SATSYMPH: on a theme of Hermés

Marc Yeats' on-going journal dealing with the compositional challenges surrounding the creation of 'on a theme of Hermés'

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    SATSYMPH: on a theme of Hermés | Blog 2

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    From my first writing of the initial blog to now some ideas have changed, as I knew they would, which is exciting in its own way. Initially I was projecting ideas into the future without any real concept of the content - the music - and how that would interplay with my ideas of structure and assemblage. Now that I have virtually completed the composition aspect of the music (that is composition on paper / music performance and recording and then final composition with audio files but excluding composition in the landscape as in placing or installing the music into place), I know the nature of the sounds and what will work effectively and what will not (this even without knowledge of the word content).

    You can read more about Ralph Hoyte and the composition of his word material here

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    Phill Phelps at the UWE recording studios working with members of the Bristol Ensemble during the recording of the music for 'on a theme of Hermes' Phill has written a blog detailing the challenges and specifications involved in recording this music here


    It seems to me that the music I have created is very connected to itself, self referential, like a series of complex variations with a number of themes in constant reference and change. It is these themes that bind the music together - that and the colouristic (instrumental) and gestural qualities of the music. This is unsurprising as the musical lines created for each of the instruments were in-of-themselves variations, inversions and variants of a handful of lines and themes. So in the 'Hermes' music, the small building blocks as just mentioned, themes etc., run through each instrument and as the instrumental voices are combined and layered, these relationships become increasingly audible and ensure that the resultant music really is 'on a theme (or themes) of Hermes.

    Screen_shot_2011-09-01_at_10
    music for violin

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    Roger Huckle, Artistic Director and Leader of the Bristol Ensemble recording the violin music illustrated above.

    What also became clear is that the music itself, once combined into modules, took on very strong identities, some with wild and chaotic sounding qualities. This immediately had implications for modular layerings for several reasons: I did not want the clarity of what was very self contained material to be destroyed by obliterating its integrity through over densification; secondly, the audience needs to locate sounds in a meaningful way that implies ebb and flow in energies, densities and activity as well as distinction and contrast between music and words and individual word and music modules; all this installed into a landscape context that attached itself to the modules of word and sound. In other words, it would be unwise to put everything in the mixing pot at once and create a non differentiated goo!

      

    Module 25


    Having realised that less is more and that in this context, less actually increases the dramatic polemic due to strong differentiation between moods and densities acting as a navigational tool and a form of emotional landmarking, it has become necessary to revisit the premise of mixing sounds and how best to manage these parameters so as to maintain maximum effectiveness of the material we place into the mediascape.

    Screen_shot_2011-09-01_at_09
    music for harp


    My thoughts now turn to not having three basal zones but 1 which is on constant loop. The music in this base zone will be aurally set back into a distant acoustic so it sits in another aural plane, can interact and influence the modules of both word and music that overly it, colour it gently but not interfere with it. This will still create a 'live mixing' that is determined by direction and movement and has the added advantage of creating a new spacial element within the mediascape that will undoubtedly interact with the outside world, too as sounds bleed into and out of any headsets worn by the audience.

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    Percussionist Jeremy Little from the Bristol Ensemble performing the many percussion strands within 'on a theme of Hermes'.

     

    As for the modules, I now envisage a number of them sitting within 'walls' of basal sound with only a few mixing with each other to transition - this giving a kind of soft and hard edge feel to the modules but again, allowing aural navigation to be clear and more distinctive because the modules themselves are placed distinctively. There is also likely to be more music and word modules that stand alone and are not mixed alongside some pre-fixed word/music modules. All in all, for me, clarity has become very important as I believe this enhances the experience both on an emotional and dramatic level as well as a navigational level.

    Screen_shot_2011-09-01_at_09

    vertical iteration of material

    At this time I still have to build the base zone music, but that will be drawn from the modules already made - it will be sparse, minimal, tantalising, very quiet and distant.

    My final task will be to compose a suitable motific invention that will indicate when someone has traversed a boundary between modules. This motif is purely functional as a navigational tool. However, musically it has to work in such a way as to be distinctive enough to be recognisable, musical enough to integrate seamlessly with whatever is going on at the time in the aural landscape and not so annoying as to be irritating if encountered more than once! I needed to have a knowledge of what the music for 'Hermes' was going to sound like before tackling this small build. It will be the final compositional task before Ralph and I get together to map-out how the words and music will work with each other and what material we will use (invariably and purposefully we have over produced so as to have the broadest possible choice for construction). This activity represents yet another level of composition within a project that already has so many!

