ICMC 2010

Dear ICMC Composers/Artists/Researchers/other worthies:

Thank you so much for your interest in ICMC 2010, and thanks especially for your submissions. We had an enormous response: over 1,700 entries. Obviously, this means that there were many, many excellent submissions that we were regrettably not able to program.

A special thanks to all of our adjudicators, and the chairs of the various sub-categories:
Rob Voisey—60×60
Stephanie Loveless – Alternative Events
Marie Evelyn –Analogous
Joel Chadabe—Ear to the Earth
Sarah O’Halloran—Installations
Michael Barnhart—Piece Plus Paper
Phoenix Perry—Red Light
Steven David Beck—Video

Below you will find a list of first-round acceptances for the ICMC 2010 Edition Red Conference in the following categories:

  • 60×60 – List of Accepted Works
  • Concerts and Additional Programming – List of Accepted Works
      Includes the following categories:

    • Alternative Events
    • Ear to the Earth Concerts
    • Installations
    • Video Installations [please see “special note” below]
    • Piece and Paper Concert
    • Red Light (after hours) Concerts
    • Video Concert
    • Other Conference Concerts (6 in all)
  • Papers/Demos/Posters – List of Accepted Works

Please Note: Acceptances are listed under primary (or first) author/composer only. Please check by title and submission number.

Special Note Regarding Installations:
The listed works are accepted to the conference. However, owing to a serious illness of a crucial faculty member at Stony Brook, the situation regarding installations has become quite complicated. We will be contacting you and working with you individually to determine the feasibility of mounting particular pieces. Please note that because of the changing situation, installation artist should expect to supply all equipment.

Please note that you will need to be a conference registrant in order for your piece to be played. We regret that on-line registration will not be up for a few weeks, but in the meantime, prices can be found under the registration heading on the conference website: icmc2010.org/registration.html.

All people programmed at the conference will be receiving an email from the Conference shortly. We will then need you to fill out a form online with:

  • Confirmation of your intention to register and attend the conference
  • Precise timing of your work
  • Precise indication of required forces, both instrumental and technical
  • 150 word bio
  • 200 word program note
  • 150 bio of the performer if you are providing your own

We will post exact information about which piece is on which concert shortly. This will be a preliminary determination, and may have to be adjusted depending on timing and tech needs of works.

Once again, thank you all for your interest in ICMC, and especially for your creative and scholarly work. You are, obviously, the point behind the organization and the conferences. We look forward to seeing you all in May!

Your conference co-hosts:

Meg Schedel
Dan Weymouth

2010 – MISO MUSIC PORTUGAL "25 YEARS"

 MMP25anos_email 10.jpg

2010 – MISO MUSIC PORTUGAL “25 YEARS”

http://www.misomusic.com/25years/Home.html

In 2010 Miso Music Portugal celebrates its 25th anniversary.

To celebrate its 25 years of relentless activity, we will have some special commemorating events: from April 13 to 17 at the Instituto Franco-Português in Lisbon – “SEMANA DE ABRIL”/ “A WEEK IN APRIL” – and on June 11 and 12 at the Centro Cultural de Cascais (in Cascais) – “DIAS DE CASCAIS”/ “CASCAIS’DAYS”.

These two particular events in no way represent the whole spectrum of activities undertaken by Miso Music Portugal throughout the year, hence revealing the structural and vital work that it has continuously dedicated to fostering Portuguese musical creation and the Portuguese new music: dissemination and international promotion; investment in musicological research and in new technologies applied to music and performance; commitment in the preservation and communication of Portuguese musical heritage (both physically and digitally); long running devotion to the increase of Portuguese new music CDs and scores’ releases and distribution; assuring and reinforcing the presence of Portuguese pieces in concerts’ line-ups; developing several pedagogical projects through Art and drawing on new audiences’ awareness; developing the basis and projects for the exchange of composers and performers at both national and international levels.

The 2010 edition of the MÚSICA VIVA FESTIVAL – taking place from September 10th to 25th in Lisboa at the Centro Cultural de Belém/ Belém Arts Centre, the Jerónimos Monastery, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and the Instituto Franco-Português – will undoubtedly play a key-role in the celebration of this anniversary.

