Saturday, March 14, 2026

Richter and Fluxus Inspired Score for Contrabass Clarinet

 



My solo contrabass clarinet score pulls ideas from Gerhard Richter’s “Strips” paintings and from Fluxus. It mixes visuals, chance, bits of traditional notation, and a hands-on performance setup. The point is to loosen the usual rules of composition and let the player build the piece in real time, almost the way you would assemble an artwork from parts.

Richter’s “Strips” as a working model

Richter made the “Strips” by slicing an abstract painting into horizontal bands and then rearranging them. The result still carries the DNA of the original painting, but it becomes something new through cutting, reordering, and digital processing.

That logic maps well to sound. In this score, musical ideas are broken into fragments and then put back together in different ways. You do not get one fixed, linear “story.” You get sections that can be combined and recombined, so the piece stays tied to its source material while changing shape each time it is played.

The format supports this. The score is a set of individual cards stored in a box. Each card is a piece of the whole. The performer chooses an order, makes connections, and builds a flow, like assembling a collage out of small units.

Fluxus and “intermedia” thinking

Fluxus pushed against clean divisions between art forms. It treated performance, objects, music, and everyday actions as materials that could overlap. In that spirit, this score is not just something you read. It is something you handle. The physical act of selecting, arranging, and moving cards is part of the work.

Chance and modular structure are central here. There is no single correct version of the piece. The cards are meant to be flexible components. The contrabass clarinet is a good match because it can move from pure tone to noise, from delicate breath sounds to heavy low pressure, and it can handle quick shifts in texture without losing character.

Technology, distance, and the “camera” feeling

Richter’s process also points to how digital tools change the way images get made and understood. I carry that idea into sound and notation. The score does not treat notation as a sacred, fixed language. It uses notation as one material among others, something that can be cut up, reframed, and re-presented.

Some of the notation leans toward a photoreal, almost camera-like attitude: clean, exact, detached. That matters because it changes the emotional temperature. It asks what happens when music is shown with the cool precision of a lens rather than the expressive handwriting of tradition. It is not nostalgia. It is a direct look at how contemporary mediation affects what we think music is.

The performer as builder

In this piece, the performer is not just executing instructions. They are shaping the form. They choose how fragments connect, how long things last, and how the overall arc emerges. The cards are small self-contained worlds, but the performance is the act of linking them into a larger landscape.

That shared control is the core of the work. The score proposes possibilities, and the performer turns those possibilities into a specific version. Each realization becomes a dialogue between the fragments on the page, the physical handling of the cards, and the sound-world the contrabass clarinet can produce.





The Notational Pharmacopeia

 


The Notational Pharmacopeia: A New Dimension in Contemporary Music Notation

The notational process is not merely the transcription of sonic intentions but a multifaceted architecture wherein the gestures of the composer collide with the interpretative faculties of the performer. In this interplay lies the potential for a rich and destabilizing dialectic, one which refuses the simplicity of unilateral transmission. It is within this framework of productive tension that the concept of The Hypothetical Pharmacopeia emerges as a radical reimagining of musical notation as a site of dense semiotic entanglement.

By interspersing the score with neologisms representing fictional pharmaceuticals, this system introduces a lexicon of performative cues that function not as explicit directives but as sites of interpretative provocation. Each term, carefully constructed and strategically deployed, operates as a complex signifier, entangling linguistic, conceptual, and sonic dimensions. In doing so, The Hypothetical Pharmacopeia expands the boundaries of notation, compelling the performer to engage with the material as a labyrinthine field of possibilities rather than a finite roadmap.


Structural Foundations: Neologism as Notational Catalyst

The pharmacopeia, in its hypothetical guise, is not merely a catalog of invented terms but a carefully orchestrated topology of meaning. Each name becomes a linguistic artifact blending the poetics of pharmaceutical nomenclature with the abstraction of speculative fiction.  It exists as a node within the score’s broader semiotic network. These neologisms, while suggestive, resist reductive interpretation, offering instead a multiplicity of potentialities.

Take, for instance, the term Somnotrope. Phonetically, it evokes a drowsy momentum, suggesting decaying textures or languorous, disarticulated rhythms. Yet the term’s construction (its implicit etymological threads) might also hint at cyclical, somnambulistic patterns, inviting the performer to consider how repetition and disruption might coexist within the same gesture. Here, the name functions as a fulcrum, destabilizing the simplistic binary of instruction and execution.


