Author: Greg

  • After Rochberg: NYC Preparations

    I spent this last week in New York with my good friend and colleague Jeremy Gill as we prepared for the premiere of After Rochberg.

    In many ways this was a fabulous way to end 2018 — not the least of which is that this concert represented several milestones for my work on the Isomer Project. We worked hard this week. Even so, I got to visit with old friends

    Jonathan rips through Helian

    taste test incredible restaurants…

    Dr. Gill prepares a blue cocktail

    try new cocktails…

    Juilliard Bookstore

    rummage through bookstores in search of rare scores…

    NYC Morning Looking West

    and take in early-morning NYC views.

  • After Rochberg: A Centenary Celebration Concert

    After Rochberg: A Centenary Celebration Concert

    Since 2013, my close friend and colleague Jeremy Gill and I have been searching for an opportunity to put together a concert in honor of our mentor George Rochberg. At long last, we found it.

    Jeremy and I were fortunate to have worked closely with George during the last 10 years of his life. Rochberg’s legacy as a composer and teacher is widely felt, and in a very real sense, our compositional work is part of that legacy.

    Our concert title “After Rochberg” is a play on his 1966 piano solo work Nach Bach and is designed to showcase the incredible range of George’s musical output and his legacy — in the form of works from two of his last students.

    Half of the concert is a survey of George’s piano music from 1941 to 1984. By way of example, here’s a selection of short movements from one of Rochberg’s seminal twelve-tone works from the 1950s.

    Twelve Bagatelles (1952), Nos. 1, 2, 5, and 9, Greg Wilder, piano

    Between musical selections, we hear George’s own voice (captured in interviews) describing his personal journey and attitudes toward various aesthetic and historic approaches to music composition.

    The second half of the recital is split between Jeremy’s and my own compositions, all of which were written within the last 15 years. (Plume and The 13th Page were were among the included works.)

    After Rochberg (December 2018)

    Throughout November and December of 2018, we prepared and tested the recital concept with small audiences, eventually presenting the public premiere as a part of George’s centenary celebration (1918-2005) in Philadelphia on December 10th.

  • The 13th Page

    The 13th Page

    It’s not unusual to create new music for Pierrot ensemble.

    In fact, composers in recent decades have generated so much new music for this combination of instruments, numerous groups have formed and risen to fame performing it. But what is slightly unusual is for a composer to collaborate with computer software when writing for this ensemble.

    December 2018 | Pierrot Ensemble (Fl, Cl, Vln, Vc, Pno) | Greg Wilder, piano

    Given that my recent work with Isomer has been realized fully within the digital realm, I thought it might be appropriate to apply these same spectral techniques to the generation of a score for a traditional ensemble of instruments. The result is The 13th Page

  • The Aural Savant

    The Aural Savant

    Johannes Vermeer (1632-1675) is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest painters of the Dutch Golden Age. In particular, his uncanny ability to capture the lens-accurate effects of light and shadow in intricate and provocatively staged scenes has elevated him to the status of revolutionary master.

    There’s something very special there. Almost spiritual. And yet, we can’t quite put our finger on it.

    — Tracy Chevalier, Historical Novelist on Vermeer

    Recently, inventor Tim Jenison spent more than five years developing and testing theories around the possibility that Vermeer relied heavily on machines to produce the 36 masterworks attributed to him today. While it’s unclear how applicable Jenison’s results are to Vermeer’s actual process, the backlash from his efforts makes it clear that associating influential artwork to a partially mechanical process is a decidedly unpopular thing to do.

    Should Technology Play a Creative Role?

    Of course, art is never created in a technological vacuum. Advances in paint pigmentation, musical instrument construction, and so on, are examples of technology’s direct influence on artistic output. And yet many cry foul when they suspect a technology may be brushing up against the essence of an artwork.

    When confronted with art that acknowledges direct technological involvement in the creative process, people often say they feel deprived of an authentic artistic experience. They feel cheated in some way.

