Upload .. Download .. Perform . net

I found out about Upload .. Download .. Perform when it was in its early stages. I’ve had occasion recently to look back through it, and there’s reason to dig in a lot further. The “about” page is essentially a text score. The whole site is very well conceived and maintained. (You might consider making a small donation if you find cause to be grateful for it. The site will always be free to use.)

How to use this site Piece
… in any order, all, some, or [n]one of the following:

. upload [something]
. download [something]
. perform [something]

repeat if desired

Here are some (not all) of the pages that I’ll be looking through in more depth. I’ve chosen some profiles with upwards of five scores.

ADACHI Tomomi
MARTIN BACK
G Douglas Barrett
Madison Brookshire
Stephen Chase
jez riley french
Francesco Gagliardi
Martin Iddon
Jukka-Pekka Kervinen
James Klopfleisch
Catherine Lamb
Dominic Lash
: open to all levels :
adam overton
Ian Power
Mark So
stefan thut
Manfred Werder

Maim and alqibla at Musica nova Helsinki

Yesterday, Chaya Czernowin‘s Maim from broadcasted from the Musica nova festival in Helsinki. The piece, the performance, and the video documentation are nothing short of stunning, and they are still available for viewing. Block out 47 minutes in your day, pull out your headphones or connect to your speaker system, watch, and listen. But don’t wait 29 days, because you’ll probably want to hear it again, and then what will you do? Well, you could buy the CD, which is also great. But I mean you’ll want to see and hear this performance again. For one thing, the performers—soloists, conductor, orchestra, all of them—are visibly, unmistakably engaged in the work. They are totally invested in it, and you see it and you hear it. For another, how often do you get to see a tubax in action?

Rico Gubler gives a demonstration of the tubax at the 17:30 mark of the pre-concert discussion. His instrument, he says, is the second tubax the world! In that discussion, José M. Sánchez-Verdú also speaks about his work on the program, alqibla, which is also available to watch now and highly recommended.

And there’s one more resource, as well. Sometime before the concert, a conversation between the conductor, Lothar Zagrosek, the principal trombonist, Darren Acosta, and Czernowin was filmed and made available. Though it’s only 12 minutes, it’s very thought-provoking, honest conversation on a number of levels, from the rehearsal process, to the specific piece, to the relation of new music to history.

pre-pre-concert discussion
pre-concert discussion
Sánchez-Verdú: alqibla
Czernowin: Maim

Rico Gubler, tubax
Peter Veale, oboe
Seth Josel, guitar
Jouko Laivuori, keyboards
Ilari Angervo, viola
Lothar Zagrosek, conductor
Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra

conferences and workshops

A couple of weeks ago, I went to a number of events at Beyond Notation: An Earle Brown Symposium. A new online inventory of the Earle Brown archive was released by the Earle Brown Foundation to coincide with the symposium. Several responses to the conference are now online, Cross-Sections and Scholarly Fields, Robert Kirzinger’s field notes in NewMusicBox, Earle Brown in Shifting Perspectives, by Kyle Gann, and a post on Musically Miscellaneous Mayhem.

Several other conferences and workshops are coming up this year. A couple of the application deadlines are coming up or just gone by, but I’m still going to list them. As always, feel free to let me know of others in the comments, by twitter, or by email.

Conferences

Extended Durations

Music and/as Process

Noise/In/Music

Time Stands Still: Notation in Musical Practice

Workshops/Calls for Scores

Bozzini Quartet: Composer’s Kitchen I – Atelier à Vancouver 2013

June in Buffalo
June in Buffalo Performance Institute

loadbang call for scores

Montréal Contemporary Music Lab (MCML)

Q2 Music Open Call (Off the Grid)

Summer Institute for Contemporary Performance Practice (SICPP)