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New short film music

March 9th, 2009

Just a short post today, in between working on lots and lots of things. I’ve had the good fortune to be asked by a friend of mine to score a short (three minutes) animated film, and I thought I’d post some of what I’ve been working on to that end. I don’t think I can reveal too many details about the film itself at this point, so I’ll confine myself to talking about the music.

The director was looking for something relatively dissonant, or at least unsettling, for the main texture of the piece. To that end, I whipped out George Perle’s Twelve-Tone Tonality, which is, after 15 years of stealing (and mostly misusing) its ideas, still one of the most difficult/rewarding music theory texts I have ever read. Perle is so pithy that there’s nary a single wasted word in the entire text–every bit is crucial.

Aaaanyway, working from the “Inversionally Complimentary Cycles” section of the text, I worked out a tone row for the piece, and then transposed it into four additional voices, moving in parallel, which gave me some nice tonal blocks to play with. After orchestrating these blocks a bit with some sounds I liked, I recorded them and then cut up and arbitrarily pieced the shards back together, which produced the “glitchy” sounds you hear. I then worked out a little melody with an inversional relationship to the original row, and started flying that over the top. This is shaping up to be a fun little piece, methinks. Anyway, have a listen, and let me know what you think!

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P.S., As I was writing this post, I found out that George Perle passed away in January at his home in Manhattan at age 93. To a guy like me, who’s still at heart a music theory geek, this was heartbreaking to learn. He will be missed.

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Koven Works In Progress, music ,

The Listening Room

February 23rd, 2009

It’s been a while since I’ve done a music post here, so it seemed about time. For the last few months, I’ve been working on a commission for the choreographer Daniel Charon called The Listening Room, and I thought I’d post a few excerpts from the score as it develops.

This score has, for whatever reason, proved to be a difficult one to get a bead on–it’s gone through multiple iterations, each one evolving significantly from the last. The piece is in roughly four contiguous segments, with two themes evolving gradually throughout the piece’s 15 minutes. I’ve been attempting to strike a balance between harder rhythmic elements and more free-floating melodic sections, with varying degrees of success. On a purely technical level, I’ve been separating out rhythmic elements for more clarity, stratifying snares, bass drums, and cymbals in separate layers rather than mixing them together all at once, as I would normally tend to do.

Anyway, here are some excerpts. Hope you enjoy them!

Excerpt the first:

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Excerpt the second:

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Koven Works In Progress, music , , ,

More “Dance for a Small Room” music

June 3rd, 2008

First off, thanks for those of you who came to the Latin Hustle show a few weeks back–the response was overwhelming and beautiful. There are some nice pitchers that various friends took of the show, which hopefully I’ll be able to post soon.

Aaaaanyway, I’ve pretty much been writing music almost nonstop since then, in preparation for the upcoming performances of “Dance for a Small Room” with Cornfield Dance (see the Events page for more information on that). So here, with little fanfare, is some very new music that you will be hearing as part of the new piece. It’s super-new (less than 24 hours old!), so please forgive the fact that it cuts off, seemingly right in the middle. That will be fixed later. Enjoy!

UPDATE: Added an ending, sort of.

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Koven Works In Progress, music , , , ,

Some new music

April 8th, 2008

Sorry for the lack of posts in the last week or so–I’ve actually (ye gods!) been writing music of late. Ellen and I have been working on a new piece for a while now, and it’s taken an unusually long time to take shape. We’ll be workshopping a segment of this new piece with Cornfield Dance at an event at the Alvin Ailey studios in a few weeks (more details on that will be forthcoming as soon as I have them). For the time being, though, here is the music I’ve been working on for this piece so far. I’m not sure how I feel about this music yet–I like it, but in a “we’ve just met” sort of way. I think I need to live with it a bit more. Anyway, here are about eight minutes of what will eventually become “Dance For a Small Room.” Enjoy!

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Koven Works In Progress, music , ,

I’m back!

July 6th, 2006

OK, so clearly I’m about as efficient and up-to-date with writing this blog as I am with everything else, which is to say, not very. But look, here’s a new post! By me! Koven J. Smith! Oh, yeah. The performances at the Cunningham Studio went quite well, and I only stepped on one person’s eyeglasses during the rehearsals. So overall, I would say it was a success. The new piece for Ellen took several mysterious turns in it’s relatively short gestation period, and this is how it ended up. Harry Partch instruments+hot beats+scratchy recordings=me smiling. That is the equation.

The piece ended up being called “Get This To My Mother.” My dad laughed when I told him the title, because I think he assumed that it was another typical Koven J. Smith non-sequiter. Howeva, the title actually comes from the recording that you hear throughout the piece, which is a WWII radio broadcast of transmissions from the American troops stationed at Corregidor right before the island fell to the Japanese. I’m not entirely sure how this broadcast came to be, but it sounds as if it is a broadcaster reading decoded Morse messages as they come over the wire. The sound of that, of passionate messages being read in an entirely dispassionate way, really struck me. That in the midst of unimaginable chaos, this man just wants his mother to know that he was thinking of her. It’s not really that important that you know all of this context to enjoy the piece, but knowing this certainly makes it all a little richer for me. At any rate, I hope you like the piece, and happy 5th of July!

Koven Uncategorized, Works In Progress