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  • Christian Klinkenberg’s Microtonal Opera “Das Kreuz der Verlobten”

    Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 09.10.35

    Christian Klinkenberg’s first opera Das Kreuz der Verlobten (The Cross of the Engaged) was premiered in February 2017. Western music theory operates within the boundaries of a 12 tone octave. By splitting up the octave into microtones however, a composer is given a broader array of possibilities. Possibly infinite possibilities. How to deal with infinity? Can the ratios of the harmonic series provide us with a framework? The composer also used graphical notation to make microtonality more intuitive for the musicians.

     

    In the presentation, examples of microtonal techniques will be explained with the support of video excerpts of the first performance of the opera.

    The story of the opera: Marie Solheid and François Reiff are probably the most famous victims of the High Fens (Hohes Venn), a huge moor area in the Ardennes: In the summer of 1870, during the fair in the village of Jalhay, Belgium, two young people meet. Soon, they are yearning the wedding. In January 1871, Marie and Francois make their way to Xhoffraix, Maries birth-place, in order to get her marriage papers. But then they’re surprised by a severe snowstorm. Weeks later, on March 22, 1871, the body of the 24-year-old Maria Solheid is found …

  • Sevish at EUROMicroFest 2017

    19th May, 20.30 E-Werk

    SevishEUROMicroFest are delighted to welcome Sean Archibald (AKA SEVISH) to EUROMicroFest 2017. He will present a talk explaining how he discovered microtonality and developed a unique genre influenced by 20th century electronica. Then he will talk about the software that allows him make this music, and some of the difficulties that it has been necessary to overcome.  He will talk briefly about the split-notes label which focuses on microtonal music in “popular” forms. He will be talking a bit, but playing a lot of examples, some with animations.

    Since his album Golden Hour, Sevish’s technique has included a dark art known as microtonality/xenharmonics. For short, we can call this xen. The xen aesthetic tries to achieve new musical ideas by making things more (or less) in-tune than normal music. This is done by tuning instruments to some tonal system far different to the 12-tone system we hear daily.

    Sevish’s influences are varied. 90’s rave and drum’n’bass. Mid-20th Century electronic music like Wendy Carlos and Raymond Scott. Smartypants dance music like μ-ziq, Squarepusher, Aphex Twin and all them lot. Gamelan. Minimalism and extremely repetitive music. And also music which has no repetition at all. Field recordings and all sounds in their entirety. Ambient and drone music. Video game soundtracks—with a soft spot for Sega Genesis FM sounds. Funk. 80’s club music. Modern day xenharmonic music such as Jacky Ligon, Brendan Byrnes, City of the Asleep, Elaine Walker and many others. Jazz. Ancient music. The traditional music of various peoples and other earthlings. Glitches. Breakcore and other -cores. Prog, space, or psychedelic anything. Hip hop and beats.
  • Michael H. Dixon, horn

    Michael H Dixon, horn player, gives a recital at EUROMicroFest 2017 on 19th May.  Earlier in the day he presents a free talk about composing in just intonation for the horn. Born in New Zealand in 1961 Michael learnt piano with his grandmother and horn with his father. Michael has held full-time positions with a number of Australian orchestras including Principal Horn in Queensland Philharmonic Orchestra. Michael is now plays regularly with the Opera Australia Orchestra, the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and the Canberra Symphony Orchestra. He has performed with most orchestras in Australia including the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Ludovico’s Band on natural horn. Chamber music credits include his ensemble LOCANA and Omega Ensemble. Teaching is an important part of his work with schools in Sydney including Inaburra School, tertiary institutions including Australian Institute of Music (AIM). In 2011 he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Creative Arts from the University of Wollongong after having previously been awarded an MPhil in composition from the University of Queensland and MMus in Musicology from Griffith University. Composition is a significant part of his musical life. He has written for a variety of ensembles along with songs and percussion works. A considerable number of his compositions include intervals from the harmonic series, extended just intonation. His music is published by Wirripang Pty Ltd (www.australiancomposers.com.au). In 2015 Michael launched CHIME Music College with a focus on exploring the language of music.

