"Sound Morphology" (Bil Smith Composer)
The next word on new music.
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Monday, March 16, 2026
"Loy's Labyrinth" for Vibraphone and Harp
"Loy's Labyrinth" is not a composition that provides a comfortable center for its performers. Much like Loy's writings, it resists the confines of a fixed point and urges us to move forward, accepting the fluidity of "there" while rejecting the constraints of "here."
Mina Loy, known for her undulating idiosyncratic script and avant-garde literary works, serves as the muse for this composition. Her writings, characterized by their systematic organization into gridded size tableaux and "day calculations," disrupted ocular-centric regimes of viewing. Similarly, "Loy's Labyrinth" carries forward this spirit of defiance, activating the potential for embodied experience through its musical expression.
Much like Mina Loy's own engagement with profit, commodification, multinationalism, location, politics, and creative labor, "Loy's Labyrinth" is part of a "convoluted distributive process." It refuses to be confined within traditional musical boundaries and instead navigates the complex terrain of cultural and creative exchange. This composition's notational system becomes a tool for generating optic tethering, connecting it with the broader context of contemporary artistic discourse
The score is firmly grounded in the inescapable materiality of the world. This materiality anchors it in the tangible realm, allowing it to interact with and be influenced by every other cultural manifestation it encounters. It thrives on contamination, drawing inspiration from various sources and transcending traditional musical constraints.
Mina Loy, born Mina Gertrude Löwy on December 27, 1882, was a remarkable and influential figure in the realms of literature, art, and feminism during the early 20th century. Her life and work were characterized by a relentless pursuit of intellectual and creative freedom, challenging societal norms, and pushing boundaries in both her writing and her activism.
Loy, though often overlooked in canonical narratives of modernism, was undeniably a vital poet and artist who played an instrumental role in numerous avant-garde movements, including Futurism, Dada, and Surrealism. Her life and work were marked by a relentless pursuit of artistic innovation and a tireless commitment to pushing the boundaries of conventional art and literature. Let's delve deeper into the life and contributions of this remarkable transatlantic modernist.
In the early decades of the 20th century, Loy embarked on extensive travels across Europe. She immersed herself in the vibrant cultural scenes of London and Paris, where she rubbed shoulders with emerging modernist writers and artists. Notable among her acquaintances were luminaries like Gertrude Stein and Pablo Picasso.
Loy's European journey led her to Florence, Italy, where she became closely associated with the Italian Futurists. During her time in Florence, she engaged in romantic relationships with prominent artists of the movement, including F. T. Marinetti and Giovanni Papini. Her participation in Futurism marked her early immersion in the avant-garde.
The outbreak of World War I forced Loy to flee to the other side of the Atlantic. She found herself in New York, where she became an integral part of the American and expatriate artistic and literary circles. Loy contributed to influential publications like Camera Work and Rogue, solidifying her position as a figure of importance in the New York avant-garde scene.
In 1917, Loy collaborated with the renowned artist Marcel Duchamp to co-publish The Blind Man, a two-issue Dadaist periodical. This collaboration exemplified her commitment to the Dada movement, which challenged conventional notions of art and aesthetics. Loy was instrumental in disseminating Dadaist art and ideas to American audiences.
In 1918, Loy married Arthur Cravan, an amateur boxer and Dada poet, in Mexico City. Cravan's disappearance at sea two years later marked a tragic episode in Loy's life. She dedicated significant time and effort to searching for him, but he was never found.
Mina Loy's life and career were characterized by a commitment to artistic experimentation and a willingness to challenge established norms. Her involvement in multiple avant-garde movements and her pioneering contributions to modernist literature make her a figure of enduring significance in the history of art and literature.
Despite being overshadowed by some of her contemporaries, Mina Loy's legacy continues to inspire contemporary artists and writers who appreciate her unyielding dedication to innovation and her fearless exploration of the avant-garde.
"Cartoon Lucination Imposes Claims" for Harp and Celeste. PDF Link To Full Score.
"Red Is You And You" for Piccolo (Soprillo) Saxophone
The Soprillo Saxophone is a piccolo saxophone. It is technically known as the sopranissimo saxophone. Currently, it is only manufactured by one company: Benedikt Eppelsheim Wind Instruments in Germany.
One unique quality of the soprillo, as opposed to the more common soprano saxophone, is the placement of the octave key. On a soprillo sax, the octave is actually part of the mouthpiece! This is unusual to see in practice, but makes sense acoustically.
“Enclave of the Curated Pursuit” for Viola, Vibraphone and Flugelhorn
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:
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Typographic microstructures
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Crossed-out neologisms
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Echoic syllabic forms
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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:
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Unreadable but pronounceable
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Familiar yet untranslatable
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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.






