Performative Praxis: Interpretation as Pharmacological Experimentation

Within this notational paradigm, the performer is neither a passive decoder of instructions nor a mere executor of preordained material. Instead, they are positioned as a speculative pharmacologist, tasked with synthesizing the pharmacopeia’s latent implications into an embodied sonic reality. The process is one of experimentation, of iterative engagement with the score’s proliferating layers of meaning.

Consider the neologism Tactilysin. The term, with its quasi-scientific aura, may suggest a focus on tactile interaction with the instrument, perhaps emphasizing percussive articulations, unstable bowings, or exaggerated haptic gestures. Yet its inherent ambiguity resists closure, demanding that the performer navigate an interpretative landscape that is both richly suggestive and deliberately indeterminate.

In this way, The Hypothetical Pharmacopeia functions as a destabilizing force, compelling the performer to abandon the comfort of fixed readings and embrace the contingency of their interpretative agency.


Density and Multiplicity: The Score as a Hyper-Surface

If the pharmacopeia is the lexicon of this notational system, then the score itself is its grammar.  It presents itself as a complex, multi-layered hyper-surface wherein these linguistic artifacts are embedded. The pharmacopeia does not operate in isolation but in dialogue with a dense network of notational symbols, spatial configurations, and structural markers.

The term Echolynth, for example, might appear in a section of the score where rhythmic density is maximal, its phonetic resemblance to “echo” suggesting recursive structures or layered repetitions. Yet its visual placement might further invite considerations of timbral decay, spectral layering, or spatial diffusion.

This interplay between the pharmacopeia and the score’s visual architecture exemplifies the system’s core principle: the generation of meaning through density and multiplicity rather than clarity and univocity.


Temporal Displacement: The Pharmacopeia as Chronotopic Marker

The pharmacopeia’s terms are not merely spatial signifiers but temporal markers, each one suggesting a unique relationship to the unfolding of musical time. These markers operate as displacements, disrupting the linear flow of the score and introducing moments of rupture, suspension, or acceleration.

Take, for instance, Chronovectis. This term, with its implications of directional time, might suggest a transition from measured rhythm to an improvisatory, time-stretched texture. Yet its placement within the score, perhaps preceding a sudden reduction in dynamic density, might also imply a moment of reflective stasis, a folding of temporal flow back onto itself.

In this way, the pharmacopeia serves as a mechanism for temporal destabilization, challenging the performer to navigate an unfolding structure that is perpetually in flux.


Interpretative Ethics: The Pharmacopeia and the Agency of the Performer

At its core, The Hypothetical Pharmacopeia is an ethical proposition. It demands that both composer and performer engage in a collaborative process of meaning-making, one that resists the authoritarian imposition of fixed interpretations. The composer, in constructing the pharmacopeia, relinquishes control over its ultimate realization, trusting the performer to inhabit its ambiguities and realize its latent potentialities.

Conversely, the performer must approach the pharmacopeia not as a puzzle to be solved but as a field of negotiation, a space where their interpretative agency can unfold within the constraints of the score’s semiotic architecture.

This ethical stance aligns with the broader aesthetic principles of contemporary music: an embrace of complexity, a rejection of reductive certainties, and a commitment to the open-endedness of the creative act.


Conclusion: Toward a Pharmacological Aesthetic

The Hypothetical Pharmacopeia is not merely a notational innovation; it is a radical reimagining of the relationship between composer, performer, and score. By embedding linguistic artifacts into the fabric of the score, it disrupts traditional hierarchies of meaning and invites a multiplicity of interpretations.

In this system, the score becomes a site of dialogic interplay, a space where the composer’s intentions intersect with the performer’s agency to generate an emergent sonic reality. It is a pharmakon in the truest sense: both remedy and poison, both constraint and liberation.

Let us then embrace the pharmacopeia as a new dimension in contemporary music notation.   We find a dimension that challenges us to reimagine the possibilities of the score, to reconfigure the dynamics of interpretation, and to reassert the primacy of the creative act.