    He will be starting the recital with some of his own works:

    This Need Not Be I & II (5′) for horn
    Silver Art Upstream (4′) for horn
    Our Days (3′) for horn and electronics

    The compositions for the recital are essentially short songs. Melodies and presented with a backing track of the harmonies which are overdubbed. The harmonies are written using standard voice-leading and common tones to move between chords which are extended to 13-limit just intonation.

     

    Michael talk, beginning at 17h is called, Tuning the Horn: composing and performing in extended just intonation. Michael will outline three processes of writing for a standard (french) horn. The first is to simply write the music with an expectation that the performer can make the tuning adjustments required. The second is to provide some technical suggestions and the third is to prescribe all details of the techniques including valve slide adjustments along with anticipated embouchure or right hand adjustments. Michael will present examples of these approaches and demonstrate some of the harmonic possibilities the instrument can offer up to professional level playing without expectation of virtuosity.
  • Donald Bousted’s Video Works at EUROMicroFest 2017

    DONALD BOUSTED has 3 new video works being performed at EUROMicroFest 2017.  SHELL and SOFT are premiere performances.  GRASS-SAND-WOOD has recently been first-performed by solo horn player Michael H. Dixon in Sydney, Australia and he is travelling to EUROMicroFest 2017 to give the European premiere.

    SHELL and SOFT have common points of departure; they are part of a tranche of work which attempts to look ‘in detail’.  They wish to present their subjects – shells found on a Norfolk beach and a female body – with emotion, intensity and intimacy.   SHELL, written for bassoonist Chris Watford is in 72-div and SOFT, written for the flugel horn of Stephen Altoft, is in 48-div.  However, neither solo part is in strict equal temperament and both scores require the player to adjust ‘by ear’ to the pre-recorded parts.  These pre-recorded elements use Native Instruments’ Absynth and Kontake to generate a range of scales which mix equal and just intervals.

    SOFT features a 13-note scale and a 22 note scale which repeat at the minor septimal tritone (582.512 cents).  These are irregular scales based on a ‘softening’ of the equal scale divisions to their nearest just interval.  Also present is a scale based on 10 equal divisions of the 5:4 or just major third (i.e. steps of c.38 cents).  The competing tensions of closeness, stability and dissonance form the basis of the gently moving flugelhorn horn part which moves in and out of tonic focus.

    SHELL has a simpler design.  There are three scales ‘selected’ from the 72-et chromatic which the soloist explores through 5 short sections.  These contrast, in the accompaniment, with 3 scales based on equal divisions of the just perfect fourth.  Nine divisions at c55 cents; 6 divisions at c.83 cents; and 5 divisions at c.99 cents.

    GRASS-SAND-WOOD is a triptych of linked ideas.  It’s a personal exploration of looking close, both visually and aurally.  The presentation, however, is rather more expansive than in the shorter works SHELL and SOFT.

    When you lie in a field of grass and you slowly turn your head, each view is different.  Move a few feet and everything looks completely different again. The world looks and feels different from this near perspective: from afar, grass ‘looks green’; close, there is movement, there are things to see, a range of colours, insects, imperfections, anomalies and undulations.  In GRASS, I wanted to record the essence of the simple act of looking close and – in so doing – pay attention to the remarkable change in one’s state of mind which follows.  In SAND, the returning tide is recorded on a Norfolk beach; the speed is surprising, the result of a very gently sloping shoreline.  In WOOD, the act of looking close engages the imagination in a different way: we could believe that we are looking at majestic outcrops of rock or deserts of dried mud, but if fact we are simply looking close at the bark of trees.

    The music in GRASS-SAND-WOOD is made from polymicrotonal scales, mostly derived from equal subdivisions of just intervals.  In GRASS many scales are used but most derive from the equal subdivisions of the just major third and the just perfect 4th.  SAND only uses one scale – based on the subdivision of the sub minor tritone (551.316 cents).  WOOD uses a selection of the scales used in GRASS but with one or two additions, most notably divisions of the just minor third.

