Saturday, April 18, 2026

Hypo-Neology in Compositional Practice: A Lexical Approach to Experimental Notation

In my compositional framework, hypo-neology (the creation of sub-words, proto-words, or semi-legible linguistic fragments) is not merely a poetic flourish, but a central ontological axis of the score itself. Where neology concerns the invention of entirely new words, hypo-neology engages the threshold of language, operating beneath standard meaning, at the level of gesture, impulse, and sonic residue. These lexical artifacts function less as symbols to be decoded and more as auditory fossils, embedded in the strata of the visual field.



Lexical Residue as Sonic Prompt

Hypo-neologisms in my scores exist in a pre-semantic or post-lexical state, partially eroded, over-inscribed, looped, or mirrored. They are not intended to communicate directly in linguistic terms. Instead, they perform as notation-objects, catalyzing sonic imagination in the performer.

Rather than specifying pitch, rhythm, or articulation in traditional ways, these word-forms ask:

What does this fragment feel like when sounded?
What vocal inflection does a crumpled word demand?
What gesture is required to complete an unfinished sentence?


The Score as Polylingual Palimpsest

Influenced by Hanne Darboven’s numerico-linguistic grids, Ed Ruscha’s textual austerity, and Tacita Dean’s archival poetics, my use of hypo-neology situates the score as a layered site; a part linguistic excavation, part speculative grammar. The performer is placed in the position of a semantic archaeologist, encountering linguistic fragments whose original context has been lost or deliberately withheld.

This aligns with the visual texture of my pages, which often include:

  • Typographic microstructures

  • Crossed-out neologisms

  • Echoic syllabic forms

  • Spatialized language arranged not for reading, but for listening with the eyes



Tactile Semantics and Performer Activation

The hypo-neologism acts as an activator.  It is a point of engagement for the performer’s interpretive imagination. Drawing influence from Cornelius Cardew’s graphic provocations and Alberto Burri’s ruptured surfaces, the fractured word in my notation becomes sonic material, sculpted not just by voice or instrument, but by touch, breath, and interpretive risk.

These elements are often designed to be:

  • Unreadable but pronounceable

  • Familiar yet untranslatable

  • Silent but resonant

This tension creates a field of ontological uncertainty where sound emerges not from instructions, but from lexical hauntings from what might have been a word, a name, a direction.


Hypo-Neology as Resistance to Semantic Closure

The hypo-neologic fragment resists the tyranny of closure. Unlike traditional notation, which fixes meaning into reproducible sound events, my use of text operates in the fugitive zone between language and noise, reading and voicing, image and utterance.

This is a deliberate political and aesthetic stance. Inspired by Enrico Castellani’s tension fields and Burri’s ruptures, I use hypo-neology to rupture the presumed transparency of the score. It is an anti-authoritarian act. A refusal of the fixed. A commitment to semantic entropy.


The Composer as Lexical Architect

In sum, hypo-neology in my compositional approach is not a side-effect of poetic excess. It becomes a structural tool, a performative condition, and a methodological commitment. The invented fragment is the score’s heartbeat: unstable, intimate, and unfinished.

It invites the performer not to obey, but to co-author, to listen to the page the way one listens to ruins, archives, or tongues never fully learned.

The hypo-neologic score does not say what it means.
It becomes what you hear when you try to make it say anything at all.

Para-Form and Anti-Theme: Composing Against Motive

 


Para-Form and Anti-Theme: Composing Against Motive

Traditional motive promises recognition and return. A cell appears, mutates, reprises, and the ear is rewarded for remembering. Para-form and anti-theme take the opposite path. Form is built beside and around the expected center rather than from it. Motive is treated as a contaminant or a decoy. The score becomes an architecture that produces continuity without depending on tune.



What para-form is

Para-form is a scaffold of procedures that run parallel to material content. Think of it as a regulatory frame that governs density, direction, and privilege among parts. Notes are inhabitants, not rulers. In a para-form piece, the line does not grow because it contains a seed. It grows because the frame makes certain behaviors more likely than others.

Hanne Darboven


Hanne Darboven offers a useful analogy. Her numeric writings accumulate by rule until the grid itself becomes the subject. Music can adopt the same logic. A page might specify addition and carry between staves, or a monthly calendar of rehearsal tokens that forces recurrence without melodic reprise. Coherence emerges from arithmetic pressure rather than thematic return.

