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Download portrait article by
Kyle Gann in Chamber Music
Magaizine, Volume 25, No. 1, February 2008 in pdf format here
Biography
Wayne Siegel was born in Los Angeles in 1953. Most important in the way
of early musical influence was the American folk music tradition (Pete
Seeger, Woody Guthrie, etc.). Major influences during the 1960's
include the Afro-American blues tradition and avant garde rock (The
Mothers of Invention, Captain Beefheart). From 1971 to 1974 he studied
composition and philosophy at the University of California at Santa
Barbara (UCSB), where he concerned himself mainly with the European
avant garde tradition. After three years at UCSB he decided to complete
his Bachelor of Arts degree while studying with Per
Nørgård in Aarhus, Denmark. He remained in Aarhus and in
1977 he received his Danish degree in composition from the Royal
Academy of Music in Aarhus. In 1978 he was awarded a three-year grant
in composition from the Danish Art Council, working as a free lance
composer in the years that followed. After two years as administrative
director of the West Jutland Symphony Orchestra and affiliated chamber
ensemble, Esbjerg Ensemble, he was in 1986 appointed director of the
newly founded national electronic music center, DIEM (The Danish Institute of
Electroacoustic Music) in Aarhus. In 1994 he chaired the 19th
International Computer Music Conference (ICMC) in Aarhus. From 1996 to
1998 he served as chairman of the two music committees of the Danish
State Arts Foundation. In 2003 DIEM became part of the Royal Academy of Music in Aarhus,
and
Siegel
was appointed professor of electronic music.
Despite early rejection of folk,
blues and rock influences, these influences have surfaced in Siegel's
music, becoming increasingly apparent and conscious through the years.
Other important influences include Györgi Ligeti and Steve Reich;
all of Siegel's works from recent years reflect a strong sway towards
American minimalist aesthetics. Though Siegel has written music with
elements of collage (String Quartet No. 1, Narcissus ad fontem for
large orchestra) he now rejects what he believes to be the
philosophical and musical inconsistency of combining diverse cultural
elements without first having synthesized these elements into an
organic and personal style.
Siegel's works of the late
seventies and early eighties are often constructed around a single
musical process, especially canon technique. In Domino Figures (1979)
for 10 to 100 guitars, a huge canon is created by having the guitarists
send musical figures around a semi-circle in the manner of a chain
reaction (like falling dominoes). The first guitarist begins playing
the first figure, at the same time signaling the player to his left.
The second player waits on "beat" before beginning the figure while
passing it on to the player to his left. It takes about 30 seconds for
the figure to travel from the first player to the last, but in the mean
time the first player has sent several new figures down the line, so
that the different figures are combined in a kind of evlving sound wash
which has a singing, sustained quality not usually associated with the
guitar. Despite its unusual instrumentation, Domino Figures has been
performed frequently in Denmark and abroad. The piece been recorded for
radio and LP, and in 1993 a television production with 105 guitarists
was made to celebrate the 5th aniverssary of Denmark's TV2 - a
record-breaking performances that found its way into the Guiness book
of records!
Techniques similar to the one used in Domino Figures are found in Music
for 21 Clarinets (1980), Watercolor, Acrylic, Watercolor (1981),
Devil's Golf Course for large orchestra (1986), Three Canons for Two
Guitars (1987), Cobra for four-channel tape (1988) and Tunnel for four
channel tape (1995).
Watercolor, Acrylic, Watercolor is one of Siegel's most frequently
performed works. It was written for an instrumental combination that is
unusual for Siegel's production: wind quintet and string quintet.
Influence from Ligeti's testural music and American minimalism meet in
a delightful musical fusion which has a unique charm owing to the use
of a claissical instrumental ensemble. Although this piece cannot be
called pluralistic, the traditional ensemble gives the work's synthetic
surface a touch of the past which is treated in a very contemporary
way. The piece consists of three uninterrupted contrasting sections. In
the outer section (Watercolor) each musician plays in his own tempo as
in Domino Figures, while the middle section (Acrylic) is synchronized
in one tempo with one repeated polyphonic figure abruptly following
another. The work is performed without a conductor.
In Devil's Golf Course for orchestra he uses repetition to create a
bold and aggressive dynamic music. In addition to large orchestra the
instrumentation includes two synthesizers and two drum sets, serving to
place the work between genres, a tendency found throughout Siegel's
production. This tendency is also characterized by his use of
electronics and computers. He has often worked with electronic delays
to create synchronized canons for solo instruments. Autumn Resonance
(1979), for piano and two digital delays, utilizes the delays in two
different way: both as a textural element and a rhythmic device. In
Voices Recurrent for cello and delays, the part is intertwined with the
