Students

Sarabande

Bach Sarabande:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Bach-Sarabande1.mp3|titles=Bach Sarabande]

Single Part:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Single-Part-Bach-Sarabande-Lyras1.mp3|titles=Single Part Bach Sarabande Lyras]

Slow Rehearsal Recording:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Slow-Bach-Sarabande-Score-RR-Lyras3.mp3|titles=Slow Bach Sarabande Score RR Lyras]

Rehearsal Recording:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Bach-Sarabande-Score-RR-Lyras3.mp3|titles=Bach Sarabande Score RR Lyras]

Experimental Music Concert 2012 Documentation

The concert was a success! Despite having only a few short rehearsals, CMW students, alumni, teachers, and visiting musicians performed the four pieces beautifully to a sizable crowd. Listen/watch/read about them below.

PHOTOS (rehearsal and performance)

 

MUSIC

C.L. (Sakiko Mori, 2012)

This is music I wrote mostly in my head, hoping to make a scenery of sounds that’s there to live, being what they are and doing what they do, neither more nor less. Thank you to the performers for taking this music out of my head and giving it a life, helping it to grow.

Listen:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Sakiko.mp3|titles=SakikoCL]

Watch:

Shutter (Liam Hopkins, 2012)

This was a piece I originally composed mostly in the music program Logic. It was based on the idea of looping a recorded sound to create rhythmic texture. I recorded the sound of film camera’s shutter release and eventually added the violin/viola part you will hear.

In this live performance, the film camera is replaced by a digital camera, more capable of the fast shutter speeds used for this piece, and all the string parts are played by real performers and not looped by a computer.

Listen:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Shutter.mp3|titles=LiamShutter]

Watch:

Scratch (Liam Hopkins, 2012)

Scratch is a composition for string orchestra and field recordings. The strings section is in C major and based on a melody first exposed in the viola section. Underlying the strings part, there is texture of sounds recorded at a string restoration workshop. The piece is largely in sonata form with an interlude in the middle that could most accurately be described as a solo by the operator of the cassette tape players, which contain the recorded sounds from the field recordings.

Big thanks to Gus from Zachary S. Martin, Luthier Contrabass & Cello workshop in Pawtucket, for having us record sounds in the workshop.

Listen:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/LiamScratch.mp3|titles=LiamScratch]

Watch:



Creatures of the Night, for string orchestra and recorded sound (Forrest Larson, 2012)

Creatures of the Night, was inspired by a life-long fascination with sounds of the night. Sometimes the source of the sounds are known, but others have mysterious origins. Surely the critters who lived under my childhood bed made sounds. Maybe a few of them are in this piece. Thanks to Sakiko Mori and Community Musicworks for commissioning this piece, and the opportunity to work with some of the students. It has also been a joy to have participants from Institute for Musicianship and Public Service filling out the orchestra.

Listen:

[audio:http://www.communitymusicworks.org/medialab/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/ForrestCreatures.mp3|titles=ForrestCreatures]

Watch:

Rehearsal Recording:


MUSICIANS

About the composers

Forrest Larson

Composer, violist and electronic musician Forrest Larson has composed both

instrumental and electronic music. His work includes both strictly composed music and live improvised electronic music. Instrumental works include music for string orchestra, wind ensemble as well as pieces for unaccompanied violin, viola and cello.

He has had a life-long love of old pre-digital analog electronic instruments, and of collecting “found sounds” from both natural as well as urban landscapes. Analog devices such as oscillators, stomp box filters and shortwave radios are of particular interest.

Some of his works combine electronic sounds and live acoustic instruments. Other work includes electronic scores for abstract films and for solo dancer. His music has been performed locally at various venues in the Providence and Boston area such as the Pixilerations Festival, AS220, Firehouse 13, Mobius, Outpost 186, MIT, Brandeis University, and at the experimental music series CTRL+ALT+REPEAT in Providence, RI. Other performances have been at Carnegie-Mellon University, Washington and Jefferson University (PA), Mansfield University (PA), Southern Oregon University, in Ithaca NY and in Iceland. As a violist, he has played in the New England Philharmonic, Boston Chamber Ensemble, and other chamber groups. He also played violin in the Commonwealth Vintage Dance Orchestra, performed traditional Scottish fiddle music and was the musician for the Middlesex Morris Dancers.

Currently he plays analog electronic instruments with the quartet Sonic Sandbox.