What anti-theme is

Anti-theme is not the absence of motif. It is a deliberate practice of interrupting mnemonic promises. When a figure risks becoming a theme, the system diverts it. Imagine a motorway with frequent and irresistible exits. Each exit is attractive, well lit, and leads to a different but related district. The original road still exists, yet the best path is always beside it.

Ed Ruscha


Ed Ruscha’s text paintings help here. A word is present and legible, yet the interest shifts to spacing, font weight, backdrop, and the desert of context. A musical figure can be treated the same way. The content is not the point. The framing devices and the typographic weight of the page carry the charge.

Score as visual governance

New music art scores already treat paper as a site rather than a transcript. Para-form extends this by giving each visual element a jurisdiction.

  • Corridors and spines
    Vector corridors run across systems like elevated walkways. Parts must move along them at assigned rates. The spine dictates momentum. Material rides the infrastructure.

  • Fields and embargoes
    Color planes and photographic inserts act as economic zones. Enter a yellow field and resonance rules. Enter a black field and articulation rules. Some zones are embargoed. If a motive threatens to bloom, a zone blocks it.

  • Beacons and rendezvous
    High contrast markers align across staves. Players must arrive at beacons regardless of local detours. This creates large scale synchrony without melodic rallying points.

  • Ledger of privileges
    The margin carries a ledger that ranks permissions. Bow noise may outrank pitch inside one block. Flutter tongue may outrank rhythm inside another. The ledger changes per page, which keeps memory short and focus local.

The result is a score that behaves like a civic plan. It distributes rights and obligations. It does not tell performers what to say. It tells them where they are powerful and where they are constrained.

Thom Mayne, Architect, Morphosis


Architectural analogies

Architects have long designed against a single organizing motif. Consider buildings that gain identity from circulation rather than facade. SANAA’s museums flow by transparency and adjacency. Lina Bo Bardi’s MASP lifts the gallery on pilotis so the void carries the meaning. A para-form score borrows this stance. Circulation is the content. The void is the chorus.

Scarpa’s drawings offer another template. Details govern the whole. A small joint determines the way a stair lands and the way light breaks across a wall. In music, a minor priority rule can scale up. If breath noises always eclipse pitched attacks at the edge of a field, the sound world tilts. The listener may not know why, yet feels the gradient.

Poetics of the aside

Para-form favors the parenthetical. Think of poets who work by tilt rather than proclamation. Rae Armantrout shifts valence with a clipped enjambment. Anne Carson builds argument through insert, gloss, and citation. A score can use similar micro devices. Brackets that re-parse a bar. Footnotes that apply only when three parts occupy the same register. The main text remains sparse while the margin supplies law.

In prose, Giorgio Manganelli or Raymond Roussel create engines where the next paragraph proceeds by constraint rather than plot. A movement can do the same. Each section advances because the constraint changes. The ear accepts continuity even without refrain.

How to compose against motive

  1. Limit the half-life of recurrence
    Give every figure a decay clock. After three exposures, the figure loses one of its parameters. Rhythm survives while pitch dissolves, or dynamic survives while register shifts. The figure cannot become a theme because it sheds the reasons that make themes sticky.

  2. Use para-meters rather than parameters
    A parameter is a dial that sets a value. A para-meter is a rule that binds the next two dials. For instance, if cello and clarinet share a beacon, the clarinet must mirror the cello’s dynamic curve in reverse. These cross rules create kinship without motif.

  3. Write in layers that cannot fully agree
    Provide a pitch lattice, a timbre schedule, and a spatial route that are each internally coherent. Their meeting produces character. The listener hears a signature that does not depend on a tune.

  4. Design for saturation and vacuum
    Overwriting is powerful when contrasted with bare time. Use vacuum spans where only a spine survives. Then flood the page with fields and embargoes. The ear perceives a form that breathes without a recurring melody.

  5. Bind electronics to the visual ledger
    Processing follows the same rules as instrumental behavior. A black diamond might close the wet path for twelve seconds. A thin line might quantize buffer length. The mix reads like another stave, not an overlay from a different world.

Performer agency and repeatability

Para-form does not mean laissez-faire. It demands strong governance so that a performance is repeatable in kind even if never in detail. Provide these tools.

  • A minimal priority matrix
    One small box that says what wins in a collision. Texture over pitch, or breath over articulation, or field rule over stave rule. Keep the matrix plain.

  • Density calls
    The conductor calls numbers that raise or lower allowable privilege. At density two, fields have effect. At density four, embargoes activate. The dial gives the ensemble a shared sense of pressure.

