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Cometas / Lucas Fagin.
- Format:
- Musical score
- Author/Creator:
- Fagin, Lucas, 1980-
- Language:
- Undetermined
- Genre:
- Notated music.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (38 pages) ; A3 - Tabloid
- Place of Publication:
- Paris : BabelScores, 2004.
- System Details:
- Notes:
- Dedicated to Guillaume Bourgogne. This piece was the first of a series with spatialized devices. It is a piece for ensemble of 14 instruments arranged on the stage in three main curves articulated through a centre. The conductor stands on the right of the stage so that the audience have a cross view of the musicians.The approach to comets was somewhat rudimentary as I did not study them in depth. I read some theory or other about their origins, descriptions of their various types of trajectory, also about their physicochemical composition and saw some images (none that struck me as particularly interesting). But I did not need and even refused the possibility to tinge my composition process with any "scientific" type of quality. Thus I simply took in some simple concepts and then gave free rein to my imagination. However I must acknowledge that several sections of the piece were conditioned by the little information I absorbed at the very beginning. The piece has five sections. I composed the first section inspired in a theory which holds that there are regions of the universe where comets are formed and from which they are later ejected to follow their course along their different trajectories. Starting from a very personal conception, I built this space in which comets are born and gather to be later thrown out.The fourth section refers to the essential elements and parts that convey the imaginary view and noise of an advancing comet: its head, its tail, light, gas, friction, et ceteraThe fifth section is a metaphor for a comet whose trajectory starts changing and is progressively compressed. Finally the comet escapes its trajectory jumping into a new space. The idea to compose about comets had moreover another meaning or potential concerning the experience of spatialization I was implementing, as comets are both mobile and static elements (depending on time and viewpoint). The arrangement of spatialized instruments allowed me to link ideas of sound to space. Thus there was a space imagery. Each gesture implied a movement of passage or a particular stable arrangement. From bodies of sound that were transfigured as they passed (section 2) to a large static body distributed in space in the image of a comet (section 4).
- Publisher Number:
- 979-0-2325-0004-1
- Access Restriction:
- Restricted for use by site license.
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