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          Music, Being, and the Spaces Between

Previously titled 'Meditations on Music and Spirit

Instrumentation: flute/alto flute/piccolo; clarinet/bass clarinet; violin; violoncello; vibraphone/marimba; harp; piano. Speaker (optional)

Year: 2005 - 23        
Duration: 30 - 40 minutes
Void
Enthusiasm
Mourning/  Corpus Christie
Grace
Soaring
Peace
Flight

Music, Being, and the Spaces Between consists of twelve interludes in which each interlude's title refers to various states, or poetic representations, of being human and one's being in the world.  The change of title from 'Meditations on Music and Spirit' was made in order to avoid any reference to pseudo-spirituality or new age thought.

 

Each interlude is accompanied by a commentary which is fundamentally humanist in conception and informed by hermeneutics.  A performance can involve a speaker who reads abridged versions of the commentaries.

 

The full texts (definition and commentary) can be printed in a program with the option of  projecting only the title of each movement onto a screen or wall using the Herculanum font. For example:

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Resonance
Epiphany
Joy
Lingering

The commentaries hover somewhere between the experiential and explanatory. The interludes can be performed without any of the included texts. (For more information see A to Z of Music and Spirit: a user's guide).

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Interpreting music with words, especially anything to do with notions of being (or for that matter the spiritual) is arguably subjective and not definitive. In their attempt to negotiate that slippery space (as referenced in the title), each interlude's title and commentary tries to make connections between music and various understandings of human experience (i.e., one's being and its relation to the human spirit).  The commentaries refer to:

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i) phenomena and metaphors that are used to interpret one's relationship with, and understanding of, the external world. 

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ii) the techniques used by musicians to evoke that phenomenon or metaphor.

Relationships between language, words and music have a rich history going back to medieval times and earlier. One approach used in Music, Being and the Spaces Between is music and rhetoric, used by composers in the 16th and 17th centuries where various musical tropes were associated with rhetorical figures of persuasion and formal argument. Affektenlehre, the representation of affects or passions, from the Baroque era is another example of this approach. Both these were gradually  superseded by more rigorous approaches to music theory. However, the linking of musical tropes to specific emotions or concepts has never gone away as can be heard in musical word painting, 19th century program music, many film music scores and 19th century operas.

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Similarly in Music, Being, and the Spaces Between, rhetorical tropes are used such as ascending scales in 'Flight'. While these older rhetorical techniques are still used in various movements of Music, Being, and the Spaces Between, other more abstract rhetorical devices are used such as analogy, ellipsis and metaphor. For example, the title of a movement may relate to the listener's experience or conceptual understanding of that whole movement. The title forms a type of ellipsis in which the listener's experience bridges the gap between the title and the music thereby creating a sense of meaningfulness.

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These twelve musical interludes are also part of a much larger work composed for choir and chamber ensemble titled: The A to Z of Music and Spirit: a user's guide.

Score and parts to Music, Being, and the Spaces Between  can be obtained by contacting the composer - https://www.richardvella.net/contact

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ABC Classic Recordings of Music, Being, and the Spaces Between are available from the Australian Music Centre (originally titled The A to Z of Spiritual Music). Recorded and performed by Marshall McGuire (harp); Christine Draeger (flutes); Margery Smith  (clarinets); Alex D’Elia (violin); Adrian Wallis (violoncello); Daryl Pratt (vibraphone/marimba); Bernadette Balkus (piano); Edward Primrose (conductor); Stephen Adams (producer).

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