Daniel Goode

Composer & Performer

Tag: music

Daniel Goode Featured on Make Music New York Blog!

Check out this feature of Daniel Goode on MMNY.

Click here to go to MMNY

SoHo Garden Walk

“Composer Daniel Goode will lead participants, aided by a neighborhood map and suggested drumming rhythms, through a portion of Soho’s cast iron district. Using their hands, the group will drum on the hollow cast iron fronts of the “best” buildings. The piece ends when a select number of buildings have been turned into musical instruments.” MMNY Winter Feature!

Toy Symphony, Part 2, for voices and gamelan by Daniel Goode

This work for chorus and gamelan (percussion) ensemble was begun during the Iraq war, and continues to reflect concerns for the earth and for how we organize our society. The toys disarm, the voices speak our minds, the gamelan glues it together.

Re-post of Bergmann and Diamond’s Opalescent

Harvard students dancing to “Opalescent” by Elizabeth Bergmann and Jody Diamond, performed April 9th, 2009.

Interesting collaboration

Interview with Daniel Goode of The Flexible Orchestra

This article first appeared in Roulette written by plwn on October 20th, 2011. Click here

Daniel Goode, composer-clarinetist, is founder of the Flexible Orchestra – a new concept in orchestral sound, co-director of the DownTown Ensemble, member of Gamelan Son Lion. On November 9th, Goode brings his Flexible Orchestra to Roulette.
 
 
 
ROULETTE: Tell us as about the work you’ll be doing at Roulette.
DANIEL GOODE: The Flexible Orchestra is my baby. “Invented” in 2003-04. My project is to reform the modern symphony orchestra. Its inflexibility of instrumentation first of all. Yeah, you can add the occasional electric guitar or schmoosaphone, or something, but basically you’re stuck with the old tried and true format. So I made up a paradigm format that expresses the meaning and intent of the orchestra in my opinion (I theorized a bunch in the Letter From Vienna): one large section of one family that gives the “massed” or “chorale” effect (like the strings in the trad. orch.) but DOESN’T always have to be strings. LIke ten trombones, or twelve cellos, or eleven flutes, or now seven (this year five) accordions. THEN, you need smaller numbers of other contrasting and supporting instruments: like 2 clarinets plus 2 double basses, plus piano (to go with the 10 trombones). Given my budget and my rehearsal loft size, I picked 15 instruments as the approximate total (give or take a few) and made those distributions and choices. All this is documented with programs scores, mp3s and pix at the Flexible Orchestra website
http://eamusic.dartmouth.edu/~larry/flexible_orchestra/
Go there and have a ball! I found a really talented young conductor, Tara Simoncic, who has made each concert an artistic success. All work (including arrangements which we happily do) must be commissioned since each combo is unique.

BUT, here’s a fabulous serendipity: we have a large section of trombones or flutes or cellos or accordions as a core to the group, so we can revive pieces written for multiples of these instruments that don’t get many “second” performances because of the difficulty of assembling such. So a ’60′s piece for multiple trombones by Fred Rzewski (“The Last Judgement” – a spin-off of the trombone solo near end of M’s Don Giovanni), Lois V Vierk’s “Simoom” for 8 amplified cellos, Bill Hellermann’s 1976 “to brush up on” for 6 cellos, Guy Klucevsek’s “Spinning Jennie” for 7 accordions, Henry Brant’s classic 1932 “Angels and Devils” for 11 flutes. So we plug these in to a program  of all new pieces by famous or not famous wonderful composers. (See programs on web site). Then, I’m so proud of this: because it’s an idea not a specific group of people the orchestra can spring up anywhere where these combos can be assembled. So next July 14 in Wroclaw, Poland (that’s “Vrotzswaff”) we are funded to do a concert using the first format, 12 cellos-flute-clarinet-trombone, with local Polish composers and some of our American repertory.

R: Are there working artists today with whose work you identify, or rather, who do you consider to be your peers?
DG: Well, the composers I like are, as you might expect, the ones we program on the Flexible Orchestra: Barbara Benary, Kamala Sankaram, Bill Hellermann, Guy Klucevsek, Jordan Nobles (Vancouver), Christian Wolff, Philip Corner, Skip LaPlante, Jim Fox, and on and on (see programs).

