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JUN
Sounds New Composers – National Association of Composers/USA

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TRACKS:

1. Canotila: Stretching Toward the Sky – Mike McFerron (11:44)
2. Egon The Little Goat Takes Control – Jewel Dirks (2:37)
3. Single Fish – Leah Reid (3:54)
4. Mountains Beyond Clouds – Alan Goldspiel (6:52)
5. Stitches Upon Stitches – Indigo Knecht (5:05)
6. The Bat Flies at Sunset – Dalton H. Regnier (5:49)

7. Marimba Movie – Anthony Esland (7:41)
8. Illumine Divergence – Dinah Bianchi (7:52)
9. Prelude.Unreal.Jam.Latin.Scat – David Peoples (11:55)
10. Time and Space – Qingye Wu (6:59)
11. Invasion/Symbiosis III – Michael Boyd (6:03)

12. November Song – Richard Montalto (4:37)

13. Tough Love – Alex Shapira (5:41)

14. Parallel – Robert Fleisher (6:34)
15. In Memory of Joe Alexander – David Peoples (2:38)
16. Don’t We (Image Music VII) – Greg A. Steinke (6:26)
17. Emerald Meditations – Ursula Kwong-Brown (5:48)
18. For Dancer and Projection – Willyn Whiting (2:39)

NOTES:

Mike McFerron - Canotila: Stretching Toward the Sky
Von Hansen, claves
Canotila, according to Lokota Native American lore, are spirits that live in trees.

 

Jewel Dirks - Egon the Little Goat Takes Control
I'm always delighted with the uniqueness of non-human performances: Exact rhythms, precision speed, unique sounds, swirling around the ears...while still appealing to the human sensitibility of surprise and joy. My field recordings of rock sounds form the beginning and ending sections. The toy cymbal is in the middle, entering in reverse as a crescendo that starts imperceptibly. The melody comes from a looped portion of the rock click. Egon is a little goat that came to live on our farm with that has much larger goats, but he quickly gained control. They don't have horns, and he does.

Leah Reid - Single Fish
Nief-Norf 2019 Vocal Ensemble: Sarah Grace Graves, Mikeila McQueston, Elena Stabile - soprano;
Kerry O'Brien, coach, Andrew Bliss, artistic director
Single Fish is an aphoristic composition for three sopranos and hand percussion. The work explores the sounds and rhythms present inside Gertrude Stein's poem 'Single Fish' from "Tender Buttons." The piece is divided into four sections, each examining a subset of the text. The singers are directed to explore a vast repertoire of theatrical characters and singing styles. The composition begins with delicate whispered and spoken phonetic textures and slowly incorporates pitched material: ranging from honky-tonk piano imitations to lush melodic lines.


Alan Goldspiel - Mountains Beyond Clouds
Brittney Patterson, bass flute; Alan Goldspiel, guitar
1. Autumn Winds Whisper, 2. Gentle Rain Falling, 3. In a Sea of Stars, 4. The Time for Closure
Inspired by Haiku and its traditional syllable patterns of five and seven, Mountains Beyond Clouds portrays aspects of nature as a series of short movements with descriptive titles. The fives and sevens manifest in rhythmic patterns, meter, and melodic groupings or sets. The closure or caesura is a final movement signifying all things come to an end.


Indigo Knecht - stitches upon stitches
stitches upon stitches is a work for fixed media. As an electroacoustic composer, one of my favorite mediums to work in is fixed media, utilizing field recordings and my own recorded performances. Based on my most treasured textile, my baby blanket, I envisioned the work as a tapestry of my struggles from childhood to the present. As I look at my blanket, I can't help but focus on all the tears and damage accumulated over the years. There are stitches upon stitches from where my child self attempted to sew and patch the rips in the blanket. While it is an item I treasure dearly. I kept it with me for years, slept with it every night as a kid, and even brought it with me after moving out of my family's home; I still imagine the trauma I faced as a child through the years of wear upon the fabric. To me, this blanket is my biography of my 25 years of existence.

Dalton H. Regnier - the bat flies at sunset
Dalton H. Regnier, clarinet
One of the several unique things about Gainesville, Florida, where I relocated for my doctorate, are what's known as the Bat Houses. These structures on the outskirts of campus hold several bats, which emerge out of the houses during a 15-20 minute period after sunset. Due to the constant nature of the bats emerging from the houses, it has become somewhat of a tourist attraction and is something that nearly every local will see during their time in Gainesville. This piece is loosely inspired by the daily flights of these bats, with chilling multiphonics to add a mysterious texture, as well as playful motivic fragments and sweeping technical passages representing the bat taking flight.


