Friday, June 12, 2026

The Score Functions as an Object and as a Protocol

 


ECHOES FROM THE ANTHROPOCENE


The score titled ECHOES FROM THE ANTHROPOCENE arrives as a field, not a text. You do not leaf through it for melodies. You stand before it and feel the pull of engineered bands, stacked horizontally in a dense chromatic geology. The square panel at the center repeats in variant palettes across the folios, each time encircled by an orbital ellipse that carries treble clefs, vectorized clusters, and instrument emblems. The eye tracks along the bands like a stylus moving across strata. The notation is not framed by staves so much as embedded in them, which turns reading into excavation.



This compositional posture calls up a precise art historical kinship. In 2011 Gerhard Richter subjected an older abstract painting to a regime of digital slicing, mirroring, and lateral extension. From thousands of vertical cuts he harvested the thinnest, end-stage strips, then laid them horizontally under Lucite. The result produced pressure on the retina. Color behaved like frequency. In my score the same conversion happens between image and sound. Digital procedure, once attached to pigment, is now attached to instruction. The bands do not decorate a system, they are the system, and the performer is asked to move across them as a needle passes across data.



Look closely at the first plate and you see a procession of glyphs that descend the square like instruments lowered into a shaft. The black noteheads do not align with any single staff; they puncture multiple bands at once, which collapses the old contract between sign and pitch. Accidentals sit like geological markers. A sharp becomes a pilon that pins one layer to another. A fermata resembles a centrifuge. When the eye reaches the periphery, small ornamental clusters appear. They feel like sensors or outposts that register the core’s activity. The ellipse that holds them is a rehearsal of orbit and feedback, a calm diagram of a planet that has turned its atmosphere into a recording surface.



The kinship with Richter is not a quotation. It is a shared ethic. Richter erased the painter’s hand by subjecting his own work to algorithmic violence. I erase the security of traditional notation by exposing it to the same industrial cut. In both cases the source remains, yet it is stretched until meaning becomes behavior. Early Richter cuts produced mirrored blots that still read as images. Late cuts produced bands that act like energy. Mine mirrors this arc across the sequence. One plate retains legible staff logic and suggests chamber polyphony. Another increases the density of bands and adds dotted verticals that read as time drilling through color. By the last plates the square is a bright field where signs hover and the ellipse itself threatens to become the score, not its frame.



I exploit this field with a practical ruthlessness. Cells are introduced, then split, then mirrored, then extended laterally until they function as durations rather than events. A black block lands like a slag deposit. Adjacent dots descend as if sifting through a grate. Arrows and anchors ask for pressure, not emphasis. There are passages where a single band, narrow and acidic, is asked to carry breath or bow noise while all other behavior is suppressed. The effect is not atmospheric. It is clinical. You feel what Richter made you feel when he sealed color behind glass. Sensation, then a layer of mediation, then the knowledge of your own looking or listening.

Material choices intensify the parallel. Richter’s strips sat under Lucite that reflected the gallery and folded spectators into the image. My folios are drawn for glossy stock, sometimes Mylar, so light rakes across the page and throws a second score onto the surface in the form of reflections. Performers must read through glare. The physical delay becomes an audible one. Gestures arrive with latency and the room begins to play back at the players. When the ellipse returns as a dotted perimeter, it begins to feel like a map of indirect sound paths. Richter’s 6 Standing Glass Panes had already taught viewers to accept reflection as content. I turn that lesson into method.

There is another link. Richter’s color charts from the 1960s used factory paint chips to strip subjectivity from selection. The digital strips updated that logic for the age of code. My bands work in the same historical current. Ready-made pitch and duration are no longer sufficient, since they tie the music to a literacy that hides its industrial context.  The page becomes an array of operations that can be executed by a trained ensemble, with or without the cushion of tonal memory. Execution is the painting. The performance is not an interpretation of content. It is the release of pressure along a designed path.

The title announces the field of discourse. ECHOES FROM THE ANTHROPOCENE does not illustrate weather or lament the glacier. It models systems that exceed intention. The orbiting ellipse reads as a governance diagram. Inputs travel along the circumference. Outputs strike the core, are recorded in the bands, then return as changes in density or hue. A white blur across one square is not atmosphere. It is the visual equivalent of compression, the crush that occurs when flows exceed capacity. A vertical seam that interrupts the spectrum is not a column. It is a fault line, and the notational objects that perch on either side of it behave like instruments trained to live with rupture.

My directive language deepens the analogy. Instructions are compact, almost pharmacological. Duration feels like dosage. Repetition functions as interval. The score speaks in protocols that treat the body and the room like a joint patient. Short exposures to high frequency. Long exposures to infrasonic pressure. Breaks calibrated for recovery. In rehearsal the ensemble becomes a clinic. The parts keep a log. The same passage is administered twice at different amplitudes in order to observe how the hall metabolizes stress. Musical phrase gives way to measured release.