We would be honoured to have you with us for these events, so we can achieve our goal of giving voice to a significant number of Portuguese contemporary composers once more.

See you in April!


“The AIC has found Música Viva, and all other projects of Miso Music (including their performing groups and recordings etc.), to be of the highest artistic merit. Furthermore they are run at the most professional organisational level. In the context of the international contemporary music scene Miso Music has an exceptional record of achievement.”
John McLachlan, Composer and President of the Association of Irish Composers, August 2008


“It is with great pleasure that I write about the work of Miso Music Portugal – (…) I have always been very well received and followed up as part of a festival which is internationally known as one of today’s most original contemporary music events, using new technologies for musical creation purposes. For their human and professional capacities, I recommend without reservation the work of Miso Music Portugal.”
Pedro Carneiro, Performer, Composer, Artistic Director and Chief Conductor of the Portuguese Chamber Orchestra, September, September 2008


“Over its many years of existence and despite their limited resources, MISO must certainly be the organization which has promoted and supported the most, music and Portuguese composers both in Portugal and abroad. This support and promotion must go on in the best interest of Portuguese Culture.”
José Luís Ferreira, Composer and Professor at ESML and ETIC, October 2008


 “A week in April” – April 13th to 17th, 2010

In April 2010 Miso Music Portugal is throwing a week-long “party”: presenting concerts, children-oriented performances and the launching of new CDs. Furthermore, Miso Music Portugal is happy to highlight two world premieres: two collective works composed in a surrealist “cadavre exquis” way by more than 75 Portuguese and foreign composers, all of whom we had the great privilege and pleasure of working with over these last 25 years. Together, these composers will commemorate this important event by offering one musical miniature of music each. Several have already confirmed their attendance.

All performances at “A week in April” will be recorded and aired through RTP Antena 2 (National Music Radio).

April 13, 2010

“Contos Contados com Som”/ Sound Stories – Electroacoustic Theatre
For children
Performances at 10:00 a.m., 11:30 a.m., 2:30 p.m. and 4:00 p.m

April 14, 2010
Release of the CD “Nuno Pinto – Clarinete Solo”

Concert by Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble; Pedro Neves conducting


April 15, 2010
Release of the CD “Electronic Music Vol.IV”
Concert “Electronic Music with the Loudspeaker Orchestra”
“Mãos na Massa do Som”


April 16, 2010
Concert by Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble; Jean-Sébastien Béreau conducting

Performance “Ficções Sonoras Eróticas”


April 17, 2010

Performance by Miso Ensemble


All these events take place at the Instituto Franco-Português in Lisbon.

“Cascais’ Days”, June 11 and 12, 2010

June 11 and 12, 2010
In June, it will be Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble’s turn to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Miso Music Portugal as well as the 50th birthday anniversary of composer Miguel Azguime; the highlights will be the concert by the ensemble’s soloists entirely devoted to his work and the concert presenting the premiere of a collective work (the 3rd “cadavre exquis” of this season). This work features more than 20 composers, such as Jonathan Harvey, Philippe Leroux, Clarence Barlow, Masataka Matsuo or Tadeusz Wielecki.

June 11, 2010

Open Reading Sessions by the Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble

Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble’s Soloists – Miguel Azguime’s 50th Anniversary

June 12, 2010
Concert by Sond’Ar-te Electric Ensemble; Pedro Neves conducting

Música Viva Festival 2010

Celebrating Miso Music Portugal’s 25 Years

While Miso Music Portugal celebrates a quarter of a century’s existence, Musica Viva Festival could not fail to be another great moment to demonstrate its strength and stamina.
As a key event for innovation, circulation and exchange of ideas and aesthetics, especially devoted to Portuguese composers and to the connections between music and technology, the Musica Viva Festival 2010 will bring us some of the most experienced and respected performers today, who will present pieces by renowned composers alongside those of young composers.
The Festival line-up will boast about 20 concerts and more than one hundred musical pieces as well as activities such as installations and audience awareness events. It will take place at the Belém Arts Centre, the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, the Jerónimos Monastery and the Instituto Franco-Português from September 10th to 25th, 2010.

