Login

Enter your username and password

Forgotten your username or password?

Your Shopping Cart

There are no items in your shopping cart.

Work

Musica universalis

by Andrián Pertout (2014)

Score Sample

View a sample of the score of this work
This sample is from the Site specific live performance version of this work

Versions of this work

Select from the following versions of this work to view more detailed information:

- Live performance electronics

- Site specific live performance

Products featuring this work

Format Title Version AMC Library Price  

Score [ePDF]

Musica universalis : for theremin and harmonic bells (or tape) [eScore] / Andrián Pertout.

Live performance electronics Not for loan $37.27 Add to cart

Score

Musica universalis : for theremin and harmonic bells (or tape) / Andrián Pertout.

Live performance electronics Available for loan $52.73 Add to cart

Score [ePDF]

Musica universalis : for harmonic and polytonal bells [eScore] / Andrián Pertout.

Site specific live performance Not for loan $37.27 Add to cart

Score

Musica universalis : for harmonic and polytonal bells / Andrián Pertout.

Site specific live performance Not for loan $52.73 Add to cart

Work Overview

'Musica universalis' or 'Music of the Spheres' was commissioned by Moscow-born, London-based theremin virtuosa Lydia Kavina, who began to study the instrument at the age of nine under the guidance of her first cousin twice removed and inventor of the theremin, Léon Theremin (1896-1993). The work serves as an exploration of a variety of compositional techniques developed by American composer, pianist and theorist Henry Cowell (1897-1965), and presented in his monumental publication of New Musical Resources (1930), as well as melodic, harmonic and rhythmic transformation based on the theoretical writings of Russian composer, music theorist, and composition teacher Joseph Schillinger (1895-1943) - published posthumously as part of a two-volume work entitled The Schillinger System of Musical Composition (1978). Additionally incorporated in the work are the musical implications of the Rhythmicon (an instrument built in 1931 by Léon Theremin at the request of Henry Cowell capable of sounding any rhythmic beat combination based on the harmonic series up to the 16th partial via a 17-note keyboard) in conjunction with compositional techniques derived from Joseph Schillinger's writings that include: (1) "the incorporation of the 91 three-unit scales available in the first sixteen partials of the harmonic series to deliver simultaneities based on all 91 three-part harmonic structures", (2) "the alternation between clockwise and anti-clockwise circular permutations by 3 elements", and (3) "the combination of the gradual addition and subtraction of the original melodic structure split into three (or more) elements (the time axis on abc) delivering symmetry growth along the time axis". Thematic material includes two historical Russian melodies recomposed utilizing Schillinger's concepts of "continuity composed through the time axis": a spiritual verse (Kniga Golubinaya, The Dove Book, Riazan province), and a gospel stichera, or greater chant (Gospel Sticheron by Feodor the Christian [16th Century]).

Work Details

Year: 2014

Duration: 7 min.

The composer notes the following styles, genres, influences, etc associated with this work:
Léon Theremin (1896-1993) Henry Cowell (1897-1965) New Musical Resources (1930) Joseph Schillinger (1895-1943) The Schillinger System of Musical Composition (1978) Rhythmicon (1931) Kniga Golubinaya, The Dove Book, Riazan province Gospel Sticheron by Feodor the Christian (16th Century)

Performances of this work

3 Dec 14: Ace Hotel: London Shoreditch, London, England, UK. Featuring Lydia Kavina.

User reviews

Be the first to share your thoughts, opinions and insights about this work.

To post a comment please login.