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THE
ENTIRE POPULATION OF PAPAY WESTRAY - violin,whistle,percussion,and
improvised accordian (by non-musician)
LAND-ART COMMISSION 2008 © james hesford
SOUNDS
LIKE SKUNK - Piano Trio No.2 FIDELLIO TRIO COMMISSION
ŠJames Hesford - Performers - Cello James Hesford, Violin James
Hesford, Piano James Hesford.
JUGGLE - ALFIA NAKIPBEKOVA COMMISSIONŠJames
Hesford - Performer Alfia Nakipbekova
ALPHA BOP - ALFIA NAKIPBEKOVA COMMISSION˛©
James Hesford - Performer Alfia Nakipbekova
HEY THE MOONS UP - ALFIA NAKIPBEKOVA
COMMISSION © James Hesford - Performer Alfia Nakipbekova
TO LIVE IS TO LOVE - Cello Quartet
ŠJames Hesford performed byCellorhythmics
NEW ARM POLLY - Cello Quartet ŠJames
Hesford - performed by Cellorhythmics
TRILOGY - "Frying Tonight",
"Home,Warm, Fed and Forgiven", "Before the Bubble
Squeaks" KINTERMARNI SAXOPHONE
QUARTET COMMISSION © James Hesford
PIANO
TRIO NO 1 - BEKOVA TRIO COMMISSION
CHUCK'S
BIG LEAPS - Brass Quintet - MARDI BRASS COMMISSION
SOMETHING
BORROWED - Brass Quintet - MARDI BRASS COMMISSION
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SHAM
SHUI PO SONIC POEM CREATED IN HONG KONG DURING IVANOV
AND CHAN CIRCLE AND PICNIC PROJECT
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Created
during Ivanov/Chan/Hesford's artist/composers residency
in Hong Kong - a piece in its own right and part
of an sound video installation in the C&G Artpartment
in Kowloon, Hong Kong. |
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THE
ENTIRE POPULATION OF PAPA WESTRAY |
Commissioned
by Land Art The Entire Population of Papa Westray was
written for violin, whistle, snare drum, and hide skin
drum and an accordion played by someone who knows nothing
about the instrument apart from if you squeeze it and
press down notes it makes noises. Violin - Julian Saxel,
Flute (Whistle) Mikey Kirkpatric, Drums - Marc Leyton
Bennett, Accordion - James Hesford
"I noticed that many of the Scottish tunes are
named after people. I decided that I would write a very
long tune giving 4 bars of music to each person on the
island of Papay. There are 70 people living there, which
makes 280 bars of music without repeats.. As well as
writing music I also write words - forming ideas through
flow of consciousness. I wanted to approach the composition
in the same way - writing a single line melody from
left to right which would flow from my pen as easily
as words do. My starting point was the fond memories
I have of playing with Margaret Rendall (accordionist)
in the Papay pub on Saturday nights so the beginning
melodic curves and rhythms are reminiscent of the Scottish
and Island tunes we played together for the Papay dances.
I soon found the melody took a life of its own and steered
me into darker tonal areas. I suppose I could not escape
the changing moods of the weather in the Islands which
was unknowingly influencing me. The melody became as
unpredictable as the wind, weaving into the brightness
of the diatonic folk tunes and out into territories
more akin to Ornette Coleman's free jazz improvisation
or early twentieth
century attempts at atonalism. I decided that the tune
should be played by a fiddle and flute player, two percussionists
playing military snare and hide skin drum, and a non
musician improvising on accordion to add a layer of
familiar texture, and to be as disruptive as the Orkney
wind."
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