  • Beacon logs
    After a run, players pencil short notes near beacons that record what choices worked. The score becomes a living archive that guides later passes while refusing a fixed theme.

Listener frames

A listener who expects motive might feel unmoored. Offer program notes that tune attention.

  • Continuity from infrastructure
    Invite the ear to track beacons and corridors rather than melodies. These are the lines that endure.

  • Value of residue
    Ask the audience to notice what remains after clashes. Residue becomes the memorable trace, much as photographic grain can be the most human part of a picture.

  • Local truth, global patience
    Encourage the habit of listening for local clarity inside global ambiguity. Para-form does not ask for surrender. It asks for trust that small truths accumulate.



Studio and print practice

If the score is the city, production is urban planning.

  • Print vector spines on one plate and high-contrast fields on another.

  • Add hand ink or collage on a third pass.

  • Emboss only the embargoes so performers feel the rule.

  • Keep states. Edition A with yellow resonance planes. Edition B with slate chokes. Mix states across parts to vary friction without breaking the law.

Microphones and monitors should respect the civic plan. Provide a monitor channel that favors collision points. Record the residue with close mics and the infrastructure with wide pairs. Balance both in the mix so the plan remains audible.



What success looks like

  • Performances differ in surface yet retain posture. Listeners recognize the city even if streets shift.

  • Players report clear choices rather than guesswork. Confidence builds though the piece stays risky.

  • Reviews describe continuity without naming a tune. Words like gradient, corridor, and hinge appear.

  • The score ages well. Marginalia from early players enrich future editions. The page becomes scholarship.



Closing

Para-form and anti-theme do not reject memory. They redirect it. Memory attaches to rules, to pressure, to the way a page governs touch and time. This frees the music from the burden of the catchy cell and replaces it with a social contract between page and player. Hanne Darboven shows how structure can become content through honest accumulation. Ed Ruscha shows how a word can be present while attention moves to frame and climate. Contemporary architects, poets, and image makers show how circulation and detail anchor experience when center fails.

Compose the corridor and the embargo. Draw the ledger and the beacon. Let theme try to form and then guide it to a side street where it learns restraint. The work will carry identity without clinging to a tune. The score will become a city that performers inhabit with judgment and care.

Friday, April 17, 2026

Paper, Model, Score: Thomas Demand’s Afterimage in My Compositional Surfaces

 

Paper, Model, Score: Thomas Demand’s Afterimage in My Compositional Surfaces

Thomas Demand’s pictures have followed me into the studio for years, not as images to imitate, but as a procedure to inhabit. He reconstructs a scene as a full-scale paper model, photographs the model, then removes the evidence. What remains is an image twice mediated: a photograph of a construction that stands in for an earlier photograph.

That lesson is foundational to my scores. I also insert a built intermediary between source and outcome. Where Demand builds rooms, I build pages: hyper-notational surfaces that must be navigated rather than merely executed. The performance you hear is not a translation of instructions; it is an excavation of a constructed field.

Thomas Demand's "Control Room"

From Photograph of a Model to Model for a Score

Demand’s practice taught me to distrust directness. In my work, I stage a sequence: concept → model (visual, typographic, photographic) → notational object → performance. Portrait sessions with models, tilt-shift photography, and photo-real fragments feed the page; the page is then collaged with blocks, legends, and vectors. Like Demand’s sets, these pages are not neutral carriers; they are architectures that record the choices of their making and demand new choices from readers.

The effect in both cases is similar: a viewer or performer must confront the intermediary. The work refuses to disappear into fluency.



Objecthood as Method (Not Decoration)

Demand’s dye-rich prints condense time and manual procedure into surface. I aim for an analogous condensation: metallic powders, conductive inks, thermochromic and photochromic layers, dense graphite, aluminum supports. These are not embellishments. They are operational materials that change the kinetics of reading such as how light grazes a line, how a block occludes, or how a legend becomes legible only at a particular angle or distance. The page controls tempo before a single sound is made.

In rehearsal this has consequences. Performers negotiate wayfinding (landmarks, corridors, cul-de-sacs) rather than counting alone. The score becomes site: not a tape to be unspooled but a place where decisions are staged and restaged.



Spatial Resistance

When notation turns spatial, it becomes political. The linear staff over-optimizes for excerptability, logistics, and product. A spatial score resists all three. It cannot be skimmed, clipped into “best bars,” or sight-read on short call. It costs rehearsal, and that cost is the point: time redirected from efficiency to attention, from throughput to co-presence.