    The compositional approach is exploratory and improvisatory.  Images and sounds build together, one providing inspiration to the other.

     

  • Christopher Watford – bassoon

    Chris Watford opens EUROMicroFest 2017 at E-Werk on Thurs 18th May.  On Fri 19th May he is giving a free talk about the Microtonal Bassoon.

    Here’s something about Chris, his recital programme and a description of his talk:

    CHRISTOPHER WATFORD is a Boston/New York based bassoonist concerned with the expansion of the instrument’s capabilities. Praised for bringing “smooth varnish” (The Boston Globe) to his performances with a “clear consistent tone,” Watford works to advance the instrument’s relevance within varying contexts. As a specialist incontemporary music, his performances pursue the limits of extended techniques, microtonality, and electroacoustics, with a focus on extreme sonic identities and the exploitation of the instrument’s acoustic peculiarities. Watford has worked closely with many leading composers including Pierluigi Billone, Salvatore Sciarrino, Tristan Murail and Franck Bedrossian, and has commissioned and premiered numerous works exploring the range and potential of the instrument. He is a member of Boston’s acclaimed new-music sinfonietta Sound Icon and appears regularly with ensembles throughout New England and New York. Watford is a graduate of the New England Conservatory of Music and the North Carolina School of the Arts.

    Jason Eckardt
    A Compendium of Catskill Native Botanicals, book 2 “Wild Ginger” (2014)
    for solo bassoon
    Pierluigi Billone
    Legno.Edgre II. Edre (2002)
    for solo bassoon
    Liza Lim
    Axis Mundi (2012-14)
    for solo bassoon
    Katarina Miljkovic
    Drop (2008-2017)
    for bassoon and electronics

    The Microtonal Bassoon – a demonstration of the bassoon’s microtonal potential as well as an examination of key methods/issues of execution and notation. Drawing on music by Pierluigi Billone, Liza Lim, Joseph Maneri, and others, the discussion will explore the bassoon’s relationship to three specific microtonal systems: ¼ tones, 72 note, and “inherent”intonation (irregular scales derived from the instrument’s natural microtonal structure). The talk will address issues for both composers and performers on approaching microtonal writing for the bassoon.

  • Freiburg Gamelan Interview from 2015

    Freiburg Gamelan played a great concert at EUROMicroFest 2015.  Artistic Director, Donald Bousted took a few minutes out to interview one of the players, Franz Goldschmidt.  The interview includes clips of the Freiburg Gamelan’s rehearsal at E-Werk.

  • Microtonal Talks @ EUROMicroFest 2017

    Fr., 19 May, 2017

    2pm-6pm Microtonal Talks – FREE ADMISSION

    PREVIEWS TO FOLLOW

    E-Werk

    — 14h Agustin Castilla-Avila (SP/AT)

    The Microtonal Guitar  
    — 14h30 Christopher Watford (USA)
    The Microtonal bassoon 
    a more detailed explanation of the instrument’s microtonal functionality in the context of Chris’ concert the previous day – with demonstrations
     — 15h Stephen Altoft (UK/DE)
    Eighth-tones on the Flugel horn
    — 15h30 Tassos Tataroglou (GR/CH)
    The Microtone-Duplex is a trumpet with integrated keys for microtones, a slide
    mechanism attached to the tuning slide of the instrument and a second bell.
    16h00 Pause
    — 16h30 Casey Hale (USA/UK)
    19-div through its temperaments
    — 17h Michael H. Dixon (AUS)
    Tuning the Horn: composing and performing in extended just intonation.
    — 17h30 James Batty (UK)
    The Golden Ratio Project: James will introduce the album he’s currently working on for retuned acoustic piano and strings.
  • EUROMicroFest 2017 Programme

    E-Werk 

    Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany

    MICROTONAL AUDIOVISUAL INSTALLATION

    (running throughout) Ephraim Wegner, May 2017

     

    ––––Mon. 15th May,

    8.30pm INTRODUCTTORY CONCERT — FREISPIEL SPEZIAL

    E-Werk, Kammertheater

    Stephen Altoft (Trumpet) & Ephraim Wegner (Live Electronics)

    works by Todd Harrop, Casey Hale, Donald Bousted and others.