delays creating a virtuoso cello trio performing at 16 beats per second.
From the early eighties, Siegel has become increasingly occupied with
computer music. His Street Music (1981) uses synthesizers and delays to
create a percussive Latin-American rhythmic canon, while Supreme
Sacrifice (1981) for keyboards and voice is an electronic science
fiction ballad. Like Autumn Resonance, both works are written for and
performed by the composer. In Cobra (1988) for four-channel tape, the
sound material is derived mostly from the human voice. The material was
digitally processed to create hybrid instruments - crosses between sung
vowels and plucked string instruments. The work is a strict
twenty-voice canon with the voices distributed in a large circle.
Another frequently performed work by Siegel is his second string
quartet, Tracking. Commissioned by the legendary Kronos Quartet, the
piece is written for string quartet and computer. The electronics are
used as an extension of the acoustic instruments, the computer
controlling both sound treatment of the live musicians as well as a
battery of synthesizers playing digitally altered string sounds and
synthetic sounds. The work is more aggresive than most of his earlier
work, with two repetitive, distinct outer sections joined by a
seemless, textural wash of ever-changing timbres. Eclipse (1991),
commisioned by the London-based vocal group, Singcircle, is written for
four voices and live electronics. The voices are treated electronically
using various techniques, transforming the texts into a type of sound
wash. In some of the sung passages, delays are used to create a
rhythmic canon in combination with the singers. In other passages,
computer processing is used to transform the sound spectrum, spatial
location and reverberation of the voices. Jackdaw (1995) for bass
clarinet and computer, the sounds produced by a small European crow
called the Jackdaw are manipulated, morphed and transformed along with
the sounds of a bass clarinet to create a lively dialogue between the
instrumentalist and the computer. The work was commissioned by Dutch
bass clarinet virtuoso Harry Sparnaay and has received over 100
performances throughout the world.
The, science fiction opera Livstegn (Signs of Life, 1993-94) is
Siegel's most extensive work to date. This two-hour work involves four
singers, nine musicians and several computers controlling interactive
computer music programs and computer graphics as well as live video
scenes. Commissioned by the Danish Music Theater, Livstegn was
premiered in Copenhagen in November 1994, receiving nine performances.
The story and libretto were written by Siegel's wife, Danish novelist
Elisabeth Siegel. In the opening scene, two young scientists, Adrian
and Natalie, arrive by space ship at a base on Jupiter's moon, Europa,
where they are to study conditions in the vast ocean beneath the icy
surface of this foreign world. As the work unfolds, it becomes more and
more apparent, that Adrian is also a foreign world to himself. When he
unexpectedly discovers signs of life from the depths of what he thought
to be a completely barren wilderness, a fateful chain of events is set
into motion. In several scenes, performers appear on a large video
screen, interacting with performers on the stage.There is a seemless
boarder between sound effects and music, and the interaction between
human beings and the sofisticated machines that protect them from a
hostile environment in the story is reflected in the interplay between
musicians and computers in the performance.
During the 90's Siegel explored
the possibilities of interactive computer music. Best known are his
“Music for Wind”, an outdoor installation which responds to wind speed
and wind direction and "Movement Study", an interactive work for dancer
and computer, in which the dancer's movements control the music. The
two parallel works for solo intrument and computer, Match I for
percussion and computer and Match II for flute and computer also employ
specially developed computer programs as integrated parts of the music.
Siegel has worked on research in the field of interactive music, and
pulblished several articles on the subject. Siegel continued to compose
instrumental (acoustic) works, including the two virtuoso pieces
Savanna for percussion duo (1997) commission by the Safri Duo, City
View (1996-99) for saxophone quartet commissiond by the Danish
Saxophone Quartet and Millennium Café (1999), a concerto for
trumpet and chamber ensemble commission by the Danish Chamber Players.
With his American background,
Wayne Siegel occupies a unique position in Danish music. This
background has quite naturally led him to feel less bound by European
tradition than other composers in Denmark, and Siegel's wholehearted
adhearance to an aesthetic derived from American minimalism represents
in itself a consistency and strength that is exceptional. His use of
electronics and computers is perhaps also of American derivition, but
his work in this field has undoubtebly had a major impact on a new
generation of Danish composers.
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Drowning/Burning
Interactive
sound
installation,
Skive
Museum
June 12 - August 29, 2010
Sound installation awarded idea prize by the Danish
Arts
Foundation.

Nykker - Ballet 2007

Match I, CD on Da Capo
Records

Orfeus Duo
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