February 7 - Lyre, Lyre


Revised the orchestration of Lyre's Melody from Orpheus Cycle.  Previously there were only piano-vocal and Pierrot ensemble versions, with an initial sketch of the orchestral version.  Revision modelled on the Richard Wagner Rheingold opening, plus no doubt Balinese, club jazz, and Ludwig van Beethoven Symphony No. 1 finale sentiments.

February 6 - Going for It


Prepared Mice and Men Act I, B ("Now the ranch we're goin' to"), for publication.

February 5 - Majestic


Franco-Russian Craft Sails Into Bay

Despite competition from the Super Bowl and the Queen Mary II sailing into
the Bay (I know from close experience, having late-lunched at a sports bar in
San Francisco and then heading over the Golden Gate Bridge exactly as the ocean
liner sailed under), the Russian Chamber Orchestra drew a respectable crowd on
February 4 at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Belevedere for its third
concert of the 2006-2007 Season.

While Music Director and Conductor Alexander Vereshagin characterized the
program, in brief accented remarks tot the audience, that this was "the Russian
Chamber Orchestra with a French accent," this mostly-French program had a
distinctly Russian accent. Sailing off with Camille Saint-Saens's Prelude from "Le
Deluge" (op. 45), the hall was flooded with rich sounds that bespoke of
European, rather than American, continental connections. If this relatively
unknown take on Noah's Flood bogs down in watery counterpoint, perhaps so much the
better.

The Slavic, rather than the French or Spanish, overtones continued in the
conductor's own impressive orchestration of three dances from the George Bizet
psuedo-Hispanic "Carmen." In particular, the famous "Habenera" had a weighty
gravitas to it that was reinforced by the sonorous stillness of St. Stephens.
Violinist Leonid Igudesman and Larisa Kopylovsky engaged in rapturous
calls-and-responses in the duetting roles. Following this up with Claude Debussy's
"Danses Sacree et Profane," proved a delight for solo harpist Olga
Ortenberg-Rakitchenkov and the ensemble.

"Rondo" from a Luigi Boccherini C Major Quintet seemed less suitable for the
players and space, given that the intended medium was five players only, and
probably for secular, less-resonant, performing environment. This did not
prevent Victoria Ehrlich from giving here all, however, in the demanding obligato
cello role.

In the rest of this entertaining program, Vereshagin continued to intrigue in
his duel role as leader and arranger, to which he added a third aptitude as
pianist in Maurice Ravel's beloved "Pavanne pour une infante defunte" (often
translated more poetically as "Pavanne for a Dead Princess," rather than "Dead
Child" -- still certainly not as devastating as the Mahler compound
"Kindertotenlieder" -- "DeadChildrenSongs"). Ravel's own 1910 orchestration of his 1899 piano is a tough act to follow, and Vereshagin proceeded carefully with the
angels.

The final and finally Russian "Fantasy on Russian Themes" (op. 33), by
Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov, was initially marred by a cherub in the front row, who was
too young to realize that heightened speech among audience members is not
exactly welcome during recitals. Returning soloist Igudesman turned in his most
wondrous performance of the evening, which lamentably had to include a welcomed
public admonition to the kindercaretaker, "it is time to leave, now."

But for the rest of us, we were sad to leave to leave on this eventful day,
extended just a bit with another French work for encore: the C.S.S. "Swan" from
"Carnival of the Animals." Originally scored for solo cello and piano, this
final Vereshagin scoring proved a Spruce Goose for full strings on the melodic
line, a liner proudly sailing into that large pond adjacent called San
Francisco Bay.

February 4 - Fully Involved


SF Cabaret Opera / Goat Hall Board meeting mid-day at Douglas and Miriam's in SF, then Russian Chamber Orchestra at


St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Belevedere (vaguely old Marin County stomping grounds) for Commuter Times (report soon).  Familiar faces: Warner Jepson from NACUSA and Fresh Voices, who's moved from Noe Valley (SF) to Sonoma, the town, in county of same -- Katie Wreede, violist par excellence as one of the players, from SFCCO and elsewhere, who I hope will be able to do Halfway Mark with us -- just missed the bass player from Old MC group Hipbones, too....

February 3 - Following a Course


At home preparing Act I, A ("Goddam it, Lennie") of Mice and Men for publication, then lunch with Harriet at the local Chevy's, where we discussed various nefarious schemes involving audio, video, and websites....

Back to DVC in evening to record above.  Took forever to set dynamics in the MIDI tracks -- wrote the piece back in my careful markings days, so the calibration stretched over hours.  Realized that, back then, forte meant just about as loud as possible and p the reverse, so after trying levels at 100-90-80-70-60 (f-mf-mp-p-pp), recalculated to 100-80-60-40-20, which worked much better.

Took only a take each for George and Lennie, in that order, panned left and right.  Set the reverb (for an almost total change) at merely default (80 room, 1 second decay), since the scene is outdoors by a pond (as opposed to my normal love-affair-with-the-cathedral 100 room and anywhere from 2-12 sec fall-off)...

Sounds like a condusive environment for future.

A few lyric mistakes, and some overmodulated shouts, but reasonably powerful, so I left it as is for now....

February 2 - To the Basics



Wrote a new little piece last night and this morning, or, rather, composed it directly into Cubase, and based on the only other exercise like it in my work thus far.  First one was called Big Beat Remix, Op. 135 (2006), after the earlier  


Big Beat, Op. 39 (1990, which states eight generic measures of rock-n-roll drum rhythms in orchestral pitches simultaneously at various temporal levels), but with MIDI-track content provided by an assignment in Mark Steidel's Music 172 at Diablo Valley College.  The new one is Beat Beat Remix Count-Off, Op. 146 (2007), after an assignment in Doug Michael's Music 173, which requires a recorded vocal "1-2-3-4" stated in rhythm to MIDI tracks at least three times.  'Course I had to go overboard, and there are about a million (not really) repetitions of the count-off stated from quarter-note pulse, through a background ratio where the four counts take 64 measures to be heard, and beyond....  Sort of like Steve Reich's Slow-Motion Sound, except it's not....

Normally I don't like to assign an opus number to one small work (other than these, I can only think of The Lord's Prayer, Op. 5 [1975]), but these little beat pieces have comparatively less to do with the other ideas with which I work, so there it is.  Will probably collect them someday in a volume no doubt called Book II (Textbook) for Orchesrtra, and give it another opus number.  Cheating...

OK, another idea: Let's put it back with Big Beat Remix, as second of two movements...

Big Beat Remix, Op. 135 (2006)
     I. Big Beat Remix Midi
     II. Big Beat Remix Count-Off



February 1 - Studio Effects


Recorded the Prelude to Act I of Mice and Men.  Learned how to do the MySpace Slide Show + a bit of html thanks to Jose Martinez!  Amazed by all the dead composers maintaining websites....