numbers 81–85; numbers 96–100
8 October 2021 - news
This is the catalogue page for numbers 81–85 and numbers 96–100 (published together).
numbers 81–85 and numbers 96–100 were commissioned by the Festival d’Automne à Paris, Musica, festival international des musiques d’aujourd’hui de Strasbourg and Lovemusic.
The first performance was given by Lovemusic with Grace Durham (mezzo-soprano) on 1st October 2021 at the Cité de la Musique et de la Danse in Strasbourg, as part of Musica, festival international des musiques d’aujourd’hui de Strasbourg. The video above is from a concert by the same performers at Arsenal in Metz in November 2022.
These pieces may be performed alongside numbers 76–80 and/or numbers 91–95 (both published by Ricordi), in which case they should be performed in sequential order.
The text for all these pieces comes from Simon Howard’s long-form poem, Numbers (Knives Forks and Spoons Press, 2010).
Duration
numbers 81–85: 12 minutes
numbers 96–100: 8 minutes
Instrumentation
Voice (F3 to A5)
Alto Flute
Clarinet in A
Violin
Viola
Cello
Projection (optional but recommended)
Programme Note
My relationship with Numbers by Simon Howard began in 2011 when I worked with two poems from the book: numbers 76–80 and numbers 91–95. Ever since, I had the intention to set more poems from the book, to gradually form a kind of loose ‘meta-piece’ of all 100 stanzas. The 2011 settings mark the beginning of my explorations of spoken text within my work, and were pivotal pieces for me in that respect. Ten years later, when the circumstances arose to be able to return to the book, I found that, having spent a decade working primarily with spoken text, I wanted to focus back on musical settings of text. To remember, if you like, how to compose. So these two pieces from numbers are just that — my attempt to get back to a more music-led setting of text, while retaining a strong relationship to the structures and ideas in Simon’s work, but hopefully refracted through a musical lens.
numbers 81–85 is a series of five episodes, each quite different from the other. In each episode I’ve tried to distill a feeling or action from the narrative of each stanza, and illustrate it in music. In numbers 96–100 the fives stanzas are taken as a single form. The form of text is mirrored through the fractured pronunciation of the words, the overall idea is of a collective meditation.
Press
“...which seems to focus the composer’s intention to explore certain pathologies from which our societies suffer. He goes even further with Numbers 91-95, framed by Numbers 81-95 and Numbers 96-100. His music resonates/differs with the words of the poet Simon Howard, clattering forcefully in semantic explosions charged with meaning.” — DNA Magazine (machine translated from French)
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[Post Photo: the premiere performance in Strasbourg with Grace Durham and Lovemusic, © Didier Jacquot]