R: What are some defining characteristics of the musical scene you would fit yourself into? What elements of your scene differentiate it from what has come before, or what is happening now?
DG: I’ve been on the scene in NY since 1971 (not counting grad school at Columbia in the ’60s. I’ve always been in the avant-garde or whatever the new music scene is or was from the world of Cage, minimalism, world music (or new music for gamelan ensemble—Gamelan Son of Lion). Did lots of solo clarinet (extended and circular breathing techs) at XI and Roulette—of West B’way days. Started with Bill Hellermann the DownTown Ensemble in 1983 because there were NO repertory groups of the very new (only Composer X’s Ensemble–you know who I mean) type of thing existed based on the one-man show art exhibits. So we dissented from this as non-communitarian art. Our friends and us had no ensemble taking care of our needs. New groups, high-technique conservatory trained groups not composer-performer groups which we were, added to the scene in the late ’90s. I think they are more conservative than we are at the DownTown Ensemble. Our ties go back to the original revolutionary composers of the late ’50s through the ’60′s etc. I recently deplored the world of the Stone which lets the composer shoulder the financial burden of the concert—which is where we all began. I titled my two little articles “We’ve Been Demoted” (see attachment).

R: What was the last music you listened to?
DG: Just finished listening to a CD from Australia called “Ecopella.” Fun madrigal and folk-song style chorus on original pro-environment lyrics and music. Why not! But New York Kool it’s not! Last night I went to the new Freddy’s Back Room to hear my friend and sometime collaborator, Bonnie Barnett, improvising experimental vocalist playing with bassist extroadinaire, Ken Filiano. Great. She also did a set at ABCnoRio with guitarist extraordinaire, Anders Nilsson.

R: Is there an event or experience that led you to start in experimental media?
DG: In the late ’60′s I discovered myself on experimental clarinet. And started really enjoying playing other’s new music scores in ensembles.

R: Who do you see as instrumental in your development as an artist?
DG: No one person to point to in going into new music. The scene in Southern CA at UCSD was hot with composers, performers, ideas flowing all over the place. Then continuing in Soho in the ’70′s.

R: What is interesting to you about your own work?
DG: I’m really pushing all my inner resources now. Continuing instrumental orchestra music with my Flexible Orchestra pieces since 2004. Now adding opera and political cantata type of music. I’m working on my “One-Word Opera.” And my first opera, “French Arithmetic.” Working on a second one-act: “Puppet Dance, and Opera-Ballet.”

R: Do you do other things aside from music?
DG: I’m writing more about music now, and in a personal voice. Published by Frog Peak Music, and in occasional issues of the blog, “Deliberately Considered.” I’ve got my own blog now, https://danielgoode.com/

Marvin Taylor comments on my Mahler post

On Oct 13, 2011, at 4:03 PM, Marvin J Taylor wrote:

For the blog entries: What do you think about this: Are the well-intentioned attempts to see these things in Mahler’s works just a continuation of the very problematic critical debates between early Wagner–of Judenthum in der Musik–Hanslinck, and Brahms of the 19th c.? Did Bernstein get duped by falling into this line of critical thought just as Hanslick and Brahms missed the shift in Wagner’s thinking in the later works after he gave up on the ideas put forth in Oper und Drama? (Or, conversely, did Bernstein so strongly believe in the cult of the artist that Wagner promoted–and the Nietzsche so rightfully despised–that he over Romanticized everything about Mahler?)

On the other hand, as a student of lit., I’ve never much worried about what authors (of any kind) say about their work. The Intentional Fallacy rears its Fafner-like head. Instead, I tend to see these kinds of engagements as Heidegger did: that is, as dialogues with the past, even if it was only two weeks ago. It’s even more important to located the discussion in the present the further back you go in time with the referent.

Of course, Mahler often does use rather simplistic “programmatic” tricks in the music. I’m thinking, for example, of the off-stage horns of the Apocalypse at the end of Sym. no. 2. This probably enables people to see programmatic moments where they might or might not exist, such as at the end of the 9th.