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    Tags » ACE Marc Yeats PRSF PVA MediaLab Phill phelps Ralph hoyte SATSYMPH app bristol ensemble composition contemporary music iphone locative media mobile technology music/word fusions on a theme of hermes pervasive media
    • 1 September 2011
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    9 months ago Ralph Hoyte responded:
    Ralph Hoyte
    Lovely entry, Marc, lots of grounds for thought! SATSYMPH definitely building up a head of steam. Really glad I went to Royal Geographic Society conference to give paper, it's really brought into focus a lot of things about 'SATSYMPH satscape technology' which have been sub-liminally humming along. What is also very interesting (an encouraging, of course) is that people are starting to say, 'Oh, SATSYMPH this that and the other', so we're getting good 'brand recognition' (sorry all you true artists who hate 'brands'... what I mean is that the name is becoming recognized and associated with what we do!)
    2 months ago contactos valencia responded:
    Surely, the dude is absolutely fair.
    2 months ago necantibi1988 responded:
    necantibi1988
    I totally match with everything you've written.
    contactos valencia
    about 1 month ago Ash Madni responded:
    Ash Madni
    Very inspiring stuff Marc!
  • Marc Yeats's Space

    Marc Yeats is a composer and visual artist. His uncompromising music has been performed, commissioned and broadcast around the world. He has worked with many distinguished performers, ensembles and musicians including Psappha, the London Sinfonietta, the Endymion Ensemble, Paragon Ensemble, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Hallé Orchestra, Tokyo City Philharmonic and Gewandhaus Radio Orchestra, among others.

    Marc’s visual art has been exhibited and collected across the UK and abroad. He has paintings in the collections of several public galleries in Scotland including An Tobar, An Tuireann and The Pier Art Centre, Orkney. The Swiss art dealers Stampfli and Turci represent his work.

    Marc has a special interest in communicative, challenging work that pushes boundaries, including immersive installations combining music, visual art, dance, word and digital media. Marc has also delivered a number of major arts projects across the UK that have enabled the learning disabled, people with mental health issues, and the over 60s and young people to engage with contemporary practitioners to create new, meaningful work.

    Marc is currently Chair of PVA MediaLab in Dorset, an artist led RFO specialising in digital media, sound, residencies and incubator labs.

    Marc is an artistic assessor for Arts Council England.

    In April 2010, Marc was appointed Composer-in-Association with Manchester Pride.

    Also in April 2010, Marc Yeats along with his collaborators, Ralph Hoyte (poet) and Phill Phelps (coder) were named in the national press as one of six projects to be finalists in the prestigious PRS Foundation’s New Music Award 2010, the most significant award for music in the UK, with their innovative project SATSYMPH.

    SATSYMPH

    SATSYMPH have just received a major Arts Council Grants for the Arts (GftA) Award (with the PRS for Music Foundation and PVA MediaLab) to realise 'On a Theme of Hermes', a geo-located contemporary symphonic work.
    ‘SATSYMPH’ is a 3-way collaboration between composer Marc Yeats, poet Ralph Hoyte and coder Phil Phelps. As SATSYMPH we are at the forefront of creating geo-located soundworlds that enable users with no technical ability whatsoever to access and experience contemporary symphonic works in new contexts in relation to the environment.

    ‘ON A THEME OF HERMES’ is an original full-scale contemporary symphonic work which fuses contemporary music and contemporary poetry in an entirely new and innovative way, and, moreover, one which has a truly unique method of delivery. ‘On a Theme of Hermes’ is user-directed and geo-located. It responds to location, to where the user is. It morphs, changes, according to what the user does. This is an entirely new music/poetry paradigm.

    We have chosen the theme of the Greek god ‘Hermes’ as he is, traditionally, messenger of the gods, guide to the Underworld, patron of thieves, liars, of literature and poets, as well as of boundaries (and those who, as in this project, “travel across them”). These attributes of his quicksilver nature give us massive scope for weaving symphonic stories around him and for integrating classical and contemporary allusions and illusions, words and music.

    New choral work: Coastal Voices is an umbrella project that explores the Jurassic Coast with newly commissioned compositions by Marc Yeats, John Surman, Billy Bragg and John K Miles. Linking music and earth sciences through the voice, the project aims to stimulate coastal communities to examine the unique relationship with the geology and forces that shape their environment.

    Stretching from Poole to East Devon, Coastal Voices aspires to raise the standard of local choirs, school choirs and individual singers of all ages, leading to regional performances at events such as the opening of the Twin Sails Bridge, Poole in March 2012 and the Cultural Olympiad in Weymouth and Portland in July 2012.

