The Musica Nova Festival of 2017 in Helsinki performed its remaining notes last Sunday. I attended 16 of the concerts, in three of which I contributed as a performer, those being singing a considerable programme with the Helsinki Chamber Choir and soloistic improvising in the Ears Open Ensemble with Jan St. Werner. Both the publicity work and the artistic level of the programming were of high quality. The practicalities with exquisite venues and timeslots allowed flexibly for interaction; some programs were reperformed to ensure more people could hear the music. The artistic director Andre de Ridder has done a great service to the Helsinki new music life, and we can look forward to more in February 2019!
Selected photos from my activities:
Photo 1, Ears Open Ensemble with Jan St. Werner
Photo 2, Ears Open Ensemble with Jan St. Werner
Photo 3, Helsinki Chamber Choir
All posts by jtvesikkala
A Complementary Platform for Studying Piano Multiphonics
I’m glad to hear that my long-time colleague Johan Svensson’s team has today finally completed and published their research “Pianoharmonics – a systematic approach to the inner world of the grand piano” by recording several piano harmonics and multiphonics (or just harmonics, as they call them).
Their work is accessible on the internet in an interactive and immediate form. It serves as substantial and valuable complementary material together with the piano multiphonics charts I have previously published in my thesis (Vesikkala 2016, p. 96-98; 103) and as a transposable file on the Sibelius notation software (in my Press Kit, under Multiphonics materials).
On the CD included with my thesis, I did not delve into such a systematic recording process.
The chart on the team’s website: http://www.pianoharmonics.com/pianomap
Their work is accessible on the internet in an interactive and immediate form. It serves as substantial and valuable complementary material together with the piano multiphonics charts I have previously published in my thesis (Vesikkala 2016, p. 96-98; 103) and as a transposable file on the Sibelius notation software (in my Press Kit, under Multiphonics materials).
On the CD included with my thesis, I did not delve into such a systematic recording process.
The chart on the team’s website: http://www.pianoharmonics.com/pianomap
Extras for my Multiphonics thesis
Thanks to interest from composer colleagues, there are now more multiphonics materials to be found under Press Kit → Multiphonics materials.
One of them is about a multiphonics whistling sound, which, not even all professional singers are not capable of doing. The vocal apparatus is highly individual after all. The sound has found use in my earlier works, for example in Seven takes on Eliot (2014).
The second material will hopefully facilitate the compositional application of the ideas in my thesis from Spring 2016 and a particular chart of multiphonics featured in it, to be exact. The slightly revised chart is now electric and consists of a Sibelius file (here provided for both the 6 and 7 versions) that allows for transposition whereas the original printed chart only presented the situation when a fundament pitch G is used to build the multiphonic chords.
Overview of the adjustable revised chart.
The second material will hopefully facilitate the compositional application of the ideas in my thesis from Spring 2016 and a particular chart of multiphonics featured in it, to be exact. The slightly revised chart is now electric and consists of a Sibelius file (here provided for both the 6 and 7 versions) that allows for transposition whereas the original printed chart only presented the situation when a fundament pitch G is used to build the multiphonic chords.
Overview of the adjustable revised chart.
Interview with Steven Takasugi
New research findings on piano multiphonics made available
My long-time work on piano multiphonics has recently been approved as my master’s thesis at the Sibelius Academy on May 17th.
The study is now publicly accessible to all composer and pianist colleagues for whom it might be helpful.
The text described and available in PDF format (the PDF file can be found near end of page)
The files from the audio CD
I am willing to keep this resource relevant and updated, so any missing information and new perspectives are welcome.
The study is now publicly accessible to all composer and pianist colleagues for whom it might be helpful.
The text described and available in PDF format (the PDF file can be found near end of page)
The files from the audio CD
I am willing to keep this resource relevant and updated, so any missing information and new perspectives are welcome.
