Fibreglass Forestry - A new Large Scale Work by Chris Perren
Nonsemble's latest large-scale work sees their string section augmented to a 9-piece in Chris Perren's majestic Fibreglass Forestry. Composed throughout the first half of 2016, it was premiered at the Dots+Loops Recomposed Concert at GoMA, Brisbane, July 2016. It is scored for Piano, 3 Violins, 3 Violas, 3 Cellos, Drums, and Bass Synthesizer, running for around 19 minutes.After its exceptionally well-recieved premiere, we look forward to recording and releasing this monster of a piece sometime in the future. Program notes by Chris Perren:
Fibreglass Forestry is a large single-movement work that crystallizes spontaneous and fleeting gestures in the frozen form of fixed notation. In my work I am often caught between two competing interests: a Zen-influenced desire to leave my compositions loosely defined, dynamic, open to chaos; and a perfectionist compulsion to control every detail. Fibreglass Forestry mimics the spontaneity of improvisation within the contrived medium of notated music.Where my previous compositions have been rather mechanical and procedural in their development, this work was much more intuitive. Its journey is more winding mountain path than machine conveyor belt. Perhaps the influence of having recently become a parent has led me to embrace mess and chaos in both life and art - this work is certainly the most deliberately untidy of my compositions to date. Much of it is the result of a kind of mental improvisation, to which the medium of notation grants powers of alignment and coherence unavailable to true improvisation.The title is a play on this tension between the dynamic and the static: a forest constructed with fibreglass could have every leaf perfectly placed, but does not grow; it is a beautiful dead thing. But the metaphor is loose, because regardless of how strictly one tries to dictate a musical work, there is an abundance of life and chaos to be found in the very act of performance. The players, the audience, the space, and the wood and metal of the instruments are alive and organic. They are the true life-givers to a piece of music.