    Selected 2010 Highlights:

    In 2010, Marc was appointed Composer-in-Association with Manchester Pride. His first commission included the world première of “schlick’s approximation”, for clarinet, violin & piano (Festival commission) (play it here) premiered on the 27th August by the ensemble CHROMA at the Cosmo Rodewald Concert Hall, Manchester University. 2011s festival will hear the second performance of 'rhêma' for harpsichord, and the premiere of ‘Eris’ for flute and viola.

    'rhêma' for harpsichord, commissioned by BBC Radio 3 was premiered by Mahan Esfahani in Leeds, October 2010 and broadcast in March 2011.

    In December 2010, Conversational Geometry for tenor trombone, amplified acoustic guitar and piano was premiered in Switzerland and recorded for Swiss Radio with Dirk Amrein, trombone, Maurizio Grandinetti, Gitare, Jürg Henneberger, piano.

    Forthcoming premieres:

    Prorrhesis for tenor trombone and 2 bass drums - Dirk Amrein - Brazil - May 2011
    shadown and the moon for flt., cl., vln., vc., marimba and piano - Kokoro - Bournemouth UK May 2011
    Eris for flute and viola - Manchester Pride Fringe Festival 2011 - Manchester UK - August 2011
    Strange Geometry for flt., vc. and piano - Trio IAMA - Cyprus and Berlin - September 2011

    About Marc’s work:

    ‘The genesis of his work stems from two major influences on the composer. Yeats' own initial musical experiences delineate nostalgia for the English Pastoral School (exemplified by Bax, Vaughan Williams and Moeran) casting an acute emotional impression and a diametric opposite; matched by his passion for and fascination with avant-garde expressionism and experimentalism awakened from the 1960s and '70s.
    Being also an acclaimed landscape painter Marc Yeats' work with colour, form and texture inform his ideas on musical construction and content. As his illustrative aptitude intensified he observed: 'I moved decisively from representational to abstract art. With a rising technical repertoire, so too grew my conviction of creating an individual compositional language by exploring these modes in a musical context. In I am Nature, both threads are transformed through my "painterly ear" to assimilate and evoke a very personal, natural and unselfconscious outpouring of sound.
    On first hearing, the music may seem arbitrary, improvisational or even chaotic. This is not the case. Consciously the music doesn't operate within the logic of number series, motific development, Fibonacci-based proportions, functional harmony, magic squares, tone rows or any of the customary gamete of compositional techniques. Another rationale is operative; a personal logic rooted in "self experience" of the techniques and processes of abstract painting.'

    Excerpt about Yeats’ work from ‘I am Nature’ edited by Keith Evans

    His experience encompasses commissioning work, access and engagement, project management and audience development. Marc holds a passionate belief that public engagement with quality contemporary artistic practice holds amazing creative opportunities!

    "Marc Yeats' musical voice is quite unlike anything else; the music is challenging to both performers and audiences, and very communicative. He produces extraordinary compositions that not only look and sound good, but demonstrate a very high level of academic learning, while being breathtakingly original." (Sir Peter Maxwell Davies)

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  • About Marc Yeats

    Marc Yeats is a composer and visual artist. His uncompromising music has been performed, commissioned and broadcast around the world. He has worked with many distinguished performers, ensembles and musicians including Psappha, the London Sinfonietta, the Endymion Ensemble, Paragon Ensemble, the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra, Hallé Orchestra, Tokyo City Philharmonic and Gewandhaus Radio Orchestra, among others.

    Marc’s visual art has been exhibited and collected across the UK and abroad. He has paintings in the collections of several public galleries in Scotland including An Tobar, An Tuireann and The Pier Art Centre, Orkney. The Swiss art dealers Stampfli and Turci represent his work.

    Marc has a special interest in communicative, challenging work that pushes boundaries, including immersive installations combining music, visual art, dance, word and digital media. Marc has also delivered a number of major arts projects across the UK that have enabled the learning disabled, people with mental health issues, and the over 60s and young people to engage with contemporary practitioners to create new, meaningful work.

    Marc is currently Chair of PVA MediaLab in Dorset, an artist led RFO specialising in digital media, sound, residencies and incubator labs.

    Marc is an artistic assessor for Arts Council England.

    In April 2010, Marc was appointed Composer-in-Association with Manchester Pride.

    Also in April 2010, Marc Yeats along with his collaborators, Ralph Hoyte (poet) and Phill Phelps (coder) were named in the national press as one of six projects to be finalists in the prestigious PRS Foundation’s New Music Award 2010, the most significant award for music in the UK, with their innovative project SATSYMPH.

    SATSYMPH

    SATSYMPH have just received a major Arts Council Grants for the Arts (GftA) Award (with the PRS for Music Foundation and PVA MediaLab) to realise 'On a Theme of Hermes', a geo-located contemporary symphonic work.
    ‘SATSYMPH’ is a 3-way collaboration between composer Marc Yeats, poet Ralph Hoyte and coder Phil Phelps. As SATSYMPH we are at the forefront of creating geo-located soundworlds that enable users with no technical ability whatsoever to access and experience contemporary symphonic works in new contexts in relation to the environment.

