Finishing a score

Most of my thoughts on score prep can be found in this checklist on Scoring Notes. I wrote the list, and Scoring Notes editor Philip Rothman added links to some really interesting articles that go into detail on many of the topics. As the editor’s note at the top suggests, many of these are Sibelius specific, because until 2017, the publication was Sibelius-focused. 

Here’s an article on program notes from my own blog. Regardless of how you feel about the importance of program notes, someone will inevitably ask you for a note to put in a program or to speak about your piece. In either case, it’s a lot easier to put your thoughts together while the piece is fresh in your mind. Even if you don’t publish the note, it’s a nice reference if you ever need to speak about the piece to performers or audiences. 

If you need to include any graphical elements in your score, here’s a tutorial I put together on graphic notation. I demonstrate using Sibelius and Adobe Illustrator, but the same process will work in any scoring application and with any drawing application. 

Critical Response Process

If you have ever made something and presented it to an audience, you’ve probably had the horrible experience afterward of being told how great it was. To some, I’m sure that sounds dumb. Being told that you’re great shouldn’t be horrible. Unless, of course, you were hoping to learn something about how the audience perceives the things you make. Remember, we don’t have feedback sessions for fun, even though they can be lots of fun. We have them for their utility: to learn to make stuff better and, in doing so, make better stuff.

Choreographer Liz Lerman developed the Critical Response Process (CRP) to solve the issue I described above. It does an excellent job of separating the personal tastes of the “responders” (audience, in Lerman’s system) from that of the artist. The artist gets to determine how well they[1] achieved their goal without getting into aesthetic disagreements. I’ll describe it here in broad strokes, but if you’re interested in implementing it, I strongly recommend her short book on the topic. Please familiarize yourself with the basic structure, outlined below. We will often use CRP sessions to discuss our projects with one another.

Lerman defines three roles in a CRP session: artist (composer), facilitator, and responder. After presenting the work, the process runs through four phases. What’s particularly interesting is the direction to hold value judgements (positive or negative) to the very end. Again, this allows everyone to focus on the artist’s goals and the audience perception without passing any judgement on those goals directly. As I describe the process, I’m going to assume we’re talking about music. But as Lerman’s subtitle explains, the system is valid for any creation, “from dance to dessert.”

  • Step 1: Statement of Meaning – The facilitator asks responders to explain what they heard as specifically as possible. Lerman suggests “What was stimulating, surprising, evocative, memorable, touching, or meaningful for you?” You may have noticed that these are not all value-neutral adjectives! It can be hard to avoid this at this stage; but, try not to get too effusive or negative.
  • Step 2: Artist as Questioner – The composer asks questions about specific elements of piece. This is not the time for “Did you like it when…?” or the well-worn “What did you think?” Those are just soliciting general opinions. There’s time for that later. Artist questions can provide insight into what the artist thinks is important about the work. They might ask, “Could you hear the gradual harmonic shift from measures 28 to 40?” Specific questions yield more useful responses.[2] Good questions here can really raise the value of subsequent steps. I would encourage composers to take a few moments to write some questions down.
  • Step 3: Neutral Questions from Responders – These questions are tricky for responders who are new to CRP, as it can take some effort to phrase certain questions in neutral ways. So instead of asking why the third movement was so long, the responder might ask how the composer is thinking about the structural proportions of the work. There might be a good reason for the third movement to be long. Maybe the issue isn’t the length, but rather how the third movement is prepared by the previous two, or how it develops, or something else. A neutral question allows everyone to frame issues in the context of the composer’s own goals for the piece. Neutral questions are a great way for the composer to learn how the audience perceives the music.
  • Step 4: Permissioned Opinions – Responders get to offer direct and clear opinions here for the first time in the process. However, they should ask permission first. The script goes something like “I have an opinion about [specific thing]. Do you want to hear it?” This gives the composer the chance to avoid getting bogged down in parts of the work that are still under heavy revision. So if there are certain elements of orchestration that are still being worked out, a composer might not want to waste time in a back-and-forth about what they consider to be a placeholder decision. A nice side-benefit: the time of asking the question allows the artist a quick moment to recall the reasoning that went into whatever the opinion is going to be about. This might allow them to respond more thoughtfully. In my experience as a composer, when I’m not “prepared” for an opinion, it’s much easier for me to get defensive or ignore the feedback entirely.

While it may seem a bit structured and arbitrary at first, I hope that you find CRP to be a valuable experience for you both as an artist and as a responder. You might want to keep this around as a quick reference the first couple of times you do a session. I think you’ll quickly get the hang of it, and future sessions will feel more natural.