Anthony Esland - Marimba Movie
George Barton, marimba; Siwan Rhys, piano
Marimba Movie is a single-movement concerto, originally composed in 2009 for marimba and woodwind ensemble and later arranged for marimba and piano. It's an exuberant piece in a broadly ABA structure, with rapid outer sections and a slower, mellower central part. The main theme reappears in various guises throughout, and the contrapuntal nature of the work creates a continuous dialogue between the instruments. This recording features George Barton on marimba and Siwan Rhys on piano and was broadcast on BBC Radio 3 in March 2019.


Dinah Bianchi - Illumine Divergence
Kayla Noelle, flute; Robert Conway, piano
In dedication to her daughter and flutist, Kayla Noelle, this piece was commissioned by Jacqueline Fornari to commemorate the completion of Kayla’s M.M. Degree from UNCSA. While creating this work, Bianchi focused on infusing the music with ambient sounds, rich harmonic language, extended techniques, and beautiful melodies that would highlight the many facets of flute performance. It was her ambition to create music that would showcase a high level of artistry and craft, while evoking the essence of change and growth through a type of reflective evolution. As this work celebrates new uncharted beginnings, the title, Illumine Divergence, seemed apropos to her as illumine means: to illuminate; or to light the path; to hold a hopeful connotation, while divergence depicts the change or metamorphosis within the change. Bianchi felt it was imperative to emphasize the beauty of change and progression not only present within the music, but to overtly symbolize the connection of the progression of time and achievements with accomplishments and events yet to be discovered, hence concluding the work with a sense of lingering mystery.


David Peoples - Prelude.Unreal.Jam.Latin.Scat
Kleidi B, voice; David Peoples, piano and percussion
In this newly composed work, a jazz vocalist, pianist, and percussionist perform with live processing. There are elements of fixed notation and improvisation. The work is set against three movements. Prelude: voice and agogo with delays sets the mood for a calming space. Unreal: well realness is there to trigger and interact (drum machines, live percussion, synthesizers, and the scatting talents of the vocalist). Jam: ends it all with a broken jam session.


Qingye Wu - Time and Space
Qingye Wu, piano
Time and Space is a piece written for electronic and acoustic piano. The piece is inspired by the feeling of contemplation during the silent night-time. I imagined myself standing alone in an empty field, starring at the endless dark sky full of stars, taking journeys in time: the past, this moment, and the future. Being like an observer, while the time changes, the scenes and the feelings in my memory come in and out, just like the waves of the sea.

Michael Boyd - invasion/symbiosis (III)
invasion/symbiosis (III) is an opportunity to Create A Gem of an Electro-acoustic work. One begins realizing this work by recording sounds in and around their home including, but not limited to, automobile traffic, 'nature' and mushrooms cooking. Nearly all aspects of how these recordings are edited and arranged are governed by chance operations. The individual realizing the piece is instructed to not modify sounds (instead accept them as they are), and to not fear silence. This work is featured on the SEAMUS Electroacoustic Miniatures 2012: Re-Caged recording; this version is a different, slightly longer realization of the work.

Richard Montalto - November Song
Sheri Falcone, clarinet
In 1987, I composed a work for unaccompanied trumpet, Autumn Song. Many years later I decided to revise the work. An electronic accompaniment was created and various changes were made to take advantage of the performance capabilities of the clarinet. The result is the current work, now renamed November Song. The accompaniment comprises a digital manipulation of a recording of the clarinet part.


Alex Shapira - Tough Love
Ben Gimm, Sequoia - piano
Alex completed this work in September 2022. It evokes an awkward conversation between generations with different ideals and approaches to life. Can love and understanding coexist with the tensions, the stress and even anger, which are amplified by not really listening to each other? Can we disagree, but still respect each other, and even have fun together? At least once in a while? Alex used polytonal elements to create the sensation of 'not being on the same page' and to add color to this generational dialogue, that doesn't allow a dull moment. In addition, dramatic accents and polyrhythms diverge, creating grotesque effects at times. Unlike other works for two pianos, where matching is emphasized, differentiation is more important in this case, and can be achieved by selecting performers with different backgrounds or performing styles.


Robert Fleisher - Parallel

This recorded artifact from 1968 was first heard (backwards) on the reverse side of its 7-inch tape reel. Judicious editing in 2021 (reducing the original duration by roughly one third) preceded its 2022 premiere during the third annual Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) Earth Day Art Model international telematic festival. In 2023, Parallel was heard during the VU3 Symposium (Park City, UT) and more than a dozen NACUSA events in Alabama, Georgia, and North Carolina. Most recently, Parallel was selected for the 40th SEAMUS conference (2024), where it was heard during the "Living Room Music" session at NYU's Music and Research Laboratory in Brooklyn. The title alludes to both the "negative image" of music heard backwards and the composer's evident fondness for archaic voice leading in his youth.