What does this produce in listening terms. First, an awareness of scale. The bands read as horizons, yet the micro-signs embedded within them demand close work. The eye and ear must shuttle between far and near. Second, a transposition of cadence. Instead of symmetrical phrases you receive cycles of accumulation and discharge that belong to weather systems and supply chains. Third, a reframing of virtuosity. Craft is still there, but the heroism is in calibration. The most difficult task is to sustain a held behavior without telegraphing aim. Richter’s end-stage strips looked like smooth color, yet carried a history of cuts so fine they were no longer visible. My end-stage behaviors sound like sheen, yet carry a history of rules and refusals.

Exhibition should honor this. The score functions as an object and as a protocol. Show the plates at eye level in a continuous frieze, so the visitor experiences the strip effect before hearing sound. Stage public rehearsals, since the work’s ethic relies on transparency. Present take sheets that document timings, failures, and recovered solutions. Install acoustic baffles in the shape of the outer ellipse, then let the ensemble play through them. You will hear the echo pattern that gave the piece its title.

I have translated a decisive lesson from late painting into a new language of musical inscription. Richter demonstrated that digital process can operate as a historical instrument, not as a fashionable trick. I take that stance and applies it to notation. The bands, the cuts, the mirrors, and the lateral pulls are not quotations. They are structural tools for composing in a century defined by replication, extraction, and feedback. The result is a score that thinks like infrastructure and sounds like pressure made audible.

You leave the room with a recalibrated ear. Horizontal color has become time. Glyphs have become valves. Reflection has become a voice. The echo is not a metaphor. It is the world answering back.

"Phas Iria Aven" For Trombone. Bil Smith Composer

"Phas Iria Aven"

For Trombone

Bil Smith Composer

2023

Commissioned by Ericsson

Published by LNM Editions

Link to PDF (Hi-Res)



 

Thursday, June 11, 2026

W.I.P.>>>>>>> For Guitar


 

There is a row of pin-up girls at the top of this score.

Each one holds a block of cheese. Each one is accompanied by a sloth.

This is not decoration. This is the piece telling you exactly what kind of attention it requires before you have read a single note.

The notation below is some of the most demanding material I have written for guitar. Four simultaneous staves operating at different logical levels. Time signatures of 08 over 17 and 4000 over 008, which are not errors and not provocations but precise specifications of a temporal experience that conventional meter cannot contain. Tuplet groupings of 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8 in simultaneous deployment across independent voices. Extended techniques rendered in a notational language that borrows from multiple traditions and resolves into none of them. A second clef entry mid-page at 085 over 178, the tempo itself a fraction, the music inside it a further subdivision of something already impossibly subdivided.

And above all of this: women, cheese, and sloths.

The juxtaposition is not ironic. It is not surrealist in the fashionable sense of random image collision. It is a genuine compositional proposition about the relationship between maximum notational complexity and maximum notational absurdity, the idea that the most serious musical demands and the most cheerfully ridiculous imagery belong on the same page because they are both, in the end, asking the same thing of the person who encounters them.

Which is: stay with this. It will not explain itself. But it will reward you.

The sloth knows. The sloth always knows.

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Intuitive Compositional Tablatures: The Circos Development Tool

"Dendon" for Solo Tuba (2018)



"I Think I Am Rich" for Tuba and James Trussart Steel Deville Electric Guitar


"Temperance Meant Swimming Through The Heat" For Accordion and Schilke 'G' Trumpet

"Vague Emotional Overflow" for Trombone and Flute


"Craterfaced Woman Sell Sugarcane Juice In Plastic Bags" for Three Sopranos

"Extremity, Such As It Is, Half-Mercifully Attenuates Itself By Being Quotidian"
For Oboe and English Horn




Partial element (utilizing Circos) from one of the pages of the score for "Partitions: Cambics Alive in Sensient Amplules" for Chamber Septet.  World Premiere, April, 2014 with Renee Baker and The Chicago Modern Orchestra



















"Verseed" for Bass Marimba

"Verseed" for Bass Marimba

"Injectables" for Euphonium. Observations and Analysis by Joan Didion

                      

"Injectables" for Euphonium.


Bil Smith Composer


2019


Published by LNM Editions


Observations and Analysis by Joan Didion


Bil Smith's "Injectables" for Euphonium has carved out an audacious niche. It's a piece that doesn't just challenge the performer with its complexity; it seeks to upend our understanding of the relationship between mathematical abstraction and visceral experience. Smith, in his tacit, almost belligerent refusal to simplify, instead amplifies the abstract into the experiential, wielding exponential growth not as a concept to be merely understood but as a physical force to be felt, endured, and ultimately, interpreted through the medium of sound.


The score is a battleground of ideas, where the notational signs are not merely instructions but provocations. They dare the performer to engage with the piece not just intellectually but physically, to confront the strange, alien symbols on the page and translate them into something that resonates in the gut as much as it does in the mind. These signs, these indicators of Smith's compositional intent, perform a delicate balancing act, embodying both the spontaneity of physical matter and energy and the rigid predictability of mathematical equations. The exponential function becomes a signifier of this duality, a symbol that straddles the physical and the abstract, demanding a response that is at once emotional and analytical.