MISO MUSIC PORTUGAL * CENTRE FOR MUSICAL CREATION
www.misomusic.com * www.mic.pt * misomusic@misomusic.com
Rua do Douro 92 * Rebelva * 2775-318 * PAREDE * PORTUGAL * Tel:+ 351-21.4575068 * Fax: + 351-21.4587256

Xenakis exhibition in NYC

Gone but not, not forgotten

Posted by Steve Layton

PhilipsPavilion1958-450

An illegal immigrant with a civil engineering degree in Paris,
fugitive from his native Greece for his WWII resistance activity (for
which he nearly died, and lost one eye) Iannis Xenakis (1922-2001) eventually found himself working for the famed architect Le Corbusier,
first as one of any number of assistants but soon enough as
collaborator. Yet he was always drawn above all else to the need to
compose music. Nadia Boulanger, Arthur Honneger, Darius Milhaud –all
were either rejecting or rejected. It wasn’t until Xenakis stumbled
upon Olivier Messiaen that he found a teacher that saw past the
inexperience and willfullness:

I understood straight away that he was not someone
like the others. […] He is of superior intelligence. […] I did
something horrible which I should do with no other student, for I think
one should study harmony and counterpoint. But this was a man so much
out of the ordinary that I said… No, you are almost thirty, you have
the good fortune of being Greek, of being an architect and having
studied special mathematics. Take advantage of these things. Do them in
your music.

Thrown
almost at once into the hotbed of post-WWII modern music, surrounded by
the likes of Karlheinz Stockhausen, Pierre Boulez, Jean Barraqué and
Pierre Schaeffer, yet still working for Le Corbusier, Xenakis soon
found ways to integrate his love of mathematics and architecture with
new musical forms based on points and masses, curves and densities,
later even physics and statistics — but somehow always tied to a deeply
Greek historical and humanistic root system.

In the late 1950s Le Corbusier received a commisson to create the
Phillips Pavillion for the 1958 Brussels World’s Fair. Le Corbusier
made a preliminary sketch, but it was Xenakis who would develop and see
the structure through to completion. Not only that, Xenakis (along with
Edgard Varèse) would create music to inhabit the space, complementing a
multi-projection visual program by Le Corbusier himself.

While only standing a short time, the echo of that space, event and
music would continue well past 1958; it was constantly mentioned in all
the books while I was a university student, and the pieces made for it
have become “classics” in the field of early electronic music, still
listened to and loved today. (There’s a small documentary on the Pavilion that you can see on YouTube.)

The reason I’m telling you all this? Because from January 15th through April 8th, The Drawing Center in New York City is hosting the show Iannis Xenakis: Composer, Architect, Visionary. And in conjunction with this show, the Electronic Music Foundation is sponsoring a number of Xenakis events, including on the 15th a virtual recreation of the experience of the Phillips Pavilion at the Judson Church (55 Washington Square South).

We’ve asked The Drawing Center’s Carey Lovelace and the EMF’s own Joel Chadabe to give us some background and info, which follows just after the jump:

EYECATCHING AVANT-GARDE MUSIC
Iannis Xenakis:  Composer, Architect, Visionary, The Drawing Center, NYC, January 15-April 8
By Carey Lovelace

At a premiere New York alternative art
spaces, The Drawing Center, Iannis Xenakis: Composer, Architect,
Visionary, starting January 14 , will feature the first exhibition ever
devoted to the visual aspect—which was substantial–of the legendary
avant-gardist’s work.  Not only was Xenakis a pioneer of the use of
advanced mathematics as an organizational compositional tool, he
created captivating working studies and sketches that charted out his
ideas before their translation into notation or into electronic or
computer works.
This visual acumen resulted from his
background.  Originally trained as an engineer, in the 1950s, Xenakis
worked with the Swiss-French Modernist Le Corbusier.  Indeed,
currently, he himself is gaining almost cult-status among architects.  
(The combination of music and building is au courant— the noted Stephen
Holl designed the Stretto House in 1989, based on Bartok’s Music for
Strings, Percussion and Celeste.)