Friday, March 13, 2026

Pharmaco-Sonic Cells: A Reimagining of the Notational Object

 


Pharmaco-Sonic Cells: A Reimagining of the Notational Object

“Each notational object is not a note. It is a pharmaco-sonic cell, a site of energetic discharge, and regulation."This statement functions not as poetic hyperbole, but as an ontological pivot.  It is one that moves musical notation away from referentiality and toward therapeutic agency. In the tradition of Damien Hirst’s medical interventions into visual art, the pharmaco-sonic cell refuses the historical role of the note as an inert symbol. It becomes instead a prescriptive capsule: performable, affective, and metabolically unstable.

“Each notational object is not a note.”

Displacement of the Traditional Note: In conventional music, a note is a symbolic placeholder: a fixed pitch, duration, and sometimes intensity. It presumes the score is a prescriptive map that the performer translates into sound output.



By contrast, the “notation-object” in this framework is neither a symbol for pitch nor duration. It is not representational in the way a note is; it does not refer to a singular sonic event but instead to a complex system of potential energies and interpretations.

This is a fundamental ontological shift. The notation-object is no longer a pointer to a sound. It is the event.




“It is a pharmaco-sonic cell...”

Pharmaco-sonic Cell: Hybrid of Biopharmacology + Sound Cell

  • Pharmaco-: The prefix introduces a set of biological and therapeutic expectations.  It is the idea that this object has effect, dosage, absorption, contraindications, and latency.

  • Sonic: The cell is audible, resonant, and vibrational and its output is not merely audible sound but sound as physiological or symbolic experience.

  • Cell: The term cell here refers to both biological units and modular musical microstructures. It implies an autonomous structure, capable of interacting with others, containing within it a blueprint for performance but also a logic for transformation.

Thus, a pharmaco-sonic cell is a compositional micro-organism: it can be activated, interpreted, and recombined; it possesses affect, effect, and agency.


“...a site of energetic discharge, regulation...”

Here, the metaphor transitions into a physiological and kinetic realm, aligning with systems theory, somatic practices, and sound healing traditions.

  • Energetic discharge: When the notational object is performed, it releases energy, however, not in the abstract musical sense, but in the modeled analogy of biological discharge: like a neuron firing or a medicine metabolizing.

    In performance, this could manifest as:

    • Sudden bursts of microsonic articulation.

    • Frequency collisions or harmonic ruptures.

    • Sound-sculptural interactions that physically move or affect air, skin, breath.

  • Regulation: The notational object is not just chaotic. Like a drug with homeostatic goals, it also carries protocols:

    • It modulates surrounding sonic material.

    • It may suppress or amplify particular performer gestures.

    • It demands discipline and dosage in its realization.

In this way, each notation-object acts like a pharmaceutical mechanism: releasing something into the system and simultaneously trying to regulate its systemic integration.




“...and healing friction.”

Healing and friction are intentionally paradoxical terms here:

  • Healing suggests restoration, soothing, recalibration.

  • Friction suggests abrasion, conflict, tension.

This concept draws directly from the dialectics found in:

  • Acupuncture (where friction triggers recalibration),

  • Psychoanalysis (where healing arises through resistance),

  • And even experimental music, where destabilization is used to reconfigure perception.

In this model:

  • Friction is not an obstacle but the mechanism of healing.

  • The performer must engage with the dissonance, misalignment, and tension embedded in the circle-object in order to fulfill the work’s purpose.

  • The healing, therefore, is not sonic per se, but performative and relational: it occurs through transduction, embodied decoding, and interpretive struggle.




In Summary:

The statement suggests that in this notational paradigm, each notation-object:

  • Is not symbolic but active.  It emerges as a site of meaning production, not just representation.

  • Holds within it the properties of a pharmaceutical agent, one of being structured, targeted, timed, and transformative.

  • Engages the performer as a clinician and patient, requiring enactment through discipline, absorption, and calibration.

  • Demands from sound the same rigor as a drug demands from the body.  It resolves an interpretation must be careful, contextual, and ethical.

  • Provides not clarity but productive conflict, which, like therapy, offers resolution through engagement with disorder, not the avoidance of it.

It is, in short, a semiotic medicine cabinet for the performative discourse.



The Banjo Problem: Estrangement Through Unconventional Instrumentation

 


The Banjo Problem: Estrangement Through Unconventional Instrumentation

When the banjo enters a chamber ensemble alongside flute and cello, something breaks. Not the instruments themselves, but the acoustic and cultural contract we've spent centuries refining. The listener's ear, trained to navigate the familiar terrains of string quartet or woodwind quintet, suddenly encounters an obstacle it cannot process using established perceptual templates.

