Glossary of Post-Conceptual Terms for Contemporary Composition & Intermedia Practice
Destructural Narratology
noun
A critical and creative strategy that dismantles conventional narrative forms in favor of fragmented, non-linear, or recursive structures. It rejects plot hierarchies and fixed sequencing, enabling open-ended or rhizomatic realizations. In musical or performative contexts, it challenges continuity and causality, emphasizing rupture, entropy, or unstable agency.
→ See also: anti-narrative, indeterminacy, rhizomatic form.
Hypo-Atomism
noun
A compositional and notational approach that works beneath the level of traditional musical atoms (notes, beats, intervals), engaging with micro-gestures, timbral impulses, and pre-symbolic fragments. Hypo-atomism avoids discrete events in favor of proto-musical textures typically expressed through graphic or gestural scores where notation operates as implication rather than instruction.
→ Contrast with: pointillism, granular synthesis (as metaphor).
Post-Notation
noun
An umbrella term for notational practices that operate beyond the conventions of Western staff notation. Post-notation includes graphic scores, spatial diagrams, algorithmic instructions, visual-poetic systems, and non-visual (e.g., tactile or conceptual) directives. These scores prioritize process, interpretation, and context over fixed content.
→ Related: performative notation, meta-score, open form.
Pharmacoform
noun
A speculative or aestheticized delivery mechanism for a conceptual "dose" often modeled after pharmaceutical forms (capsule, tablet, vapor, patch), but used metaphorically or sculpturally in compositional or exhibition contexts. Pharmacoforms carry meaning not just in what they deliver (sound, scent, text), but in how the form itself encodes ritual, regulation, or affective experience.
→ Coined in speculative pharmaco-aesthetics and biodesign.
Semantic Drift (in Score-Based Work)
noun
The gradual displacement or mutation of a symbol’s meaning as it travels across time, media, or interpretive acts. In post-conceptual music, semantic drift allows notational elements to act as semi-stable carriers open to reinterpretation, distortion, or recombination. Often used intentionally in modular scores, iterative works, or collaborative installations.
→ See also: score erosion, interpretive entropy.
Inscriptive Field
noun
The total visual-textual space of a score, including marks, margins, non-verbal cues, and absences. An inscriptive field functions as a performance ecology rather than a directive object. In post-conceptual practice, attention is paid not just to the notation but to the material, topological, and atmospheric qualities of the field.
→ Related: paratext, score as object, field-based composition.
Meta-Score
noun
A score that describes or generates other scores. It may take the form of instructions, rule sets, conditions, or algorithms that define the parameters for score creation. Meta-scores operate at a structural level and often produce different outputs per iteration. They function as compositional frameworks rather than finished works.
→ Associated with generative systems, procedural music, and AI-informed practices.
Sonic Ficta
noun
Borrowed from the medieval term musica ficta, this post-conceptual term refers to sonic or performative content that is not notated but implied often existing between interpretation and invention. Sonic ficta plays with expectation and insinuation, inviting the performer to interpolate gestures not explicitly present in the score.
→ Related to: implied voicing, interpretive invention, ghost notation.
Paranoiac Reading (of Score)
noun
A mode of score interpretation in which the performer assumes hidden codes, misdirections, or double meanings within the notational system often drawing from surrealist or psychoanalytic frameworks. This reading strategy encourages non-literal, affective, or symbolic interpretation of scores.
→ Inspired by Salvador DalĂ’s “paranoiac-critical method.”
Archive-as-Performance
noun
The practice of treating archival material (texts, sketches, past scores, data, failed ideas) as active compositional matter. In this approach, the archive is not static, but performative. It becomes a site of iteration, remix, or reanimation. Often used in posthumous collaborations, re-scoring, or durational installations.
→ Related: living archive, curatorial composition, memory-based notation.
Temporal Scaffold