David Peoples - In Memory of Joe Alexander
Joe Alexander, narrator
Joe Alexander was a lifelong member of NACUSA and one of the first members of the Sounds New chapter - and was present at our first mobile installation in Mississippi. The last time I saw Joe, he was working his tail off to host a concert at MUW. Regrettably, he passed shortly after that concert. This memorial piece is a soundscape using a voicemail from Joe to the composer and a ton of delays and other electronic processing.


Greg A Steinke - Don’t We (Image Music VII)
Roger Cole, clarinet in A
This is a short unaccompanied work originally written for inclusion in the clarinet anthology, Etudes for the Twenty-First Century Clarinetist Project, (A Festschrift for the 64th Birthday of Barney Childs) commissioned by Phillip Rehfeldt. The listener should just enjoy contemplating “... there are no such things as ....”


Ursula Kwong-Brown - Emerald Meditations
Hrabba Atladottir, violin I; Dan Flanagan, violin II, Ellen Ruth Rose, viola; Leighton Fong, cello
Emerald Meditations was inspired by a trip to Thailand in which I visited the Emerald Buddha, a legendary statue in the Wat Phra Kaew temple in Bangkok. This piece describes my experience that day, beginning with the frenetic activity of vendors and tourists outside the temple walls, followed by a moment of silence on entering the temple grounds. Next, I found myself immersed in a stream of people proceeding past a series of shimmering golden stupas towards the main temple. On the temple steps, chaos reigned as everyone struggled to remove their shoes, and guards wrapped scarves around short-sleeved foreigners. On crossing the threshold, I was greeted by another breath of silence. From atop a great pedestal, the Emerald Buddha sat looking down upon us, the statue smaller than I had imagined, yet more commanding than I had thought possible. Around me, worshippers kneeled and prayed, quietly touching their heads to the floor. I am not Buddhist – in fact, I waver between agnostic and atheist - but as I sat there, I could not deny that I, too, found a momentary peace in the Emerald Buddha’s presence.


Willyn Whiting - for Dancer and Projection
For Dancer and Projection (2020) was first written as an accompanying track for Danielle Willis' video dance work Celestial Bodies of the same year. It was produced in a collaboration between the University of North Texas, where I was studying at the time, and Texas Woman's University. Currently it is a stand-alone piece for stereo fixed media. The sound source for this piece, a drone of five sine tones, is decidedly simple and abstract, much like the direction of Willis' choreography. I then granulated this sound-source, taking inspiration from the particle effects that she projected onto her dancer. A simple heartbeat like pulse persists throughout the work. Like many of my pieces it started out as a graph paper sketch with contrapuntal layers of activity.

COMPOSERS:

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Mike McFerron is professor of music and composer-in-residence at Lewis University and he is founder and co-director of Electronic Music Midwest. McFerron’s music has received critical acclaim and recognition. His music has been performed by the Remarkable Theater Brigade (Carnegie Hall), the Louisville Orchestra, the Civic Orchestra of Chicago, and Cantus among many others.


He serves on the board of the directors for the Metropolitan Youth Symphony Orchestra and is a past Chair of the Executive Committee for the Society of Composers, Inc. McFerron’s music can be heard on numerous commercial recordings as well as on his website at http://www.bigcomposer.com.

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Jewel Dirks Although educated in music, I’ve spent most of my life in psychology, first as a counselor for the seriously mentally ill and then teaching brain anatomy and neurology. I am surrounded by the Wind River Indian Reservation, and am retired, old, and arthritic. However, my consuming passions in life remain roaming the wilderness areas with my pack goats and composing music from natural sounds. I am nonbinary, which has given me the gift of perceiving the world in an unusual and humorous manner. All my music is made from sounds that are around me which I have recorded--coyotes, irrigation pipes, birds, donkeys.... I try to explore the many different ways that a sound can be heard through various sampling tools and effects. I've discovered that in making music I better appreciate the world in which I live.

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Leah Reid is a composer, sound artist, researcher, and educator, whose works range from opera, chamber, and vocal music, to acousmatic, electroacoustic works, and interactive sound installations. Winner of a 2022 Guggenheim Fellowship, Reid has also won the American Prize, first prizes in the International “New Vision” Composition Competition, the KLANG! International Electroacoustic Composition Competition and Musicworks’ Electronic Music Competition, Sound of the Year’s Composed with Sound Award, the International Alliance for Women in Music’s Pauline Oliveros Award, and second prizes in the Iannis Xenakis International Electronic Music Competition and the International Destellos Competition.