    ‘ON A THEME OF HERMES’ is an original full-scale contemporary symphonic work which fuses contemporary music and contemporary poetry in an entirely new and innovative way, and, moreover, one which has a truly unique method of delivery. ‘On a Theme of Hermes’ is user-directed and geo-located. It responds to location, to where the user is. It morphs, changes, according to what the user does. This is an entirely new music/poetry paradigm.

    We have chosen the theme of the Greek god ‘Hermes’ as he is, traditionally, messenger of the gods, guide to the Underworld, patron of thieves, liars, of literature and poets, as well as of boundaries (and those who, as in this project, “travel across them”). These attributes of his quicksilver nature give us massive scope for weaving symphonic stories around him and for integrating classical and contemporary allusions and illusions, words and music.

    New choral work: Coastal Voices is an umbrella project that explores the Jurassic Coast with newly commissioned compositions by Marc Yeats, John Surman, Billy Bragg and John K Miles. Linking music and earth sciences through the voice, the project aims to stimulate coastal communities to examine the unique relationship with the geology and forces that shape their environment.

    Stretching from Poole to East Devon, Coastal Voices aspires to raise the standard of local choirs, school choirs and individual singers of all ages, leading to regional performances at events such as the opening of the Twin Sails Bridge, Poole in March 2012 and the Cultural Olympiad in Weymouth and Portland in July 2012.

    Selected 2010 Highlights:

    In 2010, Marc was appointed Composer-in-Association with Manchester Pride. His first commission included the world première of “schlick’s approximation”, for clarinet, violin & piano (Festival commission) (play it here) premiered on the 27th August by the ensemble CHROMA at the Cosmo Rodewald Concert Hall, Manchester University. 2011s festival will hear the second performance of 'rhêma' for harpsichord, and the premiere of ‘Eris’ for flute and viola.

    'rhêma' for harpsichord, commissioned by BBC Radio 3 was premiered by Mahan Esfahani in Leeds, October 2010 and broadcast in March 2011.

    In December 2010, Conversational Geometry for tenor trombone, amplified acoustic guitar and piano was premiered in Switzerland and recorded for Swiss Radio with Dirk Amrein, trombone, Maurizio Grandinetti, Gitare, Jürg Henneberger, piano.

    Forthcoming premieres:

    Prorrhesis for tenor trombone and 2 bass drums - Dirk Amrein - Brazil - May 2011
    shadown and the moon for flt., cl., vln., vc., marimba and piano - Kokoro - Bournemouth UK May 2011
    Eris for flute and viola - Manchester Pride Fringe Festival 2011 - Manchester UK - August 2011
    Strange Geometry for flt., vc. and piano - Trio IAMA - Cyprus and Berlin - September 2011

    About Marc’s work:

    ‘The genesis of his work stems from two major influences on the composer. Yeats' own initial musical experiences delineate nostalgia for the English Pastoral School (exemplified by Bax, Vaughan Williams and Moeran) casting an acute emotional impression and a diametric opposite; matched by his passion for and fascination with avant-garde expressionism and experimentalism awakened from the 1960s and '70s.
    Being also an acclaimed landscape painter Marc Yeats' work with colour, form and texture inform his ideas on musical construction and content. As his illustrative aptitude intensified he observed: 'I moved decisively from representational to abstract art. With a rising technical repertoire, so too grew my conviction of creating an individual compositional language by exploring these modes in a musical context. In I am Nature, both threads are transformed through my "painterly ear" to assimilate and evoke a very personal, natural and unselfconscious outpouring of sound.
    On first hearing, the music may seem arbitrary, improvisational or even chaotic. This is not the case. Consciously the music doesn't operate within the logic of number series, motific development, Fibonacci-based proportions, functional harmony, magic squares, tone rows or any of the customary gamete of compositional techniques. Another rationale is operative; a personal logic rooted in "self experience" of the techniques and processes of abstract painting.'

    Excerpt about Yeats’ work from ‘I am Nature’ edited by Keith Evans

    His experience encompasses commissioning work, access and engagement, project management and audience development. Marc holds a passionate belief that public engagement with quality contemporary artistic practice holds amazing creative opportunities!

    "Marc Yeats' musical voice is quite unlike anything else; the music is challenging to both performers and audiences, and very communicative. He produces extraordinary compositions that not only look and sound good, but demonstrate a very high level of academic learning, while being breathtakingly original." (Sir Peter Maxwell Davies)

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