Then, of course, there is the matter of the performances. Regardless of what Bernstein thought about the work, his conducting of the pieces is so stellar that I’d almost rather not know his ideas. This is esp. true given the live performances with the Koncertgebow. Those recordings are devastating to me on a purely musical level.

How’s that for opening up a can of worms?

All best,
M.

Daniel to Marvin, re: Mahler

This is great. I’ll have to defer to you, I’ve never read Oper u.Drama. I thought the T.Thomas film really was pretty much a part of the over-Romanticized thing. I’m not really interested in the idea of the end of those movements (9, 10, Das Lied) AS a death trip. Yes, ending ending ending. OK, already! got it.  In performance (I have to write this down at some point), the actual effect in real time, actual halls, is to make a subtle, long segue between the hyper-mood of his material, and the everyday world with coughs and squeaks and traffic, letting you down slowly, fading out on you, putting you on your feet going out with the memory of what was the musical high points for  you. It’s very vivid and unavoidable at any performance. What he meant is almost superfluous, though why not add it in, if we knew it. Ironically it was those three works that were premiered posthumously, so any composer/audience colloquy couldn’t happen. This does spook me: the posthumous performance of his masterpieces with no commentary from him possible.

The Mahler Second is part of the theatricallizing of his inner/outer world, so yes, simplistic, but we forgive him (intentional fallacy again) because he’s recovering child-hood memory, so simple=simple. I honor Bernstein’s performances, and glad he decided to internalize Mahler. I think the 9th with Koncertgebow and Bernstein was one of the films I saw in the Mahler and Film series last season. Or was it another symphony? Or was it Claudio Arrau? Bernstein did the 4th, yes, that was it. There was a German television film of Kindertotenlieder with Fischer-Dieskau that was overwhelming partly because the simple, stark, black and white staging of it was like German wood-cut. Our PBS type things need to hang their hat on something simple, so the conductor’s get short-circuited. Bernstein was a serious thinker in a way, just not in these contexts.

Yes, I think contemporary discussions, of the program note variety, just continue ad nauseum the 19th Century. I don’t have a theoretical take because M’s music is still a visceral agent in my life. I like Adorno’s book on Mahler. I’ve turned it into a palimpsest. You’ll get it some day for the Fales!! Yes, to a blog entry. I should read Op. u. Dr. I might need a crib. Hope I recognize where he departed from himself as you mention.

Thanks for putting your thoughts down on this. For me., it’s a perpetual itch, I keep on scratching at, but it never calms down.
Best,
Daniel

Henry Brant’s Textures and Timbres: An Orchestrator’s Handbook.


(2009 by Carl Fischer in Frog Peak Newsletter #17).

It’s always good news when the craft and art of orchestration is brought up-to-date by a significant composer-practitioner. If you think about it, what an orchestration book is—is a labor of love for a composer, who might better spend the time actually composing and orchestrating. Such texts have been, traditionally, odd combinations of lists of important trivia (like the ranges of instruments) and real hard-earned practical experience in the use of these instruments, sometimes with innovative ideas from the composer’s own compositions (viz. Berlioz). Brant’s handbook, begun when he was a teenager in 1932, is an outlier in some ways. It doesn’t do either the basic manual task, or a grand synoptic view of contemporary orchestration. It is an unusual book. There is nothing quite like it.

You can count on three fingers such recent examples of composer-written orchestration books. Walter Piston’s useful, compact Orchestration (1955 by W. W. Norton and Company), Larry Polansky’s New Instrumentation and Orchestration: An Outline for Study (1986 by Frog Peak Music). This one is a course outline with all the important categories, but not the examples or commentary. And now Henry Brant’s “handbook.” One might use a fourth finger for books—neither manual nor guide—like composer Robert Erickson’s 1975 Sound Structure in Music, an important analytic study of timbre and texture in contemporary music. Other specialized books for jazz or avant-garde and experimental music are not by important composers, though some are certainly useful guides for students.

