Warren Burt: Remembering Griffes (1989, rev. 1992)
Date
Authors
Composer: Warren Burt
McSullea, Mardi
Harvey, Michael Kieran
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Canberra School of Music, Australian National University
Abstract
"Late in 1989,1 made some sounds on my synthesiser that played two tones at a time, tuned to the pure intervals of the harmonic series. I then began to experiment with playing these two tones in different scales. I got the best results - lots of interesting microtonal intervals and beating sounds - when I used a scale of 17 tones per octave. At this point, I imagined a flute over these sounds. My fascination with the music of the pioneer American modernist composer Charles Tomlinson Griffes (1884-1920) led me to wonder how his type of melodies would go with my microtonal sounds. Using the computer, I made a tape of my sounds. Eventually, I improvised a flute part that used and varied both original materials and the opening theme from Griffes Poem for Flute and Orchestra, which I then notated. In performance, the flautist plays the notated part, while I play the computer. The two parts, flute and computer, have different characteristics, are in different tunings, and progress at different speeds; I think they sit well together." -- Warren Burt