She received her D.M.A. and M.A. in music composition from Stanford University and her B.Mus from McGill University. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Music Composition and Technology at the University of Virginia.

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Alan Goldspiel is a composer and guitarist who has performed world premieres at New York’s Carnegie and CAMI Recital Halls and been featured on NPR radio stations from coast to coast. Holding graduate degrees from Yale University and The Hartt School, Dr. Goldspiel is Professor of Music at the University of Montevallo. He is the recipient of both the Louisiana State Arts Council Artist Fellowship Award for artistic excellence and the Alabama State Council on the Arts Artist Fellowship Award for artistic excellence. Currently, serving as Vice-President of the National Association of Composers/USA, his music has been featured at the International Low Flutes Festival, Research on Contemporary Composition, College Music Society, National Association of College Wind and Percussion Instructors, North American Saxophone Alliance, and International Clarinet Association.

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Indigo Knecht is a composer, tubist, and educator fascinated with the challenges people face as they navigate this world. Through a synthesis of contemporary classical music and rock & roll, Indigo explores themes such as environmentalism, mental illness, self-realization, and advocacy for diversity, equity, and inclusion.

As a nonbinary lesbian, Indigo places great emphasis on LGBTQIA+ advocacy in their music, creating works that both educate and emotionally speak to listeners. In addition, Indigo works to uplift the voices of their contemporaries with marginalized identities through their role as Programs Director in Bowling Green State University’s Tau Beta Sigma Alumni Association, an organization devoted to empowering women in music.

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Dalton H. Regnier  Described as “captivating” and “expertly blended,”  the music of Dalton H. Regnier (aka Dalton Ringey) explores themes of consumerism, environmentalism, nature, and the human psyche. He has been commissioned by various musicians and ensembles, such as the University of Delaware Wind Ensemble, Hope College Wind Ensemble, trombonist Nathaniel Lease, and clarinetist Julia Lougheed. He has also collaborated with several other chamber and large ensembles, including Sputter Box, Quince Ensemble, icarus Quartet, loadbang, and University of Delaware Symphony Orchestra.

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Anthony Esland is an award-winning composer from the UK. He studied composition and organ performance at Cambridge University, conducting at the Guildhall School of Music, and has an MA in composing for film and TV from the National Film and Television School.

Anthony has written over twenty scores for films, TV, and games, and composed concert music for a variety of soloists and ensembles. His choral music has been performed by choirs such as the BBC Singers in the UK, KC VITAs and Lux in the US, and his chamber music has been broadcast on BBC Radio 3.

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Dinah Bianchi, the award-winning Michigan composer, seeks to create vibrantly exciting music; music that is sublime, beautiful and with the communicative power that drives the creative spirit of all artists. She is well versed in a variety of musical genres with a portfolio that includes music for orchestra, concert band, string ensemble, chamber ensemble, solo works, as well as electronic music. Well received both nationally and internationally, Bianchi’s music has been performed in concert halls located in Europe, Asia, Canada, and the United States. Recently, she completed a recording session for “Chasse Noir” with the Janáček Philharmonic Orstrava in the Czech Republic. The recording was released in August of 2022 and is anticipating an album release with PARMA in the Spring of 2024.

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David Peoples It’s from Flowery Branch, Georgia, surrounded by nature, that all of David Peoples' compositions begin before being released into and around the world. From April 2021 to May 2022, he presented recitals featuring 100+ composers in all 50 states through the National Association of Composers, Music Teachers National Association, Research on Contemporary Composition Conference, and Electrophonic Concerts. David also actively composes new music with recent performances by soloists, Luna Nova Music Ensemble, Argento Chamber Ensemble, Contemporary Chamber Players, West Point Band, and other performance groups. Additionally, he has enjoyed jazz premieres by the Jazz Surge with Randy Brecker, David Sanchez, Rufus Reid, and Gary Foster.

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Qingye Wu was born into a musical family in China. Qingye received BM and MM degree in composition from the Cleveland Institute of Music, and DMA in composition from College-Conservatory of Music in University of Cincinnati.
Qingye has composed over 30 works, including symphonies, chamber music, vocal pieces, solo instrumental works, electronic music, and film music. Many of her compositions have been commissioned by musicians in the United States and Europe. Her works have received more than ten international and domestic awards in China, the United States, Austria, Italy, and other countries. Two of her electronic pieces were featured in the Society of Composers, Inc. 2020 Summer Student Mixtape and Ablaze Records Electronic Masters.