The hard demographic truth is that few young (or even any) composers unless in a privileged conservatory setting, are going to have the full palette with which Brant quantizes his results. For example Brant often lists: 18 violins, 2 bass clarinets, contrabass clarinet, and so on. Where will you find these outside of a well-stocked conservatory, or in a movie city with movie budgets to hire any number and types of instrumentalists?

So trying and testing Brant’s examples is going to be out for most of us. We’ll have to trust Brant until and unless our own use of his precepts fails in some way. Particularly in the “American system,” it can be hard to test orchestration ideas because there is limited access to expensive instruments. With aggressiveness, a young student composer in a conservatory might have the moxie to bring together these instrumentalists, cajole, or otherwise lean on enough levers of instrumental power to try out Brant’s extravagant combos—or even invent his or her own. But most students will not be able to do this.

By definition, orchestration books are “how-to” manuals, practical and not theoretical guides. This is hugely true of Brant’s handbook. In his manual, published posthumously in 2009 a year after he died at 95, he makes absolutely no mention of the significant 20th Century advances in acoustics (like formants), or psychoacoustics (like auditory streaming).  He doesn’t analyze the noise-to-pitch continuum, nor even, perhaps most significantly, give us any inkling of his vast knowledge about spatial separation of instruments and instrumental groupings, and how this would affect orchestration. That he omits any mention of his self-proclaimed life work, spatial music, seems strange at first. But read on! There is, I believe, an explanation.

But (a big but!) this doesn’t make Brant’s handbook any less important. It is vastly so! My message is this: whatever I say as critique of his handbook, you still must read it if you use orchestral instruments in your music.

Let’s take two case studies from Brant’s handbook:

CASE STUDY # 1: THE UNISON

Composers, arrangers, and transcribers create unisons among instruments as routinely as Moliere’s character speaks prose and is amazed when told that he has always done so. Brant would have us be a little more amazed and reflective when we assign the same note or line to two or more instruments. Normally it’s crude practicality that governs the choice of unison: we have just these instruments available when we either need or think we need a unison sound. Sometimes it’s as simple as: let’s give a player something to do for a while. The only question we need ask ourselves in this instance is can they do it. If we’ve thought about unisons theoretically at all, it might be with these things in mind:

—The Balinese practice of tuning pairs of instruments just off the unison, which gives that famously brilliant shimmer to Balinese gamelan music.

—The not-quite unison texture called heterophony found in religious chanting and much experimental music. In the former it is pitch and rhythmic discrepancies of “untrained” voices on the same melodic line—which we usually find beautiful and moving for complex reasons, musical and cultural.

—The fascinating psycho-acoustical study that found the “just noticeable difference” in frequency which can turn a perceived unison of two tones into the experience of two separate tones.

Enter Henry Brant with Chapter 9: Unisons. Actually let’s briefly step back to another account of unison texture, that by Walter Piston in his 1955 orchestration text. He gives wonderfully subtle analyses of D’Indy, Beethoven (his 9th), Stravinsky (Symphony in Three Movements), and Debussy examples. But Brant at the head of his chapter, using his own created examples (as are all of his examples) immediately puts us off balance by exemplifying the misuse of “accidental” unisons; then he proceeds to “passing unisons” and their cost to “harmonic balance.” The whole discussion is on a level of acoustic detail that must be unique in the published literature. One of his distinctions is between the “expressive unison” with hybrid tone-quality, and the “functional unison” with “nondescript character…well-blended…” Altogether he has six categories—of great interest and observational clarity. Chapter 10 continues the discussion logically with “octaves and double octaves.”

But unison pedagogy keeps cropping up in other chapters as well:

—“Three-way Unisons: Definite Pitched Percussion and Piano” (p. 156) in Chapter 33, Piano as an Orchestra Instrument. This whole chapter is an important contribution in looking at our familiar piano in an analytic way as just another member of the  orchestra. Take the middle range of the piano—the range of the solo and jazz repertoires. This is the least valuable for the orchestral piano; the outer ranges (low and high) are most valuable, says Brant. This could be a modernist tick of his, but probably is statistically true, since piano in the orchestra is a modernist addition.