This is where Demand’s ethic touches mine most directly. His pictures slow spectatorship by making the image slightly “wrong."  Convincing yet off, familiar yet modeled. My scores slow performance by making the page thick.  They become fields of potential that frustrate frictionless delivery. In both cases, the work’s difficulty is not punitive; it is repairing. It restores our capacity to read with care.



Instruction, Trace, Object

I’ve long been drawn to the hinge where instruction becomes object. In my practice, the score is simultaneously:

  • Instruction (it can be played),

  • Trace (it records a process of construction, including failures),

  • Object (it holds on the wall, on a table, as a sculpture of information).

Demand’s model/photograph dynamic clarified this for me. We both use an interposed artifact to change the terms of reception. For him, the paper room reforms the photograph. For me, the constructed page reforms the performance. In both, the intermediary is generative, not ancillary.


Reading as Archaeology

Performing these works is an archaeological practice. Players read for seams: where instructions thicken, where textures contradict, where legends fork. Annotations accumulate; each realization leaves residue for the next. The work grows by stratigraphy, not by a single definitive text. Demand’s destroyed sets are gone, but their logic remains legible in the image; my earlier drafts are gone, but their logic is fossilized in the final page. We meet our audiences (and performers) at the surface where that history has been compacted.

Curatorial Notes (from the Studio Outward)

If these pages enter the gallery, I prefer they be treated as sites, not illustrations for a performance that “really matters.” Show the scores at scale, with vantage points that enable mapping.  Present rehearsals, marginalia, and multiple realizations as parallel artifacts, not documentation. The point is to stage the same demand these works make in the rehearsal room: engage the intermediary.



Influence, Precisely Named

Demand didn’t give me a look to borrow; he gave me a logic to adapt:

  1. Build the intermediary (model/page) that stands between source and outcome.

  2. Harden process into surface (photograph/score) so that labor becomes legible.

  3. Compel a new literacy in the viewer/performer.  Reading for joins, routes, and residues rather than for instant legibility.

That sequence continues to shape my compositions. It is why some pages appear obstinate; why blocks sit where common sense says “clear the path”; why certain legends seem too local or contingent. They are local and contingent by design. The page is a model of a situation, not a shortcut through it.

Coda: Afterimage

I often think of Demand’s pictures as afterimages of making. My scores aspire to the same: to be notational afterimages that hold, in their complication, the memory of the processes that produced them and the performances they will provoke. If the work asks more of the reader, it is because I want the page to look back and say: the intermediary is where meaning starts.

"Pirate Geologists and Circuit Couture" for Solo B Flat Trumpet.

 



"Pirate Geologists and Circuit Couture" 

for Solo B Flat Trumpet.

Bil Smith Composer

2024

40" X 20"

Link to PDF Score

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1f-YikAey_RPGvRGChMeXl1ZP6VfIuA40/view?usp=sharing





Review and Commentary by Fred Chappel, Author and Poet.


In the avant-garde corridors of contemporary music, few compositions dare to redefine the essence of musical notation and performance with the audacity of "Pirate Geologists and Circuit Couture" for solo B Flat Trumpet. This piece, a bewildering foray into the limits of traditional composition, serves not only as a musical work but as a bold exploration of how we conceive the act of musical notation itself. In it, Bil Smith, the composer transcends the conventional role, embodying a polymathic presence as typographer, notationalist, casting director, photographer, visual designer, and, fundamentally, the composer.


This composition for solo trumpet (Mr. Smith's primary instrument) endeavors to dematerialize the notational object, inviting it to float free of its physical substrate, engaging with a wide array of activities that dramatize abstraction's confluences with history, text, moving image, and pop culture's collective unconscious.


The Composition as a Microcosm


"Pirate Geologists and Circuit Couture" functions as a microcosm of radicality, illustrating that such a quality stems from context rather than form alone. The forms, while seemingly radical, gain their essence through memory, by continuing the once radical through extensions of its history. This continuation leaves a wake that propels the composition forward through a mannerist force. The approach to composition here is intuitive, eschewing strategy for a more spontaneous creation, embodying more the attributes of a cult than those of culture.



Oddly, it is the spatial inaccessibility of the score that introduces a theatrical element to the composition—a theatrics of rupture. This disruptive notational archetype serves as a placeholder for a profound recalibration of subject-object relations, venturing into a phenomenological presence that can be aptly characterized as "aesthetic withdrawal." Whether the notation is columnar, compartmentalized, or perfectly plain, it carries direct addresses to the performer and audience alike, challenging them to reconsider their roles in the musical experience.