This is not malfunction. This is strategy.

The banjo, with its bright, percussive attack and unwavering associations with folk traditions, bluegrass, and Americana, refuses integration into the Western art music soundworld. It arrives trailing its cultural baggage like tin cans tied to a wedding car: impossible to ignore, deliberately disruptive, fundamentally estranging.

This estrangement is what I call "the banjo problem," though the banjo itself is not the problem. The problem is us. Our listening habits, our genre expectations, our neat categorical boxes. The banjo simply refuses to stay in its assigned container, and in doing so, reveals the artificial nature of all such containers.

The Acoustic Disruption

Begin with the purely sonic. The banjo's timbre occupies a unique position in the spectrum of plucked strings. Unlike the guitar's warm, sustained resonance or the harp's ethereal shimmer, the banjo produces a bright, nasal attack followed by rapid decay. The metal head, stretched over a resonating chamber, creates harmonics that emphasize the percussive strike over the melodic sustain.

In a trio with flute and cello, this creates immediate hierarchical disruption. The cello, with its rich fundamental and complex overtone series, typically anchors chamber music with gravitational authority. The flute floats above, providing lyrical line and coloristic commentary. These roles have been established over centuries of repertoire.

The banjo recognizes none of this.

Its attack is sharper than the cello's articulation, cutting through texture with knife-like precision. Yet it cannot sustain like the flute, cannot sing a legato line with the same breath-supported continuity. It exists in the gap between percussion and melody, refusing to be either entirely.

This sonic ambiguity forces composers and performers to rethink fundamental assumptions about blend, balance, and textural hierarchy. The banjo won't blend. It won't recede politely into accompanimental roles. It insists on its own presence, its own sonic signature, its own refusal to be absorbed.

The Cultural Freight

But acoustic properties tell only half the story. The banjo arrives in the concert hall carrying the weight of its cultural associations, and these associations actively resist art music contexts.

For American listeners especially, the banjo is inseparable from folk music, bluegrass, minstrelsy, Appalachian culture, and the complex, often troubling history of American popular entertainment. These associations are not neutral. They carry class implications, regional identities, racial histories that cannot be easily bracketed or ignored.

When a composer places a banjo in a contemporary chamber work, they are not simply choosing a timbre. They are invoking an entire cultural field, one that exists in complicated relationship to the institutional spaces of concert music. The banjo makes the concert hall aware of itself as a space with boundaries, with exclusions, with aesthetic politics that determine what belongs and what remains outside.

This is precisely why the banjo functions as an agent of estrangement. It makes visible the usually invisible framework of genre and cultural legitimacy that structures our listening. It asks: why is the cello serious and the banjo vernacular? Why is the flute refined and the banjo rustic? Who decided these categories, and what purposes do they serve?

Historical Precedents and Failures

The banjo is not the first "inappropriate" instrument to enter art music. The saxophone, invented in the 1840s, struggled for over a century to gain full acceptance in classical music despite significant repertoire from composers like Debussy, Glazunov, and Ibert. The saxophone carried jazz associations that made it suspect in academic contexts, too popular to be serious, too new to have established legitimacy.

The guitar faced similar resistance. Despite a rich solo repertoire and the advocacy of performers like Andrés Segovia, the guitar remained peripheral to mainstream chamber music throughout much of the 20th century. Its associations with popular music, folk traditions, and flamenco marked it as somehow less serious than keyboard or bowed string instruments.

But the banjo's problem is more acute. The saxophone eventually accumulated enough art music repertoire to establish alternative associations. The guitar's Renaissance and Baroque pedigree provided historical legitimacy. The banjo has neither of these escape routes. Its history is too American, too vernacular, too entangled with cultural forms that remain outside the European concert tradition.

Some composers have attempted to "elevate" the banjo by writing in conventional classical styles, treating it as simply another plucked string instrument that happens to have a metal head. These attempts generally fail because they misunderstand the instrument's power. The banjo's value in contemporary composition is not that it can imitate classical guitar technique. Its value is precisely in its refusal to do so, in its insistence on remaining itself.

Case Study: The Trio as Collision

Consider a hypothetical trio for flute, banjo, and cello. Not a real work, but a thought experiment about what happens when these instruments occupy the same sonic space.

The flute enters with a long, sustained tone. The cello provides harmonic support with slow-moving bass line. This is familiar territory. We know how to listen to this. We've been trained by centuries of flute and cello repertoire.