—Harp and harpsichord unisons (p.165) in Chapter 34: Pizzicato Timbres. Brant is persuasive in treating all pizzicato instruments as the useful category, bypassing the usual division into different “families” of strings and of keyboards.

—“A Single-Line Melody Played by One or More Unison Sections” (p.196) warns that full string sections tend to cancel out the nuances possible to solo string performers—a really good lesson for many of us composers who want whole string sections to “fiddle” as would a solo folk fiddler.

—Unison strings (p.213). This long, 26-page Chapter 38 is devoted to Bowed Strings. It is the counter-part to the pizzicato chapter. At the end he gives a formula for the best unison groupings for delineating “outer parts.” He also claims that unisons of muted and unmuted strings are “non-mixing and of poor resonance.” I’m not sure I would accept such a generalization, though I don’t discount it either.  Since strings are the core of the modern symphony orchestra, his account repays close attention. It contains, for example a discussion of “fullness and thickness.”

This “thickness” (which also means harmonic thickness or density) is a characteristic of most of the examples composed by Brant for this book. It could be said that this is a stylistic property of his music in general. To coin a word: his “choralizing” textures are something you can notice throughout his oeuvre. The advantages of composing your own musical examples in a book of this kind are obvious: first it saves time scouring the literature for exactly the right orchestral moments to use from thousands of compositions of many eras. Second, the examples can be tailored exactly to the point at hand, without extraneous distracting musical contents. On the other hand, examples sought out in great music impress the point more forcibly because their whole message is served by inspired orchestration. But Brant’s composed examples are not routine either. By about a third of the way through the book, one notices they are becoming ever more detailed, longer, complex and rich in sonic qualities. It wouldn’t be wrong to actually play many of them as short compositions on a concert program. He almost encourages this in his important Foreword—which has his many disclaimers of what the book doesn’t do—when he says: “Examples of three bars or more are regarded as expressive [compared with shorter ones he calls functional], indicating one or more complete musical statements.”

Bowed Strings (chapter 38) gives us a chart (p.190) of how different sized string sections should ideally apportion the number of instruments among the five sub-sections: violins through contrabasses. He says that centuries of experimentation have standardized these proportions so that progressively fewer low instruments are needed: because “longer vibrations” (he must mean wavelengths) of the lower pitched strings “need fewer players for the sound to carry adequately.”

Unison mixing of strings and winds (p.222): “To produce an ‘enriched’ string timbre, the wind component should seem to ‘disappear’ in the total amalgam.” This is done my marking the winds at a lower dynamic than the strings. And by omitting wind vibratos. The issue of independent dynamic markings for different sections of an ensemble moving together in time is fraught. Some would argue that the conductor should make micro adjustments to the dynamics in the context of performance. Brant and many other modernist and even late Romantic composers choose for very knowledgeable reasons to do this kind of micro-marking themselves.

There are probably many more references to “unisons,” (see Appendix 4: Expanded Unisons) throughout the text, as well as musical examples using unisons. This is not an easy book to use. There is no index to look up “unisons.” We should all write the publisher, www.carlfischer.com, to ask for a new edition with an index—and be sure to add, when you write, that the musical examples should also be indexed throughout the book wherever they show the important concepts (like unisons) at work.

CASE STUDY # 2: “GROUPS OF CLOSELY RELATED INSTRUMENTAL TIMBRES.”

Perhaps Brant’s boldest idea, one most dismissive of convention, is this disassembling of the traditional categories of  “instrumental families:” woodwinds, strings, brasses, percussion, and their recombining in new categories. Here is his text on wind instruments, verbatim:

Wind Timbre 1: flute family, clarinet family, bassoon (top octave only), strings (in harmonics only), horn (restricted range, fiber mute only), pipe organ (flute stops only)

Wind Timbre 2: muted trumpet and trombone, horn (hand-stopped or metal mute), all double reeds, clarinet family (bottom fifth only), pipe organ (reed stops only), accordion

Wind Timbre 3: open horn, trumpet and trombone “open in hat” or equivalent, muted tuba (all in restricted ranges), all saxophones (top two octaves only)

Wind Timbre 4: open trumpet, flugelhorn, trombone, tuba (full range), horn (full high range), all saxophones (full range)

In an important addendum to this list (p.54), he gives his idea of what the model or prototype instrument is for each of these four groups, respectively: flute, oboe, horn, trumpet, the latter two without mutes.