The notion of "aesthetic withdrawal" is significant. It suggests a departure from the sensory bombardment typical of much of contemporary culture, opting instead for a more contemplative, immersive engagement with the work. This withdrawal is not a lack but a space created for deeper interaction, where the phenomenological presence of the performer and the audience becomes paramount. The composition insists on an active, rather than passive, reception, where every note played and every symbol interpreted is an act of co-creation between the composer and the performer.


This piece unfurls a litany of queries: Who are the figures captured in these photographs, and for what reasons were they selected to inhabit each particular stage set? What threads of connection, what intricate web of relationships, binds the photographs, the iconography, and the notational framework together? On what grounds were these specific sets chosen? And by what criteria were these individuals, now forever stilled in the photos, deemed integral to the composition's narrative?


One might venture into the speculative terrain these questions demarcate, recognizing that in the architecture of this composition, every choice is a filament in the dense weave of its overall structure. The individuals in the photographs, perhaps chosen not for their recognizability but for the way their presences echo the elusive themes of the piece, serve as conduits to deeper resonances. They are not merely models but embodiments of the composition's unseen forces, selected for the stories etched into their visages, stories that harmonize with the silent music of the piece.


The photograph's sets, each a meticulously curated tableau, are not random backdrops but deliberate choices, landscapes within which the narrative unfolds. They are chosen for their ability to evoke a sensory response that complements the auditory journey, for their capacity to amplify the composition's thematic preoccupations through visual means.


The connectivity—the interplay between the photographs, the iconography, and the notational archetype—serves as the composition's neural network. It is this inter-relationship that transforms the piece from a mere collection of disparate elements into a coherent, if enigmatic, whole. The photographs do not merely accompany the music; they, along with the iconography, are integral to its notational DNA, suggesting that the music itself might be visual as much as it is auditory, a multi-sensory composition that seeks to engage not just the ear but the entire sensorium.


In choosing these sets, these people, the composer—or perhaps more accurately, the artist—invites the audience into a space where the boundaries between disciplines blur. The reasons for these choices are as layered and complex as the composition itself, reflecting a deliberate aesthetic strategy that seeks to disorient and reorient, to defamiliarize in order to reveal new modes of seeing, hearing, and understanding.


In this way, the composition does not merely pose questions but embodies them, becoming a question in its own right—a meditation on the nature of art, perception, and the invisible threads that connect us to each other and to the world around us. It is in the interstices of these connections that the true essence of the composition lies, a palimpsest of meaning waiting to be deciphered by those willing to look, and listen, closely.


Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Music Theory After the Page



Music Theory After the Page

Music theory cannot remain only a study of harmony, counterpoint, modulation, cadence, and form in the conventional sense. Those things still matter. They remain part of the historical machinery of musical thought. But they do not exhaust what theory can be, especially once the score stops behaving like a neutral page of transmitted instructions and begins acting as an object, a surface, a pressure system, and a site of interpretation.




What interests me is not music theory as a closed grammar. What interests me is music theory as a way of understanding how musical meaning is built, distributed, withheld, materialized, and made unstable. In that sense, theory is not something applied after composition. It is already present in the construction of the score itself. It is present in the spacing of elements, in the density of a field, in the behavior of a surface, in the tension between text and image, in the use of symbols that do not submit to inherited notation, and in the role assigned to the performer as an interpreter of conditions rather than a decoder of fixed content.


Traditional music theory often assumes that music is fundamentally made of pitches arranged in time. Everything else is secondary. Timbre, pressure, visuality, materiality, notation, spatiality, and symbolic atmosphere are usually treated as subordinate. They may color the music, but they do not define its deepest structure. I do not accept that hierarchy. In my work, those supposedly secondary dimensions are often where structure begins.

If one takes seriously the idea of morphology, then music is not simply a sequence of notes. It is the behavior of forms. It is contour, accumulation, incision, recession, pressure, interruption, distortion, residue, and emergence. These are not metaphors laid over the music from outside. They are compositional realities. A score can swell. A symbol can puncture. A field can compress. A phrase can thicken into objecthood. Silence can function not merely as absence but as a kind of weighted spatial interval. Under this view, music theory has to become capable of describing not only harmonic relation but formal pressure.