Sakiko Mori 

Sakiko Mori is a musician and a piano tuner currently living in Providence. She mainly plays piano, keyboard instruments, and drums. Sakiko has collaborated with film makers, animation artists, and dancers, as well as performed and recorded music with many individuals and groups.  She co-runs the Experimental Music Lab at Community MusicWorks with Jori Ketten, CMW Media Lab Director.

Liam Hopkins

CMW student Liam Hopkins is a rising high school junior and enjoys playing the viola, composing music, and taking photographs.

 

Performers

Participants in the Institute for Musicianship and Public Service

Eve Boltax, Brianna DeWitt, Isabel Escalante, Joshua Burgos Gonzalez, Mari Lee, Taylor Morris, Lauren Nelson, Maggie Schenk, Jaunter Sears, Andrea Sisco, Jared Snyder, Bryan Susma

CMW Teachers and Mentors

Carole Bestvater, Jesse Holstein, Robin Gilbert, Laura Cetilia, David Lee, Sakiko Mori

CMW Alumni

Joshua Rodriguez, Sidney Argueta

CMW Phase II and Media Lab Students

Heather Argueta, AlexisMarie Nelson, Jose Baez, Angie Descollines, Liam Hopkins, Andrew Oung, August Packard, Paola Pena, Alana Perez, Matthew Ricci, Alondra Rivera, Ian Rosales, Natasha Rosario, Jaxine Wolfe, Jesse Woodbury, Emily Cabreja, Aiden Sullivan, Malachy Hopkins

 

 

Movie Making Recap!

Whew! The last 6 weeks are a blur. In this short time, we came up with an idea for a movie, created characters, wrote out scenes individually, and combined them into a script. We talked about the mood of each scene and created (and recorded) music on our instruments to score the scenes. Then we filmed the scenes, revised our script a little, created some new music to fit the revisions, and put it all together into our final movie… the Pillow Monster!!!! Enjoy.

Field Trip to Zachary S. Martin, Luthier Workshop

Today we went on a field trip to Zachary S. Martin, Luthier Restorations in Pawtucket.This is a workshop specializing in repair & restoration of contrabass and cello, by Zachary. (He is also known  as Gus, so we’ll call him Gus!) Gus showed us the workshop and gave us a basic but thorough explanation of how string instruments are made and repaired. He showed us all the different stages of the whole process.

Gus also told us that he always loved to play music and make things out of wood, and that’s how he became a maker of string instruments.
Then Gus let us do recordings in the shop while he worked on instruments. There are so many interesting sounds happening! He also introduced us to his friendly dog and let us all play his contrabass. The recordings we made will be used in our piece for the final performance on 6/2. Thank you very much Gus, for such an inspirational tour.
Here are some photos of our trip by Brandon L, and more photos on CMW’s Flickr in the slideshow below!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Movie Making, Day 1

Today marked the beginning of an epic adventure.

David, Juan (Jay), Gaby (Gabrielle), Anthony, Sienna, Jori, and Laura have devised a truly incredible movie treatment involving pillow monsters, snow, and (of course), music.

Backing up, class started with a conversation about the Media Lab for those who were new to the space. We looked at the Media Lab website, and checked out current and past Media Lab student projects, including work from the Experimental Music class and the Different Trains classes.

From there we started talking about narrative, and elements of narrative including:

– setting
– plot
– conflict
– characters
– point of view

We next watched some music videos, including Black Leaf’s The Cave Singers and Math the Band’s Four to Six. We talked about narrative (and a lot of other things) relevant to these videos, and then looked up some music on the Free Music Archive to see how the videos looked with music that had a different feel than the original soundtracks. We also looked at a simple home movie, Friday I’m in Love, as a way to talk about something that was shot almost exclusively in one location yet still held our interest.

We also checked out this awesome video, Birds on the Wires, which helped us think a little abstractly, and then the more literal Peter and the Wolf, in which we saw different instruments and sounds representing specific characters in a narrative.

After that we collectively wrote a kind of secret and very awesome plot for a movie we’ll be making – and scoring – as a class. Stay tuned to see how the project progresses!

 

Cage Centennial Concert

After many weeks of rehearsal, the Cage Centennial Concert at the Arsenal finally arrived.

In the words of one concert-goer:

“I’ve never attended a show of this type of music, or sound art, or whatever it is referred to as. It mostly had the same effect on me as meditating – forcing me to confront uncomfortable thoughts or acute self-consciousness. It was very different than listening to it recorded. I was really effected by the one with four or five percussionist around room, and the one with the guy reading cage writings and kids eating carrots and cereal and people playing checkers. Those kids were cool.”

Thanks to Laura and Mark Cetilia for organizing the show!

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