Bil Smith's approach to composition, and to "Injectables" in particular, mirrors the inextricable from the broader cultural or philosophical context. The score itself, with its reliance on indices and indexicality, underscores this connection. The index, in Smith's hands, becomes a tool for bridging the gap between the immateriality of abstraction and the undeniable materiality of musical performance. It is both a trace of the composer's own physical engagement with the score and a philosophical statement about the nature of representation and meaning in music.


Smith's exploration of rheology and viscosity in the creation of his notational content further deepens this engagement with the material. These are not the esoteric concerns of a composer detached from the physical world; rather, they are the preoccupations of an artist deeply invested in the physicality of sound and the tactile aspects of musical performance. The frictional gestures of the composer, captured in the score, range from the confident to the tremulous, each mark a testament to the physical act of creation.



This work stands as a monolith—a totem not just of musical complexity but of a deep conspiracy between the abstract and the visceral, the mathematical and the musical. Here, in Smith’s world, the exponential is not just a function to be plotted on the cold, indifferent grid of Cartesian coordinates but a wild, bucking bronco of growth and decay, its path charted across the score in a frenzy of notational innovation that dares the performer to ride or be thrown.


Smith, acting as the mastermind in this intricate dance of digits and diaphragms, wields viscosity and surface tension not as mere physical properties but as the very medium of musical expression. The score for “Injectables” becomes a battleground where ratios and relationships aren’t just calculated—they’re felt, in the gut and in the pulsing blood of the performer. Each note, each rest, each dynamic marking is a node in a vast, sprawling network of meaning, a point of convergence for myriad trajectories of thought, theory, and sheer sonic force.


This is music that refuses to be merely played. It demands to be inhabited, explored, as one might navigate a labyrinthine archive stuffed with arcane texts, each page a portal to another dimension of understanding. Smith’s approach to composition here is less about dictating terms than about setting parameters for a kind of controlled chaos, a sandbox of sonic possibilities where the performers are both agents and subjects, enactors and witnesses of the piece’s unfolding drama.


The conceptual rigor of “Injectables” belies a deeper, more delirious level of theorizing, one that extends tendrils into the very essence of what it means to create, to perform, to listen. Smith’s score is a nexus of alignments and nested codes, a system so densely packed with information that to engage with it is to find oneself reflecting on the nature of consciousness itself. What does it mean to understand music? To feel it? To be moved by it? These are the questions that “Injectables” poses, not just to the performer but to the audience, to the composer, to the very air through which its sounds will travel.


And yet, for all its perfectionism, all its meticulous control, “Injectables” is also an exercise in surrender. Smith must relinquish the illusion of absolute command, must acknowledge the fuzzy logic that underpins the relationship between creator, creation, and interpreter. This score is a living system, its rhythms and timbres a kind of biofeedback mechanism that connects composer, performer, and audience in a dynamic cognitive loop. The music that emerges from this process is unpredictable, uncontainable, a manifestation of precise practices that nonetheless open us to the uncharted territories of our own minds.


Smith's approach, deeply rooted in what might be termed "detailed expulsion theory," challenges not only how music is composed but also how it's perceived, experienced, and ultimately, how it reverberates within the human soul.


At he core of Smith's theory lies the concept of expulsion—not in the sense of mere removal or exclusion, but as a dynamic, generative process. Expulsion, in this context, refers to the deliberate distancing of elements within a composition from their conventional roles, expectations, or expressions. This is not a random scattering but a meticulous orchestration of dislocation, where every note, every timbre, and every rhythm is both a departure and a discovery.


Smith employs this theory to push the boundaries of musical notation, transforming it from a mere set of instructions into a map of potentialities. In his scores, traditional symbols coexist with innovative notational experiments, inviting performers to navigate a space where certainty is less important than exploration. The act of performing Smith's music becomes an act of creation in itself, a collaborative venture between composer and musician where the outcome is uncertain and the process is everything.


This expulsion from the traditional not only liberates the elements of music but also redefines the relationship between performer and score. Smith's compositions demand a level of engagement that transcends technical mastery, requiring performers to inhabit a space of heightened sensitivity and awareness. The performer, thus, becomes a medium through which the expelled elements of the composition find new form, new meaning, and new life.


- Joan Didion


Joan Didion was an American author best known for her novels, screenplays, and her literary journalism. In 2009, Didion was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters degree by Harvard University, and another from Yale University in 2011. She also wrote two memoirs of loss, The Year of Magical Thinking and Blue Nights






"Histochemistry" for Flute and Oboe. The Score.




"Histochemistry" 

for Flute and Oboe

Bil Smith Composer

A Commission from Embraer

Published on LNM Editions

(Laboratorie New Music)

The Full Score