That shift becomes especially important when one considers notation. Most traditional theory assumes notation is transparent. It assumes the staff, the notehead, the barline, and the accepted vocabulary of instruction are simply neutral carriers of musical thought. But notation is never neutral. It teaches the eye what to value. It privileges some relations and suppresses others. It stabilizes time in particular ways. It turns sound into governable units. It is already theoretical before it ever becomes instructional.

In my work, notation is not treated as a passive tool. It is treated as a compositional agent. The score is not merely where music is represented. It is where music starts to think. When a page becomes crowded, fractured, embossed, materially resistant, or linguistically unstable, those conditions are not decorative additions. They are theoretical propositions. They change what a performer can know, how a performer moves, what counts as event, and how sound may come into being.


This is why I am drawn to score-objects. Once a score becomes an object, theory can no longer be contained within abstract musical syntax alone. Material enters the argument. Surface enters the argument. Scale enters the argument. Reflectivity, layering, relief, photographic presence, typography, and industrial finish all begin to matter. A score-object does not only ask, “What is played?” It also asks, “How is reading structured?” “What kind of bodily relation does this object demand?” “What is withheld from immediate access?” “How does opacity produce form?” These are theoretical questions, even if they do not resemble the usual classroom model of music theory.

The score-object therefore expands theory by relocating it into the physical conditions of encounter. A performer standing before one of my works is not simply extracting notes. The performer is negotiating a system of pressure. They are reading text, image, shape, interruption, material hierarchy, and symbolic drift all at once. Theory no longer resides only in intervallic relation. It resides in the calibrated instability of the whole field.


That is equally true of my own notational devices. When I use custom symbols, neologisms, pharmacological language, or hybrid visual systems, I am not abandoning theory. I am building a local theory inside the work. These elements are not random. They do not exist to evade rigor. They exist to produce a different kind of rigor, one less dependent on standardized decoding and more dependent on relational intelligence. The performer has to build meaning from within the work rather than retrieve it from a pre-authorized glossary.

This is one reason I resist the assumption that unconventional notation is somehow less theoretically serious than traditional notation. In many cases it is more demanding. Once one leaves the ready-made infrastructure of tonal grammar and standard notation, every relation must be composed from the ground up. How does a sign function. How does it recur. How much ambiguity can it hold without dissolving. What role does visual weight play in determining musical hierarchy. How do text and object interact. How does a performer learn the logic of a field that does not offer immediate translation. These are technical questions. They are also theoretical ones.

Within this compositional field, the performer becomes central. In conventional practice, the performer is often treated as the recipient of a stable system. In my work, the performer is more deeply implicated. The score does not simply transmit. It provokes, delays, and redistributes meaning. The performer must judge how to move through it. That does not mean anything goes. It means that interpretation becomes structural rather than ornamental. A performer is not merely adding expression to a preformed content. The performer is participating in the production of form itself.

This matters because it reveals something basic about music theory that is too often ignored. Theory is not just a system for describing music. It is a system for organizing listening, reading, and action. It decides what music is allowed to be. When theory remains too narrow, music shrinks to fit it. When theory expands, new kinds of work become legible.

That is the role I want theory to play. Not police work. Not doctrinal maintenance. Not the preservation of inherited comfort. I want theory to become elastic enough to account for notation as object, object as instruction, language as pressure, surface as form, and performance as a site of active reconstruction. I want it to address the score not only as script but as a field of material intelligence.

To speak of music theory in this way is also to acknowledge that musical thought no longer begins and ends with sound alone. Sound remains central, but it is conditioned by everything that leads to it. The page, the object, the symbol, the word, the texture, the interruption, the misreading, the density of the field, and the performer’s negotiation of all these things are not external to the music. They are among the places where the music becomes possible.

Music theory, then, should not be reduced to a codified retrospective explanation of works already understood. It should be capable of following practice into unstable territory. It should be able to describe the score when the score no longer behaves like a servant of clarity. It should be able to think through systems that are provisional, local, material, symbolic, and incomplete. It should be able to recognize that a form of notation can be rigorous without being conventional, and that a score-object can be theoretical without resembling a textbook example.

What matters to me is not whether a work can be forced back into an older vocabulary of analysis. What matters is whether theory can become intelligent enough to meet the work where it actually lives. In some pieces, that may still mean harmony and duration in their familiar forms. In others, it may mean pressure, surface, spacing, symbolic instability, and objecthood. The point is not to discard theory. The point is to free it from the idea that music begins only where convention is already comfortable.

That is where theory becomes useful again. Not as a closed system of verification, but as a live instrument for entering forms that are still in the process of becoming.