    I’ve experienced this bias from non-musicians and professional musicians, and I’m not alone. While I understand why people might draw similar battlelines in other aspects of their lives (e.g. politics and spirituality), I’m left frustrated and confused when it comes to the role of technology in art. How can the source of the artifact count for more than the artistic value of the work itself?

    Perhaps a little armchair theorizing will help me understand — or at least feel better about — the apparent state of things.

    Touchable Technologies

    clarinet-technologyCould it be that certain technologies are more readily accepted because they appear to be within the immediate control of the artists themselves? For example, while most composers would be unable to fashion a working clarinet from raw materials, it’s certain that most have worked closely with numerous clarinets and clarinetists, so as to understand the limitations and advantages of the physical mechanisms employed.

    Is a composer’s use of “clarinet technology” acceptable because we can touch it? Are clarinets welcome because they’ve been around (in one form or another) for hundreds of years? Does the mechanical nature of physical instruments and tools seem more grounded to us?

    This sounds plausible.

    Untouchable Technologies

    But if touchability is so important, why then is it acceptable to use software to design and/or implement an artistic idea?

    Most often, creators employ digital tools as a series of black boxes with very little knowledge of their internal workings. Artists using these tools can be unwittingly influenced (or even held hostage) by interfaces, opcodes, and algorithms they didn’t create.

    Computer Generated Net Art

    And yet, artists using technologies like these are rarely (if ever) seen as engaging in artistic trickery or cheating, nor do they feel these tools are outside of their control.

    Strike.

    Maybe it’s time to turn the question of artistic authenticity on its head. What can we learn by examining other examples of artistic practice that are commonly viewed as deceptive?

    The (Dis)Advantage of Influence

    Just as certain applications of technology appear to influence the assumed integrity of a given artwork, the same may be said for the amount and type of perceived influence any given work contains.

    I say “perceived” because it is often the case that deep influence between artists and composers go misappropriated or even unnoticed. In fact, the attribution of landmark innovations can be so widely mistaken that the error becomes an indelible part of the canon.

    Even so, the questions that arise are familiar…

    • When artists draw heavily from existing artwork (whatever their intent), is it a form of cheating?
    • Where should lines be drawn between artistic influence, parody and copying?
    • Is it acceptable for artists to copy (or borrow) from themselves?
    • When is artistic appropriation a creative act, and when does it devolve into plagiarism?

    This feels closely related to questions surrounding our Vermeer example such as: when does a mechanically-aided artistic process cease to be a creative act?

    Hrm…

    Maybe what upsets people isn’t the use of technology per se, but rather a perceived loss of artistic authenticity and uniqueness. Adding to the confusion, perceived signals of artistic authenticity are in a constant state of flux…

    A Modern View

    js-bach-with-shadesInterpreting evidence that Vermeer was an extremely clever engineer with a talent for theatrical staging (who happened to produce incredibly important and influential artworks) is offensive to many — at least today. I suspect the same would be true if evidence surfaced suggesting that Bach’s ingenious counterpoint was significantly made possible by an incredibly clever (but long forgotten) 17th century machine.

    It’s important to remember that these illustrations carry the full force of history behind them. A distant history whereby it’s impossible to know with certainty how any specific artwork was created. Of course, this isn’t true for new pieces created by machines. But this fact only makes it that much easier for people to dismiss machine-generated music as less worthy of repetition — especially in an time of A.I. buzzword fatigue and algorithmic intrusion into our daily lives.

    Parting Thoughts

    I recently had the opportunity to see several of Vermeer’s paintings with my own eyes. Great googily moogily. The light in these paintings are unlike anything else I’ve seen.

    I’m certainly no expert, but the illumination sure feels lens-accurate to me. And so what if it is? The paintings are so much more than the unprecedented technical execution of light and shadow. So much more…

    The truth is — I have yet to hear music produced by a machine that rises to the quality of what humans create. But don’t mistake this for pessimism. There are many worthwhile efforts underway. We’re just getting started. And unlike some, I welcome our new algorithmic overlords.