Canzon in Double Echo: for ensemble and electronics

Allbwn ymchwil: Ffurf annhestunolCyfansoddiad

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Canzon in Double Echo: for ensemble and electronics. Lewis, Andrew (Arall). 2022. CE Composers Edition.

Allbwn ymchwil: Ffurf annhestunolCyfansoddiad

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Lewis A. 2022. Canzon in Double Echo: for ensemble and electronics. CE Composers Edition. [Cyfansoddiad].

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TY - ADVS

T1 - Canzon in Double Echo

T2 - for ensemble and electronics

A2 - Lewis, Andrew

N1 - Provisional publication date May 2022

PY - 2022/9/6

Y1 - 2022/9/6

N2 - At the turn of the 17th century, composers in Venice were perfecting many years of experiments in spatial music. Their sonic laboratory was St Mark’s Basilica, and the most famous and accomplished of them was Giovanni Gabrieli. Canzon in Double Echo (a title borrowed from Gabrieli) uses electronics to pursue similar aims. As with Gabrieli’s work, the echoes in Canzon are not mere repetitions, but transformations – we hear each musical object from different multiple vantage points in time and space. In doing so our perception of them changes, sometimes dramatically.In many ways, this musical and sonic phenomenon echoes our human experience of time. Calling past events to mind is not simply to repeat them, but to perceive them through the powerfully transformed echoes of memory – from another place, another time. The musical echoes in Canzon take many forms: answering or echoing phrases, sonic echoes in the imaginary space created by loudspeakers, the echoes of fragments of Gabrieli’s original, echoes of musical memories from elsewhere, echoes of echoes, double echoes… In the final section of the piece, all the music that has gone before is echoed again, but in a changed state. It is as if the sound of praise that echoed through St Mark’s Basilica now echoes beyond its walls, down through the centuries, and then beyond even the confines of space and time, into eternity.

AB - At the turn of the 17th century, composers in Venice were perfecting many years of experiments in spatial music. Their sonic laboratory was St Mark’s Basilica, and the most famous and accomplished of them was Giovanni Gabrieli. Canzon in Double Echo (a title borrowed from Gabrieli) uses electronics to pursue similar aims. As with Gabrieli’s work, the echoes in Canzon are not mere repetitions, but transformations – we hear each musical object from different multiple vantage points in time and space. In doing so our perception of them changes, sometimes dramatically.In many ways, this musical and sonic phenomenon echoes our human experience of time. Calling past events to mind is not simply to repeat them, but to perceive them through the powerfully transformed echoes of memory – from another place, another time. The musical echoes in Canzon take many forms: answering or echoing phrases, sonic echoes in the imaginary space created by loudspeakers, the echoes of fragments of Gabrieli’s original, echoes of musical memories from elsewhere, echoes of echoes, double echoes… In the final section of the piece, all the music that has gone before is echoed again, but in a changed state. It is as if the sound of praise that echoed through St Mark’s Basilica now echoes beyond its walls, down through the centuries, and then beyond even the confines of space and time, into eternity.

KW - music composition

KW - electronic music

KW - sonic art

KW - chamber music

M3 - Composition

PB - CE Composers Edition

ER -