SELECTED SOLO
PERFORMANCE PIECES
Songs of Incantation
Ritual composition based on Ancient Greek text
for masked flute performer and tape
Songs of Incantation is a music-theatre composition exploring the relationship
between rational and irrational language use, between what can be encompassed
by verbal language and what can only be communicated with raw sounds. The
primary texts used in this composition are in Ancient Greek. Using Ancient
Greek text frees the composition from the restrictions of semantic meaning,
allowing the words to exist in a sound world where every vocalisation has equal
importance: a whisper, a moan or a scream. The theatrical context of the work
examines the musical nature of language in ritual.
ZAUM-1
The emergence, artificialisation
and alienation of language, represented in sound and movement.
Based on the work of Velemir Khlebnikov, a Russian futurist poet.
for performer, slides and tape
ZAUM-1 uses poetry by the important Russian cubo-futurist poet Velemir Khlebnikov. Khlebnikov believed
strongly in the almost 'magical' power of vocal sounds both to signify and even
affect the world in a way beyond signification. The work begins in a state
without language, only sounds. Through a developmental process a connection is
made between certain movements and vocalisations. By the end of the work, words
and sounds initially stepped in primordial and ritual significance, are
stripped of meaning and are presented as obsessive gestures.
Meanwhile on the Tower . . .
word play for tape, performer and slides
The menace of the text: words by Edward Gorey,
fragmentation by Zachar Laskewicz.
for performer, slides and tape
Meanwhile on the Tower. . . is a composition in which the text itself becomes
the musical material. The performer, using a selection of various communication
systems including sign language, gestures and the use of images, attempts to
tell a story which becomes increasingly hard to follow as the text fragments
are repeated and the story begins to make less and less sense. The disintegration
of the text questions the purpose of the language, and the controlling function
of the musical form suggests the existence of 'musical' structures that we are
not even aware of when approaching discourse.
He presented it with a length of string. . .
Or possibly an umbrella. . .
On which she flung herself over the parapet. . .
ZAUM-2
Traditional performance language turned inside-out in a Russian futurist
cabaret piece.
Based on the work of Alexei Kruchenykh,
a Russian futurist poet.
for performer, slides and tape
This work is influenced by the zaum poems of
Alexei Kruchenykh, a Russian futurist poet who
rejected all forms of traditional artistic communication and suggested that a
radical zaum language was the only possibility
for contemporary art. In ZAUM-2 traditional meanings are stripped from already
existing gestural and vocal models and new and
ridiculous 'meaning systems' are presented in their place. The performer
becomes trapped in an extremely limited performance language, evoking the
restriction of verbal communication.