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The
Overwhelming Blankness of the Ultimate Meaninglessness of Tragedy
For two ensembles, soprano and actor
The point of departure of this work is a duality based on the "Death
and Disaster" series of silscreen prints by Andy Warhol, especially
his "Blue Electric Chair".

Each painting in this
serie consists of two panels, one with a representation of a "disaster"
(a car accident or an electric chair for example) in one tint against
a background colour, while the other panel consists of only this
background colour. The contrast of this blank panel next to a shocking
depiction leads to controversy: the overwhelming blankness of the
ultimate meaninglessness of tragedy.
Translated into music this duality is formed by the two ensembles,
which each have their own characteristic sound. One has the character
of a subdued, resigned esthetics (very soft and slow, orderly material:
for example, every note has its own instrumentation and register
from F below central C to three octaves higher, the soprano often
sings not more than two widely spaced intervals, the instrumentation
consists of soft instruments, such as vibraphone, harp, some strings
and woodwinds). The other ensemble characterizes disaster (everything
very harsh, loud and complex, chromatic, erratic playing techniques
such as clusters, flutter tonguing, scratching sounds, a lot of
percussion, loud brass and squeeling woodwinds, violin and double
bass).
Similarly, the text may also be divided into this duality. The texts
by Jorge Luis Borges and Octavio Paz, sung by the soprano, describe
a vision of dying, in which hopefully a hint of the world to come
is revealed.
This forms a violent contrast to the text of the actor, which is
a very direct description of what happens to someone being executed
on the electric chair.
Click
here for audio examples 1
and 2
of the work
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