     

     

    FESTIVAL INFORMATION

    Concert tickets: 15€ / 10€

    Talks, Lectures und Presentations: Entrance Free

    Sponsors: Kulturamt Stadt Freiburg, Carl-Schurz Haus, Musik Gillhaus, Sparkasse Freiburg

    www.microtonalprojects.com

    www.un-sound.org

     

    EUROMicroFest, 18- 20 May, 2017 – Festival Programme:

    ––––Th., 18 May 

    8pm Pre-concert Talk: Stephen Altoft, Project Director and Donald Bousted, Artistic Director

    8.30pm Christopher Watford (USA), Bassoon + Stephen Altoft (DE/ UK), Flugelhorn

    works by Liza Lim, Jason Eckhardt, Katarina Miljkovic, Pierluigi Billone and Donald Bousted
     

    ––––Fr., 19 May

    2pm-6pm Microtonal Talks

    Composers, Musicians, Guests give an insight into the world of microtonal music

    Entrance Free

    8.30pm Microtonal with a beat

    Sevish (UK), Composer of microtonal electronic music

    Michael Dixon (AUS), Horn

    works by Michael Dixon and Donald Bousted

    ––––Sa., 20 May

    6.30pm Keynote Lecture: “Das Kreuz der Verlobten“- the story of a microtonal opera

    Christian Klinkenberg (BEL), Composer

    Entrance Free

    8.30pm duo Contour plus:

    Stephen Altoft (UK), 19-div Trumpet and Lee Ferguson (USA),malletKat and percussion

    Casey Hale (USA), 19-div Guitar, Jan F. Kurth (DE), Voice

    works by Casey Hale, Jan F. Kurth and Donald Bousted

    Followed by a microtonal Jam Session with Festival Musicians and Guests.

  • EUROMicroFest 2017

    Microtonal Projects and our partner un-sound are delighted to announce that the EUROMicroFest2017 Freiburg event will be take place from 18-20 May at E-WERK in Freiburg, Germany. It will focus on 72- division, 19- division and just tunings. It will feature the bassoonist Christopher Watford (USA), the hornist and composer Michael H. Dixon (AUS) and duo Contour (Stephen Altoft, microtonal trumpets, and Lee Ferguson, percussion) (GER) with guests vocalist Jan F.Kurth (GER) & guitarist Casey Hale (USA).Keynote Lectures will be given by electronic composer and YouTube artist Sevish (UK), as well as jazz musician and composer Christian Klinkenberg (BEL). As usual, there will be the opportunity for composers, musicians and instrument builders to give short about their work, for which a separate call will be made.

    To make a proposal to present to the MicroFest email: 

    mail.microtonalprojects[at]gmail[dot]com

  • EUROMicroFest 2017

    EUROMicroFest 2017

    2017 will once again be EUROMicroFest year!

    The way it works is that we organise our own event and co-ordinate with other microtonal centres and concert promotors to present a year-long focus on microtonality in Europe.

    Our own event is scheduled for 18-20 May, 2017 at E-WERK, in Freiburg, Germany – full details will be released as soon as funding is in place.

    If you are interested in being a Partner by organising a conference, festival or concert as part of EMF 2017 please do get in touch: info.microtonalprojects [at] gmail.com

    Microtonal Projects offer assistance with advertising through our internet presence and our extensive mailing list, as well as the opportunity to be part of a network, which can benefit – among other things – funding applications.

    Should you wish any existing events featuring microtonal music to be advertised on our Facebook page, please do send details.

    Our current Partners include the Ekmelic Society, Salzburg, Austria (Salzburg Microtonal Symposium) and the MiCROfest in Zagreb.

    For details of our event in 2015 see Forgotten Spaces.

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    Forgotten Spaces rehearsals: EUROMicroFest 2015