As you can see, he mixes up traditional families, even including strings in Timbre 1. His justification for doing so is repeatedly shown in examples. A lot of the reasoning has to do with what I might call “thick” and “thin” tone qualities. And also, complexly, with overtone structure, but he never explains anything acoustically, so this has to be our own analysis.  Another favorite word of his for certain textures is “nasality.” In the body of the text he does exquisitely detailed annotations for these textures which account for the different strengths and loudnesses of the instruments in their various registers. We can see even in the outline above that he uses mutes (e.g. “fiber mutes”) as a tool to match brasses in their groupings with other instruments.

This classification of wind timbres is ear opening if you can imagine them. And counter-intuitive simply in the idea of breaking down hard walls among the traditional “families.” You may want to resist, as I did at first, because of his orchestral abstractionism: for example, he combines string harmonics with muted horn (Wind Timbre 1).  I wanted to rebel because of the concrete gesture needed to play these sounds puts them in different worlds. Perhaps Brant, as a world-class orchestrator who made recorded sound tracks for films, thinks only of the sound coming at a distance to the listener: a massed, blended sound from within the orchestra coming through large theater speakers. I, on the other hand, picture his combos as if I were sitting listening to a live ensemble.

Another reservation to Brant’s re-configurations occurred to me when thinking about an audience’s experience of a large orchestra. Imagine, for example that you are listening to a beautiful chord played by members of Brant’s Wind Group 1, say a flute, a harmonic on violin(s), pipe organ, and muted horn. What do you think the effect will be on blending when these instruments are modulated by the large physical spaces separating them? I think it will greatly affect the blend, unless you are listening on the radio, or are very far back and high up in the concert hall. Now hold that thought, because I want to remind you that earlier I noted, incredulously, that this composer of “spatial music” has absolutely no place in his handbook for physical separation in any of his conceptual mappings, categories, and musical examples. The reason, already hinted at above, is that Brant, the expert Hollywood orchestrator, assumed the studio-produced result that blends and mixes down recorded instruments into a film’s sound track.

In a live concert hall rendition, the listener will experience my imaginary Wind Group 1 (above) as a kind of spatial dissonance. Something like “sonic athleticism”—each sound reaching across space to its brother and sister sounds, or perhaps in another image: the cantilevering of a sound bridge between and among the various sound sources. This is indeed a stimulating pleasure of large orchestra music from Berlioz, through Mahler, and continues in our own new music styles of early Modernism to the present. But ironically, it is not a part of spatial-composer Brant’s way of treating orchestration. I think it’s a deficit in his whole project. In reality, music is spatial or on a spatial continuum. Timbral combinations are always “modulated” by physical placements in space and architecture, and then heard in relation to the listener’s place in the hall.

NOTES AND REFLECTIONS

What follows is a collection of comments on specific points about, and examples from the Brant text, with a few of my general reflections which the book stimulated.

The long (54 page) section titled “General Premises” is a must to understanding the handbook. For example, Chapter 3, Harmonic Balance begins:

“Much of the discussion in this book concerns procedures for obtaining balanced harmonic textures.”

Each “chord” must sound as “one unit,” and no notes “protrude, disappear, or seem foreign…” Though I’ve noted Brant’s “choralizing” tendencies which this premise readily lends itself to, he does have some really interesting short chapters which do not relate to “balanced harmonic textures.” Just a few of them are:

Vibrato (Chapter 14)

The Termination of Long Notes (15)

Joints and Separations (16)

Extreme Registers (17)

The Piano as a Pitch Guide in Preparing Musical Materials for Orchestration (44): “The piano cannot, however, be expected to provide an accurate forecast of the impression of vertical pitch relationships…if the texture is intentionally heterogeneous…”

Equivalents of the Piano’s Damper Pedal (20)

Percussion Timbres (25): His primary categories pre-empt the usual first division of percussion into definite pitched and indefinite (or unpitched) instruments. His two types are:

  1. Instruments producing staccato attacks only.
  2. Instruments that have a quickly decaying “carry-over” to the initial attack.