Then the banjo enters.

The attack is sharper than anything the flute can produce, more percussive than the cello's pizzicato. The pitch is clear, but the timbre refuses to merge with the other instruments. It stands apart, alien, insisting on its difference.

The listener's ear attempts to process this anomaly. Is it accompaniment? The attack is too prominent. Is it melody? The sustain is too brief. Is it percussion? The pitch is too defined. The banjo occupies a category that doesn't exist in the listener's established taxonomy of chamber music roles.

This creates cognitive dissonance, a gap between expectation and experience. The ear keeps trying to place the banjo in a familiar context and keeps failing. This failure is not a bug. It's the feature.

The trio cannot achieve blend in the conventional sense. The instruments remain distinct, separate, operating in parallel rather than merging into unified ensemble texture. This separateness reveals that blend itself is a constructed aesthetic value, not a natural acoustic fact. We've been taught to prize blend, but the banjo asks: why? What happens if we abandon blend entirely and embrace collision instead?

Estrangement as Compositional Method

Russian Formalist critic Viktor Shklovsky coined the term "ostranenie," usually translated as "estrangement" or "defamiliarization." He argued that art's function is to make the familiar strange, to disrupt automatic perception and force us to see things anew.

The banjo operates as an instrument of ostranenie within chamber music. It takes the familiar forms of art music, the established gestures and textures, and makes them strange by refusing to participate in their conventions. This refusal is not failure but revelation.

When a composer writes for banjo in art music context, they are not simply expanding the palette of available timbres. They are engaging in a form of institutional critique, questioning the boundaries that determine what counts as serious music, what instruments belong in concert halls, what cultural traditions get classified as art versus entertainment.

This critique operates through the ears. The listener experiences the banjo's strangeness not as abstract concept but as sonic fact. The instrument's bright, nasal attack interrupts the flow of conventional chamber music texture in ways that cannot be intellectualized away. You hear the disruption before you theorize it.

The Composer's Choice

Why would a composer deliberately introduce this kind of disruption? What artistic goals justify the banjo problem?

Several possibilities emerge:

Timbral Expansion: The banjo genuinely offers sonic qualities unavailable from guitar, mandolin, or other plucked strings. Its attack characteristics, harmonic spectrum, and decay envelope are unique. Composers interested in exploring the full range of acoustic possibilities find in the banjo a relatively untapped resource.

Cultural Critique: Composers working at the intersection of classical and vernacular traditions use the banjo to question hierarchies of cultural value. The instrument's presence asks who gets to make art music and whose traditions count as legitimate sources for composition.

Defamiliarization: Composers seeking to disrupt listener expectations and force active rather than passive listening use the banjo's estranging effect deliberately. The goal is not comfort but cognitive engagement, not blend but productive friction.

Authenticity: Some composers, particularly those with roots in American folk traditions, use the banjo as authentic personal voice rather than exotic addition. For these composers, the banjo's vernacular associations are not problems to overcome but resources to embrace.

Each of these motivations leads to different compositional strategies, different ways of integrating (or refusing to integrate) the banjo into ensemble texture.

Performance Challenges

The banjo problem extends beyond composition into performance. Musicians trained in classical traditions often lack familiarity with banjo technique, while experienced banjo players may struggle with the precision and notational complexity of contemporary scores.

This technical divide mirrors the cultural divide the instrument embodies. Classical training emphasizes certain values: precise intonation, evenness of tone, seamless legato. Bluegrass and old-time traditions emphasize different values: rhythmic drive, ornamentation, improvisatory flexibility. These value systems don't contradict each other, but they don't easily merge either.

Performers attempting to bridge this divide must develop bilingual fluency, understanding both the technical demands of contemporary notation and the idiomatic possibilities of the instrument itself. The most successful performances come from musicians who resist the temptation to make the banjo sound like something else, who embrace its strangeness rather than apologizing for it.

The Audience Question

How do audiences receive this deliberate estrangement? The answer varies wildly depending on context and expectation.

In experimental music venues, where audiences arrive prepared for the unexpected, the banjo's presence may register as interesting timbral choice but not shocking disruption. These listeners have already suspended conventional genre expectations.

In traditional chamber music venues, the response can be more complicated. Some listeners experience the banjo as refreshing intrusion, a welcome disruption of overly refined atmospheres. Others hear it as intrusive, a violation of the aesthetic contract they expected when purchasing tickets to a chamber music concert.

