OFFSHORE (2012–13)
for brass quartet, 2 percussionists, electronics and video (60 min.) View Score excerpts
co-created with Monica Duncan
commissioned by the International Contemporary Eensemble as part of the ICElab 2013.
OFFSHORE is an environment, a passage between land and water, between fixed ground and open sea. Taking the audiovisual elements of nautical communication (e.g. beacons, sonars, buoys) as a starting point for image and sound, the piece establishes a crew on stage with its hierarchies: four brass players and two percussionists—a naval marching band. Similar to the negotiation of ship and crew between fixed ground and open sea, the musical score shifts between fixed and open notation; sometimes it is forcefully rigid, sometimes it leaves it up to the performers to pace the music, sometimes it pushes their actions into chaos. The crew also negotiates their own terrain, from a unified naval marching band to a ship of fools-a group of passengers without a captain, guideless, with a multitude of possible routes. In OFFSHORE, the hierarchies of the crew on stage are influenced by the musical structure and vice versa. These hierarchies shift between militaristic rigor and carnivalesque disorder: they dominate, they erode, they regroup and they collapse. OFFSHORE is a danger zone: It can be painfully loud and painfully fragile, a stage between two stages, a transitory passage in an ever-evolving expedition.
International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE)
Martin Hiendl, music
Monica Duncan, video and staging
William Brent, video/sound engineer
Nicholas Houfek, lighting
Ross Karre, production
Performers:
Peter Evans, trumpet
Gareth Flowers, trumpet
Jason Sugata, horn
Max Siegel, trombone/tuba
Ross Karre, percussion
Levy Lorenzo, percussion
__________
New York, USA
December 10th, 2013 | OpenICE at Roulette