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Michael Boyd is a biracial South Asian-American composer, scholar, and experimental improvisor. Currently Professor of Music at Chatham University, he holds graduate degrees from the University of Maryland (DMA, composition) and SUNY Stony Brook (MA, music theory). Boyd's music embraces experimental practices such as installation, multimedia, and performance art, and has been performed in a variety of venues throughout the United States and abroad. As a scholar he has focused on recent experimental and avant garde practices, particularly Roger Reynolds's music. Boyd has published articles in Intégral, Perspectives of New Music, Tempo, and Notes, as well as review essays in Computer Music Journal, Popular Music & Society, and American Music.

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Richard Montalto holds a Doctor of Music Arts degree in Composition from the University of North Texas. Montalto has composed over 250 works, with performances at Carnegie Hall, Symphony Space in New York, the Montreux Jazz Festival, the New Orleans Contemporary Arts Center, the International Computer Music Conference, the Society for Electro-Acoustic Music in the United States, the National World War I Museum, numerous academic conferences, and throughout the United States and Europe. He has served as President of the Southeastern Composers’ League, the College Music Society Southern Chapter,
and the National Association of Composers, USA Mid-South Chapter. 

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Alex Shapira studied composition in Romania, Israel, and the United States, and received a comprehensive scientific education. After pursuing a successful high-tech career, Shapira is now refocusing on composition and joined NACUSA/Texas in 2021. He is developing his authentic musical language at the intersection of East and West, balancing artistic intuition and scientific rigor. The Piano Sonata In Search of Lost Meaning was recorded by Hagai Yodan in 2022, and his Mallet Quartet Nostalgia was performed the same year by the Heartland Marimba Ensemble in St. Paul MN as part of their World Premieres Tour. Shapira lives in Dallas TX with his wife, likes to hike, jog, and meditate, and enjoys modern art.

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Robert Fleisher’s music has been heard throughout the U.S. and in more than a dozen other countries, and released on nearly as many record labels. His acoustic compositions have been praised as “eloquent” (Ann Arbor News), “lovely and emotional” (Musicworks), “astoundingly attractive” (Perspectives of New Music), and “ingenious” (The Strad); his electroacoustic works have been described as “fascinating” (Fanfare), “endearingly low-tech” and possessing “a rich, tactile texture” (NY Times). Author of Twenty Israeli Composers and a contributing composer and essayist in Theresa Sauer’s Notations 21, Fleisher graduated with honors from the University of Colorado and earned his M.M. and D.M.A. degrees at the University of Illinois, studying with Salvatore Martirano, Ben Johnston, and Paul Zonn. A native New Yorker, he is Professor Emeritus at Northern Illinois University.

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Dr. Greg A Steinke is retired, former Joseph Naumes Endowed Chair of Music/Art and Associate Dean of Undergraduate Studies, Marylhurst University, Marylhurst, Oregon; Associate Director, Ernest Bloch Music Festival (‘93–97) and Director, Composers Symposium (‘90–97) (Newport, OR); served as the National Chairman of the Society of Composers, Inc. (1988–97). Composer of chamber and symphonic music and author with published/recorded works and performances across the U. S. and internationally; speaker on interdisciplinary arts, and oboist specializing in contemporary music. Dr. Steinke is a past national president of NACUSA (2012-19) and currently serves at-large on the NACUSA National Board and the NACUSA Cascadia and NACUSAsf Chapter Boards.

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Ursula Kwong-Brown is a composer, sound designer and arts technologist, originally from NYC but now located in Los Angeles. Described as “atmospheric and accomplished” by The New York Times, her work has been performed in the United States, Europe, and Asia in diverse venues including Carnegie Hall, le Poisson Rouge, Miller Theatre, the Manhattan Movement & Arts Center, the National Portrait Gallery and the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. Honors include ASCAP and NACUSA awards, a Berkeley Symphony Composer Fellowship and grants from Chamber Music America and the Sloan Foundation. Ursula received her B.A. in Music & Biology from Columbia University, and her Ph.D. in Music Composition & New Media from the University of California.

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Willyn Whiting is a Canadian composer of both acoustic and electronic music. His works feature diverse stylistic trends and personal conceptualizations of metaphor and orientation. Over the years he has written for both professional and emerging ensembles including the Bozzini Quartet, Del Sol String Quartet, the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra, the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, and RE: duo. His music been featured at such festivals as WNMF (CA), MANTIS (UK), REF (IT), SEAMUS (US), EMM (US), PMF (US), NEMF (US) and the SPLICE Institute (US) and Canadian workshops such as Orford Academy, Montréal Contemporary Music Lab, and Domaine Forget de Charlevoix.

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