This handout is based on my short blog post about CRP here.


  1. Yes. I used a singular “they”. You should too.  ↩

  2. Lerman does warn against questions that are too specific; but, that isn’t an issue I see too often.  ↩

Extended woodwinds (17 Sep)

This is far from an exhaustive list, but it will get us started.

Flute

  • Consider separately for the purposes of extended techniques, as the sound production is fundamentally different than the rest of the woodwind family.
  • References
  • Harmonics: You can give the fundamental with a diamond (in the lowest octave, this is the fingering the player will use) and then show the intended note with a harmonic circle above
  • Flutter tonguing – possible on other woodwinds as well, but particularly common for flute, as the mouth cavity is more open
  • Percussive tonguing
    • tongue pizz.
    • tongue stops (fundamentals only, lowest octave)
  • Pitch bends – slight bends achieved by rolling the flute in or out
  • Jet whistle: very fast over-blowing through a series of harmonics
  • Whistle tones: very soft, subtle high sounds
  • Breath tone (related: “shakuhachi” style)
  • alternate fingerings (microtones, timbral trills)
  • Sing (while playing or not)
  • works
    • George Crumb: Vox Balanae
    • Ian Clarke: Zoom Tube
    • Robert Dick: Lookout (and lots of other works)
    • Luciano Berio: Sequenza I

Reeds

  • Key clicks (also on flute): very soft!
  • Alternate fingerings (microtones, timbral trills)
  • Singing while playing (sligtly trickier than on flute, but doable)
  • Multiphonics (fingerings and voicings that produce multiple sounds)
    • require special fingerings
    • some more suited to loud playing, others to soft playing
    • may vary slightly between players and instruments
    • consult a fingering chart, or better yet, a performer, or even better, the performer who will premiere the work
  • Slap tongue
    • open (more percussive air sound)
    • closed (more pitch, pizzicato-like)
  • works
    • oboe
      • Luciano Berio: Sequenza VII (my favorite of the sequenzas)
      • Heinz Holliger: Studie for Oboe (This is the person for whom the Berio oboe sequenza was written. There are two studies.)
    • saxophone
      • Christian Lauba: Neuf études for saxophone (“Sanza” has some good multiphonic staccato examples, “Jungle” includes slap tongue, many require circular breathing to play as written)
      • William Albright: Doo Dah for three alto saxophones
      • David MacDonald: Inner/Outer Monologue for unaccompanied tenor saxophone 
    • clarinet
      • Eric Mandat: Rrowzer! (forgive him the title)
      • Leslie Basset: Soliloquies
      • Luciano Berio: Sequenza IX

Extended voice (10 Sep)

  • Hippocratic Oath of Extended Techniques: “First, do no harm.”

Voice background

  • Voice is unlike instruments in a lot of ways
    • each voice is a person, and therefore different from all others, making it hard to generalize
    • voices are flexible in pitch (like orchestral strings)
    • voices can be taxed more easily than other instruments
  • There are many different voice types and subtypes, but the main differences are in tone.
    • different women and different men are likely to only have a few notes of difference on the ends
  • Always remember: Bel canto is the true extended technique!
  • Technical elements of singing:
    • vocal cords (vocalization)
      • control pitch and volume
    • mouth, tongue, teeth, lips
      • control formant (vowel) and percussive sounds (consonants)
      • can be used without vocalizing
  • Registers
    • chest (normal)
    • head (higher, trained)
    • may be other registers
    • passaggio (few notes between registers, more taxing than a single register)

Techniques

  • Microtones
    • Penderecki: Stabat Mater
    • Joel Puckett: opening passages of I Enter the Earth
  • Speaking (rhythmic or not)
    • Kate Soper: Only The Words Themselves Mean What They Say
  • Sprechstimme: speech-voice, Sprechgesang: speech-sing
    • Schoenberg: Pierrot Lunaire
  • Vocal fry
    • very slow flaps of the vocal cords
  • Pop singing (not that extended, I suppose)
    • Corey Dargel: On This Date Every Year
    • William Britelle: Mohair Time Warp
  • Multiphonic singing
    • Overtone singing
      • Anna-Maria Hefele: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=32&v=vC9Qh709gas
    • Subtone singing
      • Ken Ueno: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zEAsR4s42BE
  • Yodeling
  • Screamo
  • Vocal percussion, clicks, pops (not usually involving vocal cords)
    • Berio: Sequenza III
  • Lots of things
    • Caroline Shaw: Partita for 8 Voices

Ensembles to follow

  • Roomful of Teeth
  • Quince Vocal Ensemble
  • Juice Vocal Ensemble
  • The Crossing

Other resources