Composer Michael Dessen Photo: Bill Douthart |
Composer Michael Dessen’s Slippages will be read
at American Composers Orchestra’s Jazz Composers Orchestra Institute La Jolla Symphony New Music Readings, which will take place this week in San Diego,
California. The following is Part One of Michael’s Q&A with ACO. We
will bring you Part Two of this Q&A tomorrow with Michael’s wonderful
response to what this experience means to him as a jazz composer and his advice
for other composers interested in applying to JCOI!
ACO: How
did you find out about JCOI and what made you want to apply to the Institute?
Michael Dessen: I know composers who were involved
with the first JCOI program, some as participants and others as faculty. I
applied because it seemed like an excellent way to gain some experience with
orchestra writing through working with wonderful, creative people that I really
trust, and also because of the ACO's reputation for supporting new and diverse
approaches to the orchestra. To be honest, at first I didn't know precisely
what I would do with the opportunity if I were accepted, but it seemed like too
great a chance to pass up.
ACO: What
inspired you to compose the piece that you submitted to JCOI?
MD: My composition, Slippages, was inspired in part by watching people slowly fade out
(as in dementia) or even fade back in (as in coma recovery). I've watched
family members go through both of those experiences, but the piece isn't really
about trying to depict that process literally. It's more of a sonic meditation
on the grayer areas of our experience of consciousness, and on the dialectic
tension that always exists between integration and disintegration.
ACO: After
you found out that you were accepted to JCOI, how have you prepared yourself
and your piece for the music readings that will take place?
MD: To apply for the JCOI readings, you don't have to
submit the full piece, just a section. So the main work I faced once it was
accepted was actually finishing the rest of the piece. I had finished 3 minutes
for the application, but after that, I was very busy with other deadlines for
about 6 months, so when returned to it there had been a long gap. This isn't
the way I usually work on a composition, but it turned out to be fascinating
because of course I heard things differently later. Then, as with any orchestra
piece, after the composing is done, there is a lot of editing to make sure all
the parts are formatted and printed according to the orchestra's standards,
which are a lot stricter than what I'm used to dealing with when composing for
improvisers - to put it mildly.
ACO: What
do you hope to work on during JCOI?
MD: I'm of course very curious to find out which
parts sound like I imagined they would, and which don't, since that kind of
trial and error is crucial for improving one's orchestration skills. It will
also be interesting to see how the conductor and musicians relate to the music,
since this is a composition, not just an orchestration exercise. I'm eager to
get constructive feedback from the fantastic JCOI mentor composers as well as
the musicians themselves.
ACO: Do you
foresee any challenges during the workshopping and reading of your piece?
MD: Most of the things I'm worried about have to do
with instrumental balance, that is, whether an idea comes across as intended or
whether certain instruments or sections cover up other instruments that you're
supposed to hear more clearly. When you're dealing with an ensemble the size of
the orchestra, it's easy to miscalculate and lose a particular effect you
intended.
ACO: What
do you hope to get out of this experience at JCOI and working with the La Jolla
Symphony? Have you worked with a symphony orchestra before? If not, how do you
feel about having this opportunity to work with a symphony orchestra through
JCOI?
MD: I play trombone, and much of my early formal
training as a performer was in the orchestra world. I even went to a conservatory
and did a classical performance degree, so I spent tons of time in orchestras
growing up. But I have never composed for an orchestra, and for the past 25
years or so, I haven't focused much on classical performance at all. During
that time, my work as a composer and performer has been almost entirely with
small and medium sized ensembles in more jazz and improvised music contexts. So
for me, JCOI has been sort of like going back to a place I grew up in but
haven't visited often since, and bringing a very different perspective gained
from all these other experiences I've had. I'm also looking forward to working
with conductor Steve Schick, a tremendous musician and all around great person
who I first met in graduate school and who I've enjoyed performing with several
times in improvisatory contexts.
No comments:
Post a Comment