David Worrall: ...With Fish Scales Scattered... (1982)

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Composer: David Worrall

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Canberra School of Music, Australian National University

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"... with fish scales scattered... for two channel tape was composed in January and February 1982 on the digital computer in the computer music research project studio at Melbourne University. The work was inspired by a visit I made to the Aboriginal island community at Milingimbi in north-east Amhem Land in 1973. Milingimbi Milingimbi is the home of many extraordinary painters and it is on the beach there that many of the commuhity' s artists work. Although the title is more an indication of a state of mind than a literal image, it was the kaleidoscopic effect of the continual random scattering of fish scales by the gentle wash of the water at the ocean's edge, the way the light reflected and refracted their oily colours and textures, that left a permanent impression on my mind. Technically the piece is concerned with gradual transformation through inexact repetition and the control of musical elements in a fashion not possible in human performance (ritardando,portamento, articulation etc.). The musical material of the work easily divides into foreground and background. The foreground material consists of a repeated rippling arpeggiated figure which begins in both channels. The background material makes subtle use of glissandi. The sounds are more vocal in nature and are evocative of the calling of animals, especially water animals. At each repetition of the arpeggiated figure it changes in the following ways: 1. The duration of the arpeggio is determined by choosing from a table of durations which are golden section related. 2. Although the same set of pitches is used throughout (one channel is a transposition of the other) these pitches are randomly reordered. 3. The duration of each note of the arpeggio is randomly chosen from a table of possible durations which are also golden section related. This process results in different sonorities being ustained after each arpeggiation. The two channels have different tempo schemes: one channel remains at a fixed tempo whilst the other is gradually decreasing. This creates a slow and very controlled phasing effect between the two channels. The two channels begin at the same tempo. Towards the end of the work the tempi differ enough to cause an overlap between the ending of the slowed arpeggio in one channel and the beginning of the next fixed tempo. arpeggio in the other. All the timbres were created using simple additive synthesis, the background sounds being composed mainly of odd numbered partials (fundamental, 11th, 17th etc.). An interesting tension is created by bringing sounds usually associated with the background (ostinato, arpeggiation) into the foreground and vice versa. This partly accounts for the hypnotic quality of the work." -- David Worrall

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