Yet his percussion examples often use vibraphone which with its damper and motor are just about fully sustaining instruments.

The Roll (30): He warns that all definite-pitched percussion instruments “gain in distinctness at low dynamic levels” when rolled. Soft-headed mallets increase the clarity. He takes up rolls of 2, 3, and 4 pitches.

Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Tendencies in Orchestration (Appendix 3).

I don’t think Brant thought or cared for a moment about who would use this book. It is impersonally addressed. This makes for a big disconnect with the younger generations of musicians and composers who easily use in combination: live and electronic sounds and timbres, sampled sounds, notation systems like Finale and Sibelius which come with their own library of orchestral (sampled) sounds, computer produced sound. He’s off the hook at least in the sense that his Foreword has this disclaimer: he can make “no assurance” that these kinds of sounds will “produce the same or equivalent results” as the combinations of acoustic instruments he writes about. Again, I must note the class issue here. Young, unconnected composers will not necessarily have access to the high-end, expert players of acoustic instruments.  So of course, these young or unconnected musicians will find substitutes in the form of samples, synthesizers, processers, computers, recording and playback devices.

Harmonic Imbalance: Though he wants to discourage this state (at least when the orchestrator wants balance), one of his key examples is interesting and tempting to use. He has (p.9) four flutes marked forte on their low C and three trumpets with the same marking playing the G, C, E above (p.9). He says the flute “will scarcely be audible.” But interestingly the low C will be reinforced by the difference tone, C, produced by the G-C-E, an octave below the flute C. Sure softer, but what an effect! I want to hear it.

A composer friend once commented that one of my ensemble pieces (Tunnel-Funnel) was “about orchestration.” But everything is about orchestration. Some of the most exciting moments in both 19th and 20th Century scores are “awkward” or off-kilter balances that just happen to work. Look at Stravinsky, Varese, Janacek, Mahler. Of course there are also plenty of examples of Brant’s “choralizing” textures, too. Folk bands may have “unresonant” combos that simply force the issue of blending through expressive playing, or an intimate understanding of the idiom. For example the Cape Breton fiddling accompanied by guitar was originally used if no piano was available, but became an acceptable sound in its own right.

Brant addresses the problem of balancing a progression where chords vary in number of tones (p.32) by asking the orchestrator to get at least an approximate equality of players on each tone of the chord, resulting in harmonic balance, but varied “thickness.” He doesn’t mention that this could produce a kind of “tone color” melody of thickness or thinness, related to Schoenberg’s tone color melody, famously found in his Five Pieces for Orchestra, Op.16.

Homogeneity is a constant concern of his. He says (p.59) that it is decreased by putting dissimilar timbres adjacent to each other in harmonic textures. It is also disturbed in Wind Group 3 (see above) by vibrato (p.78), though he also admits that vibrato adds “resonance and expressiveness” as it does to a string quartet.

Some of his examples are just eccentric and fascinating, so, for example he’s pointing out a horn on F above middle C, at a piano dynamic will be soft and “thick” while the piccolo three octaves above on D, at a forte dynamic will be loud and “thin” (p.10). Are we taking such things in, dear composer-orchestrators?

Juxtaposition of different timbre groups (p.11), he considers better than “enclosure” or “interlocking” because there are fewer “intervals of contact” [between notes of different Timbre Groups].

In horizontal (contrapuntal) writing (p.12), he recommends that each strand keep its respective timbre even if it causes interlocking or enclosure. This seems to preclude pointillist orchestrators like Webern, or even Mahler. So, a conservative moment in Brant. Like Max Reger was among the 19th Century innovators.

Dissonance. That’s the title of Chapter 7 (p.13), another first for Brant, in that he treats it at all. He tells us, for example, that to emphasize the dissonant intervals, keep them within the same timbre group—a forward-looking moment to open up dissonance to the same status as consonance in the project of orchestration.

