Concert Programs

Of Places Near & Far

Caroline Louise Miller: Ansible

Bahar Royaee: Kücha Lar

Robert Seaback: Mutation (as the mark that noise leaves upon presence)

Steve Ricks: Motor Culture

Paula Matthusen: within the social history of saltpeter


Of Places Near & Far is a study of location, interacting cultures, and the concept of home. At times sentimental, other times frenetic, always genuine, this electroacoustic program explores five unique voices as they each explore a specific location and space.

Caroline Louise Miller’s Ansible (which was commissioned by the Ensemble and made possible by the Chamber Music America Classical Commissioning Program) is a multi-movement work inspired by the writings of Ursula Le Guin. Integrating field recordings and classic recordings from the early 20th century, the piece – like the novels – explore cultural anthropology and colonization.

Paula Matthusen’s within the social history of saltpeter explores unique sounds from within the Mammoth Caves of Kentucky: the composer and the ensemble spent a week together in Mammoth Cave National Park recording each cave’s unique resonances and natural frequencies. The work confronts the caves’ challenging history, and questions the very nature of exploration.

Kücha-lar by Bahar Royaee
SPLICE Ensmeble

Bahar Royaee’s Kücha-Lar is a setting of an Iranian folk song which is heard in its original form by the piece’s end; the song is poignant, intimate, and paints a picture of Iranian life.

All of the music on this program was written for the SPLICE Ensemble; both the Matthusen and Ricks pieces will be premiered in Fall 2020.

The program is played in two halves with a short intermission and lasts roughly seventy-five minutes.