TIMBRE-BASED COMPOSITION, MULTIPLE PERSPECTIVES AND AMBIGUITY IN REBECCA SAUNDERS’ COMPOSITIONAL STYLE
Omri Abram
Abstract
Abstract This article takes up Rebecca Saunders’ comments on the significance of timbre in her work to develop a timbre-centred analytical technique for two of her compositions, Ire (2012), for cello and ensemble, and Still (2011), for violin and orchestra. Two overarching principles are identified: the organisation of the pieces’ sounds into clearly differentiated categories, which can also overlap in different ways, and the use of a phrase-based logic in the pieces’ formal construction. Alongside the timbral construction, stable pitches acquire formal significance by virtue of their rarity and conspicuousness. I also elaborate on the ways in which perceptual ambiguity is fruitfully exploited in these works.
Topics & Concepts
TimbreAmbiguityComposition (language)Style (visual arts)PhraseLinguisticsViolinComputer scienceVisual artsCognitive scienceArtPsychologyMusicalPhilosophyArt historyMusic Technology and Sound StudiesNeuroscience and Music PerceptionMusic and Audio Processing