Composition finally, definitively merges with orchestration (p.17) when he shows how to impart “rhythmic motion to static harmony,” and how to “produce contrapuntal motion upon tones of static harmony.” This last example has an elaborate chart where lines are divvied up using groups of flutes, clarinets, and violins.

He shows how to add octaves-pairs in a contrasting timbre (p.23), which allows the higher of the pair to be played at a lower dynamic level. This is subtle and canny knowledge.

A triadic assumption (p.24) leads him to say that widely spaced groupings should be unified vertically (harmonically) by using the same timbre. Knowing his assumption  allows us to disagree with this as a hard and fast rule.

Uniformity in Articulation is a short, pungent chapter (13), which has an ingenious solution to a problem you never knew you had. Where there are common tones in the same voice in succession, and you want to keep uniform articulation among the voices: instead of creating long notes or tied notes, exchange parts so each voice always has a new attack (p.34).

Chapter 17, Extreme Registers, points out that auditory perceptions in these registers becomes more difficult at fortissimo dynamics, but is very good at lower levels (p.42).

“Accordion in Wind-Group 2 Textures” (p.75-76): A detailed section on accordion may also be a first for orchestration books. He shows, for example, which accordion stops intensify the effects of the other winds by putting octave duplications outside their ranges.

“Non-Harmony” (p.135) raises the seldom-discussed fact of the non-blending of dissimilar attack transients in different kinds of indefinite-pitch percussion instruments like: snare drum, maraca, ratchet, tambourine, castanets, wood block. Simply coordinating attacks among instruments that produce tones in different ways is difficult. But his point is that even with a simultaneous attack, a blend will not occur. Once more we see his value of homogeneity put above its opposite. For some composers the non-blending might be quite acceptable, even desirable.

I would generalize the point to say that in any vertical (harmonic) array of instruments, blending is decreased by dissimilar attacks. Sometimes when I’m sitting in a concert hall, a harmonic progression familiar to my mind seems very strange when passed through the actual instruments. A really interesting study of blending, homogeneity, separateness could be to look at say, Mozart, Mahler, and Messiaen textures in actual performances in their acoustic spaces. What is the intention and what is the effect?

This important book, exhausting and also exhaustive in some ways while inadequate theoretically in others, ends with his “Epilog [sic]… To those everywhere who originate sonorous combinations rewarding to the nervous system and describe them accurately, I wish every success. —Henry Brant, Santa Barbara, California, 2007”

Photographs of Daniel Goode

Daniel Goode

Daniel Goode at Home

Daniel Goode on His Rooftop, NYC

Performing on a musical wire sculpture

Seat of Sound – a sound-sculpture installed at Grounds
for Sculpture in Hamilton, NJ

Playing the Gamelan Son of Lion keygongs

On a cable car in Switzerland

Daniel Goode on his Rooftop

Daniel Goode in The Burren, Co. Clare, Ireland

Leaving Neshanic, NJ with a found musical object

The I-Cow Relationship

Eight Thrushes in Berlin, 1994

Holding the score to Tom Johnson’s Rational Melodies
in Moscow, 1999

Demonstrating with a paper model the compositional
structure of one of Tom Johnson’s Rational Melodies

SOHO GAMELAN WALK, MAKE MUSIC NEW YORK

SOHO GAMELAN WALK, MAKE MUSIC NEW YORK – 06/21/09

Daniel Goode

For best effect turn up the bass response on your playback device.

Why Make CDs?

October 13, 2006

Tower is closing—why make CDs? We fought the idea of Tower when it started because it took a supermarket approach to music. But then we found it useful, and it even carried some of our CDs. Now they’re bankrupt because of the internet and Amazon. How long before Tower closes? I asked the guy at check out. “Well, first they have to get the stock from the other stores.”… So, why not do everything from our computer? Social life—easy! Even sex. Certainly shopping. No need to mix on a street, in a store eye-balling almost all of recorded music and some of the people who buy it. Oh, I saw a famous poet and his lover scarfing up CDs at 15%, 20 or even 30% off, as I was, also. He was wearing a fabulous red coat. But I’m sure he can be found on the internet, too. So nothing is lost, is there? We can still make CDs. We can up-load them. We need never leave our house. Order in.