This divided response is itself revealing. It demonstrates that the banjo problem is not actually about the banjo. It's about audience expectations, about what we think belongs in concert halls, about whose musical traditions get classified as art and whose remain categorized as entertainment.

The banjo simply makes these usually invisible distinctions audible. It forces the question: what are we really listening for when we attend concerts? Confirmation of our existing taste? Comfort in familiar sounds? Or genuine encounter with the strange, the disruptive, the not-yet-assimilated?

Beyond the Banjo

While this essay has focused on the banjo specifically, the principles extend to any "inappropriate" instrumentation in art music contexts. The accordion, the harmonica, the ukulele, the steel drum, all carry similar potential for productive estrangement. Each brings its own cultural associations, its own sonic signature that resists absorption into conventional ensemble textures.

Composers working at the edges of established practice understand that instrumentation is never neutral. Every choice of instrument is simultaneously a choice about cultural positioning, about which traditions to invoke, about what kind of listening to demand from audiences.

The most interesting contemporary music often emerges from these friction points, these moments when incompatible traditions collide and neither fully absorbs the other. The resulting music cannot be easily categorized. It exists in the productive gap between classical and vernacular, between art and entertainment, between familiar and strange.

The Problem That Isn't

To call this "the banjo problem" is, finally, a misnomer. The banjo poses no problem that doesn't already exist in the structures of musical categorization and cultural value. The instrument simply makes visible what was always there: the arbitrary nature of our distinctions between serious and popular, art and entertainment, refined and rustic.

What if we reframed the question entirely? Not "how do we solve the banjo problem?" but "what does the banjo reveal about the limitations of our existing frameworks?"

Seen this way, the banjo becomes not intrusion but invitation. It invites composers to question inherited assumptions about appropriate instrumentation. It invites performers to develop new technical vocabularies that don't erase vernacular traditions in service of classical precision. It invites audiences to expand their definitions of what counts as art music, what deserves attention in concert contexts.

The banjo's estranging presence reveals that our categories were always provisional, always constructed, always open to renegotiation. The instrument doesn't create disorder. It reveals the artificiality of our imposed order.

Practical Applications

For composers considering unconventional instrumentation, the banjo offers several lessons:

Embrace the estrangement: Don't try to make the unconventional instrument sound conventional. Its value lies precisely in its refusal to blend, its insistence on remaining audibly different.

Consider cultural context: Unconventional instruments carry cultural associations that cannot be ignored or transcended through technique alone. These associations are part of the material you're working with, not obstacles to overcome.

Respect technical traditions: Understanding the idiomatic techniques of vernacular instruments enriches possibilities rather than limiting them. The goal is not to erase tradition but to place it in dialogue with other traditions.

Demand listening: Estranging instrumentation forces active listening. Use this deliberately. Structure your music to reward the cognitive work audiences must perform to process unfamiliar sonic combinations.

Coda

The banjo sits in rehearsal, waiting. The flute and cello are warming up, running through familiar technical passages, preparing to play together in ways they've played hundreds of times before.

The banjo will not play that way. It cannot. Its metal head and bright attack, its cultural freight and timbral signature, all resist the smooth integration the other instruments can achieve. When the trio begins, something will break. Something should break.

That breaking is not failure. It's the sound of categories cracking open, of boundaries becoming permeable, of the familiar becoming strange enough to hear again.

The banjo problem is not a problem. It's a proposition: what if we listened differently? What if we abandoned the demand for seamless blend and embraced productive friction instead? What if the goal of ensemble playing was not unity but dialogue, not merger but conversation between irreducibly different voices?

The banjo has been asking these questions since the first composer had the audacity to write it into a chamber work. We're still learning to hear what it's saying.

The disruption continues. The estrangement persists. The banjo, bright and nasal and impossible to ignore, keeps refusing to be anything other than exactly what it is.

This refusal is its gift to contemporary music: the reminder that strangeness, friction, and unresolved difference might be values worth preserving rather than problems to solve.

The trio begins. The banjo enters. Everything familiar becomes strange.

Listen.