The Drawing Center show, which runs
through April 8, is drawn from nearly a hundred documents housed in the
Bibliotheque Nationale de France’s archives, placed there shortly
before Xenakis’s death in 2001.
The show was curated by scholar Sharon
Kanach, translator and editor of his works, and Carey Lovelace, a
New-York based critic and curator.  (The two met as young American
composers in Xenakis’s class at the Sorbonne, where he taught until
1989.)    The visual strength of the studies, sketches, tables of
calculations, Cartesian grids, and conceptual renderings, are so
beguiling that art connoisseurs might mistake them for gallery
works–even though they were simply casual preparatory documents.  .

To give a sense of the music resulting,
 Ipods will be provided with recordings of the works on view; 
“listening stations” will allow viewers to experience two works,
Pithoprakta and Mycenes Alpha, in conjunction with the a running
display of the visuals that generated the sound.
And yet, there is more!  Among the array of
public programming accompanying this exhibition is colloquium, Xenakis
Past, Present and Future, Jan. 28 through 30 at the Brooklyn
Polytechnic, slated for attendance by dozens of musicians, scholars and
specialists from around North Amercia.  It will focus on the impact of
this polymath’s mathematical paradigms, architectural contributions,
utopian speculations, musical advances, and rigorous approach.
 Earlier, a “triple gala” on Jan. 19 will inaugurate the Xenakis
Project of the Americas, devoted to the propagation of the legacy of
the Roumanian-born, Greek-bred, Paris-based composer.  The event, an
invitational benefit, will also launch of the book Performing Xenakis,
edited by Kanach.
………………………………………………………………..

LE POEM ELECTRONIQUE

January 15, Judson Church, NYC

By Joel Chadabe

In conjunction with The Drawing Center
exhibition, a series of public performances featuring the multi-faceted
work of composer/architect Iannis Xenakis will take place in New York
City.  The series will launch on January 15 with the virtual-reality
rendering of the Philips Pavilion created for Brussels 1958 World’s
Fair.

As I
view it, the Philips Pavilion, designed by Iannis Xenakis for the
World’s Fair in Brussels in 1958, is a remarkable building. Xenakis was
working for Le Corbusier, at that time one of the most widely
celebrated architects in Europe, who had received the call from Philips
asking him to design their pavilion. He responded, “I will build you a
poème électronique …” and he delegated the design to Xenakis. As
Xenakis told me in a conversation in 1994, “They asked Le Corbusier to
design something and Le Corbusier asked me to design something. At that
time, I was very much interested in shapes like hyperbolic paraboloids,
things like that; and so I organized them to form a shell in which we
could produce sounds and images on the walls. I did the designs and I
showed them to Le Corbusier and he said, ‘Yes, of course.’”



The
multimedia spectacle, organized by Le Corbusier, that took place within
the pavilion was also remarkable. The World’s Fair opened in May 1958.
About 500 people entered and left the pavilion every ten minutes or so
every day, accompanied by Xenakis’ Concret PH, a short piece composed
with the sounds of smoldering charcoal. The main event consisted of
Edgard Varèse’ Poème Electronique, with the sounds of percussion,
electronic tone generators, machines, and the human voice played
through 400 loudspeakers, with the sounds moving through space
according to ’sound routes’; and colored light forming a background to
Le Corbusier’s projected images of monkeys, shellfish birds, religious
objects and art from different cultures, parts of the Eiffel Tower,
Laurel and Hardy stills, nuclear explosions and other war imagery, and
buildings from different countries. The result was a total experience
of sound and image, a total immersive environment with the space of the
Pavilion hosting the musical and visual materials as integral parts of
the architectural design.



On
January 15th At Judson Church in New York, EMF is re-creating the
multimedia spectacle that was organized by Le Corbusier in 1958.
Audiences will hear Xenakis’ Concret PH as they enter and leave. They
will see the projections chosen by Le Corbusier accompanied by Edgard
Varese’ Poème Electronique. The show, with a duration of less than 15
minutes, will take place every half hour, at 7:30, 8, 8:30, 9, and
9:30pm. Admission will be $1 per show per person.