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Degrees of separation
Degrees of separation










degrees of separation

PERFORMANCE: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐, RECORDING: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐" BBC Music Magazine "This commendable release is a welcome introduction to a terrific new wave of composing talent. When you think about it, you can think about it as much or as little as you like.”ġ. Patrick John Jones The Fun Will Never End But it also, when you think about it, might not be. Patrick writes, “This might be, when you think about it, a reflection of my emotional state during lockdown.

#Degrees of separation series

Patrick John Jones draws on the unnerving combination of enthusiastic, upbeat energy and dark undertones found in the surreal YouTube series Don't Hug Me I'm Scared for his dance-like piece The Fun Will Never End. He creates two planes of opposing material the 'real' plane of the strings and the 'unreal halo' plane of pitched percussion, each exerting a magnetic pull on one another. This connection of motifs also features in Irish composer Chris McCormack's Silver Traces. Musical motifs sound out vast spaces as if searching for one another, an evocation of the sense of longing and frustration felt by many during the pandemic.

degrees of separation

The title is derived from Dadd's The Fairy Feller's Master-Stroke, an intense, mesmerising work, with Paxton's music perfectly evoking the densely-packed surreal scene, with a sprinkling of magic and intrigue.Īrchitect and composer Emma-Kate Matthews' piece Remote Overlap explores ideas of communication and distance. Christian Drew's See Slow Blue also slows the tempo, finding inspiration in the lazy, ambling slide guitar, muted toms, jangling bells, and rustling shakers of New Jersey-based ambient, noise rock, shoegazing band, Yo La Tengo.īouncing off from the symbolic double 'DD' of Bedlam-bound artist Richard Dadd's name, the award-winning composer and improvising-trombonist Alex Paxton weaves together his own folklore in Dadd's Fairies. In setting the words for brass quintet, the "imagined colours and contours" of Ahab's speech cry out for a world that humanities' greed is engulfing. The slowing of life's pace allowed the composer and former member of the Mercury Prize-nominated band The Unthanks, Stef Conner to reflect on Captain Ahab's striking soliloquy from Melville's Moby Dick in her piece Hymn to a Head. With the help of members of the London Symphony Orchestra, conductor Darren Bloom, and some well-known video conferencing software, the six composers Christian Drew, Stef Conner, Patrick John Jones, Emma-Kate Matthews, Chris McCormack, and Alex Paxton have all written and recorded new pieces which each in their way explore the effects of lockdown.

degrees of separation

This was true for the six LSO Panufnik Scheme Composers who had hardly begun their year of activity before the March 2020 Lockdown.Īs the Composition Director for the scheme, Colin Matthews created a separate project where each composer would write a short ensemble piece to be performed and recorded under lockdown conditions. When the pandemic struck and all musical activity ground to a halt, many composers and musicians were left without any means of creative output. Devastation sparks innovation with six new pieces performed by members of the London Symphony Orchestra for NMC's digital release, Six Degrees of Separation.












Degrees of separation