Regarding Certain Faces Inserted Into the Score

 


Regarding Certain Faces Inserted Into the Score, and the Compositional Implications Thereof

In the early stages before the lines grew thick with non-linear debris and before the glyphs misbehaved, I began collecting faces. I don’t mean this in the romantic or forensic sense (though either would be true in certain light conditions), but as a method of extracting symbolic residue from the already-symbolized. These were not just models. They were selected persons, posed and misposed, whose captured visages could serve not only as index but as topology: the high cheekbone not as contour but as crescendo; the tight brow not as mood but as timbral event; the misaligned eye as a notational fulcrum where meaning drops out and another, less nameable thing, enters.

I chose them carefully, though "choice" is perhaps too confident a term. I sifted through endless near-people. Candidates, stand-ins, facial proxies. They failed by being too knowable. I needed the ones whose identities had already eroded. Whose faces gave away nothing except the fact of being watched. Which is to say, I sought faces with no signal but pure reception.  Think faces as devices. Instruments of indeterminacy. Machines for the generation of compositional doubt.



Of Image as Score

The face, once captured and flattened, becomes no longer face but field. There’s a duration to a stare that cannot be transcribed, and yet it persists in the notational surface as a pressure.  It is like a thumb left too long on sheet metal. I inserted their portraits not as illustration, but as event structure. Their eyes became clefs. Their mouths served as entry points for performative impulse. Some had names. Most didn’t. The score didn't require them. Names suggest a singularity of reference, and that’s not what this work is for.

I photographed them in silence, though not without sound. A low electrical buzzing (from the ballast or the aging lens motor). Their stillness was not peace but posed resistance. The way a subject prepares to become someone else.

Once embedded in the score, they began to behave poorly at first, and then with more confidence. Their cheeks aligned with phrase curves. Their hairlines matched the contour of pitch blocks. Sometimes their faces had to be mutilated to make room for the music. Sometimes the music had to be rewritten to let the face breathe.

The Problem of Recognition

I never wanted them to be recognized.  At least not by audience, not by performer, not even by themselves (should they stumble upon their inclusion in a gallery or backroom archive). To recognize is to resolve, and resolution is the enemy of sound in this language.

Let me say it plainer: I do not score likeness. I score pressure.

Each face is a mask is a mirror is a metaphor that resists. The performer's task is not to reproduce but to negotiate. How do you play a jawline? How do you translate a squint into bowing direction? These are the questions that make the piece a piece.

Regarding Influences, Or, The Other Faces in the Room

You ask, where did this begin? Who gave you permission?

Was it the high-gloss banality of the archivist-photographer, who stripped the personhood from the portrait by calibrating it to forensic light and neutral backdrop? Was it the constructed woman who could never quite locate herself across wigs, or the mythographer of light who staged reality so convincingly that the narrative bled from the image’s surface?

Yes, it was all of them. And more. Those who stitched number to voice. Those who ruptured canvas to admit the wound. Those who folded the material until it spoke another name. I learned from them all: how to withhold, how to blur, how to stage the face as field. But none of them made scores out of faces. That part, I had to invent.


The Composer as Interrogator of Expression

I do not ask the performer to interpret the face. I ask them to interrogate it. Assume it lies. Assume it’s a stand-in. Assume it’s you.

Once placed on the page, the portrait becomes instrument, becomes warning, becomes temptation. Some performers weep. Others ask if they can remove the image from the part. They say it feels like being watched by someone they failed to understand. I tell them that’s the point.

There are no instructions. Only placement. The score is not a map.  It is a staging of collisions. Sound against silence. Identity against absence. Legibility against suggestion.

Mis-Identity as Methodology

Let’s talk about the mis-identified.

They proliferate in this work. Not mistakes. Not errors. But intentional slippages. The subject who was cast for her neutral expression becomes, in the layering process, a tyrant. The young man photographed in profile is mirrored and inverted until he becomes a glyph indistinguishable from an 18th-century clef. The face was never the goal. It was the event through which notation emerged.

You read the score, and the face reads you back. You bow, breathe, strike, hesitate and the score shrinks from interpretation like a trap door. This is the structure. This is the invitation.

Toward a Lexicon of Facial Notation

There is no legend. No chart. No semiotic key that reveals how to read these faces into phonation. But there is an emerging grammar. A curvature repeated. An eye placed at 33% down the page. A mouth inscribed with hypo-neologic text consisting of letters that almost form a command, a breath-mark, a slur.

The performer must listen to the face. Not read it. Not know it.
And in doing so, something very old occurs: the face becomes sound again.