Oliver Searle: Microscopic Dances [download]
Computer typeset score (119pp) saved to PDF for immediate download.
Computer typeset score (119pp) saved to PDF for immediate download.
Computer typeset score (119pp) saved to PDF for immediate download.
Microscopic Dances won in the Amateur or Young Performer category of the British Composer Awards. The piece uses digital technologies to provide the opportunity for disabled and non - disabled young musicians to play together in an integrated ensemble. The judges said: “ There is nothing microscopic about the ambition and impact of this courageous work”.
Instrumentation:
Flute
Saxophone - Alto/Baritone Bassoon
Horn in F Trumpet in Bb
Percussion 1 - Toms (3), Triangle, Vibraphone, other untuned percussion
Percussion 2 - Vibraphone, Marimba, other untuned percussion
Violin 1 Violin 2 Viola
Cello Double Bass
Digital Orchestra (10 players): Keyboards, iPads, Notion, Handsonic, Drumkit
Score in C
Duration: ca. 20 minutes
Commissioned by NYOS and Drake Music Scotland, for NYOS: Futures and the Digital Orchestra, with additional funding via an Athenaeum Award, from the Exchange at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.
First performance: August 12th, 2017, at the Tom Fleming Centre, Melville College, Edinburgh
“Music psychologists tell us regularly about the fantastically complex series of procedures that your brain goes through on its way to performing music.
We must interpret pitches, rhythms, dynamics and articulations from a page of music, itself a type of complex language, then begin to realise these through a number of miniscule muscle movements, making decisions about the attack and sustain of individual notes, before moving to the next one.
With or without sheet music, we are looking at others around us, perhaps focusing on a conductor/director, using our ears to decide when to join in with other musicians, altering our pitch by the smallest of microtonal increments and balancing our sound to produce a musical performance.
These tiny movements and processes (many of which are only barely noticeable, or often completely invisible to the human eye), seem to me to be a number of microscopic dances between our neural processes and motor skills. “ Oliver; 3rd July, 2017
There are six Micoscopic Dances presented here:
Jimp Jitterbug
Infinitesimal Tango
Peerie Passacaglia
Molecular Hornpipe
Minuscule Mosh
Skiddlie Jig