Fractal Variations
Details
Duration:
8’
Instrumentation:
str (6.6.4.4.2)
Commissioned by:
Performing Arts Fund NL
In Theo's Own Words
“Fractal Variations is a string orchestra version of my work for string quartet, Spring Rain.
Spring Rain was written at the request of six string quartets, who, around 2000, had come up with a plan to organize their own chamber music series in a number of country estates in the Netherlands without the help of a state subsidy.
Despite the programmatic title, the work is composed as an abstract piece. The composer leaves the listener to harmonize the title with the music in whichever way they choose.
The piece has a light-footed character with both smooth and abrupt transitions. Within eight minutes, it follows a path in which an important role is played by the repetition of musical elements on both a large and small scale. The syntax in this music is very similar to that of the Viennese classics, but came about in a completely different way.”
– Theo Verbey
In Concert
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Video
What are fractals?
Theo Verbey often used fractals when composing. This brief video explains a little more about fractals and their place in the universe.
Recording
Fractal Symphony
Details
Duration:
30'
Instrumentation:
3333 4331 timp 4perc hp pf str (16.14.12.10.8)
Written for:
The Residentie Orkest on the occasion of their centennial in 2004
Commissioned by:
Performing Arts Fund NL
Find on CD:
About 'Fractal Symphony'
Musical form is paramount for Verbey. For every new composition, he searches in advance for rational patterns which he believes are necessary to capture and hold the attention of the experienced listener. In so doing, he voluntarily puts restrictions on himself. Atmosphere and color also play a large role in his music, but only as by-products of the chosen structure.
The musical form of Verbey’s brand new Fractal Symphony depends on fractals, geometric patterns that occur on several repeated levels. Fractals in this case boil down to numerical ratios which underly both the larger form and the smaller musical units. In the five-movement symphony, Verbey chose the numbers 7: 5: 6: 4: 8. From this series, we can infer that the fourth (and shortest) movement is exactly half as long as the fifth (and longest) movement. When added together, the sum of the five numbers also gives the total duration of the symphony, or 30 minutes. Rhythm and musical phrasing are also governed by the same numerical sequence. But other musical parameters such as melody, harmony and dynamics are free from these ‘objective’ relationships, because the composer wanted to reserve room for ‘subjective’, artistic decisions. Despite his fondness for mathematical instruments, Verbey does not have a high opinion of music that is completely generated by algorithms. He thinks such music sounds primitive.
When Theo Verbey set the first sketches of the Fractal Symphony to paper in 1997, he had a slow and monotonous flow of orchestral sounds in mind. He did not hold onto this original vision. Verbey put the sketches aside for some years and only picked up the thread again in April 2004. It soon became clear to him that contrast and variety had to play a leading role in the new composition. To that end, he turned for inspiration to the music of Berlioz and Bartòk.
The variety between the various movements of the Fractal Symphony comes primarily from the contrasting tempos. The second and the fourth movements are fast, the other movements are slow. What’s more, the center of gravity within the instrumentation shifts. The strings predominate in the first movement, the woodwinds in the second, the percussion in the third, and the brass in the fourth. The fifth and final movement is based on Vallee des cloches from Ravel’s Miroirs and contains a quote from an organum from the medieval composer Perotinus. “The first and the last relevant French composers shake hands, as it were,” according to the composer.
– Michel Khalifa, 27 December 2004
In Concert
23 Apr 2009
05 Jun 2009
13 Jun 2009
18 Jun 2009
Video
Regina van Berkel - Memory of a Shape
Fractal Symphony inspired choregrapher Regina van Berkel to create her ballet, "Memory of a Shape" which has been performed by Ballet Mainz and Introdans.
3:52
What are fractals?
Theo Verbey often used fractals when composing. This brief video explains a little more about fractals and their place in the universe.
Recording
Expulsie
Details
Duration:
22'
Instrumentation:
1131 1211 2perc hp pf str(3.2.1.1.)
Written for:
ASKO|Schönburg Ensemble
Commissioned by:
Performing Arts Fund NL
Find on CD:
In Theo's Own Words
“Expulsie is a four-movement composition of approximately 22 minutes for a large instrumental ensemble. The piece forms a triptych, together with Inversie (for 10 instruments, 1987) and Contractie (for alto flute, bass clarinet and piano, 1988). In addition, Expulsie is a direct continuation of my longest piece to date: Aura (1982-1985). The starting point for the composition of this piece is the way the rhythm is structured, a specific kind of rhythm that makes the tempo, or speed audible. I constructed this rhythm based on simple numerical ratios, in this case: 7: 4: 6: 5. Based on that rhythm, the starting point for the piece is the contrast between two chords with a ‘contaminated’ past. The two chords are what’s known as the “Tristan Chord,” and the “Hollywood Chord.” Both chords contain 6 notes and are chromatically complementary i.e., together, the chords make up the 12 tones within the octave. Because the entire piece consists exclusively of these two chords in succession, it gives the piece a very specific character. Each separate movement has its own characteristic instrumentation. In the first movement, the strings predominate and the most recognizable figure is a sustained chord followed by a short, strongly accented chord. The second movement is built around the piano and harp solos; the long-short figure is turned into an appoggiatura with a long note. The third movement is made up of a succession of various solos in the woodwinds, and in the fourth movement, the brass is the most important instrumental group. The 3rd and 4th movements are played with no break in between. The piece has a somewhat curious origin. I composed the 3rd and 4th movements in 1988, after which I created the 1st and 2nd movement in 1990. The world premiere took place on November 24, 1990 in the Concertgebouw Amsterdam during a concert in the Saturday Matinee Series. The piece was subsequently performed by the Norwegian Radio Orchestra in Oslo in 1996, and by the Absolute Ensemble in New York in 1999.”
– Theo Verbey
In Concert
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Press Quotes
‘Verbey’s music is unusually intricate and poetic. “Expulsion,” for an ensemble of 24 players, is based, according to the composer, on an oscillation of two chords, but these provide just a haze over continuous contrapuntal interplay. One has the sense of numerous instrumental voices talking to one another, of music talking to itself, just being there. Not demanding attention, almost resisting it, the piece hooks one in. The Absolute’s performance could have been more carefully modulated, but its liveliness was persuasive, and one was left wanting to hear more of this composer.’ Paul Griffiths, New York Times, 20 April 1999
Reviews
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Conciso
Details
Duration:
9'
Instrumentation:
2020 2000 perc hp pf 4vl 2vla 2vc cb
Commissioned by:
The Performing Arts Fund NL (for the 1996 Holland Festival)
Dedicated to:
London Sinfonietta
Find on CD:
In Theo's Own Words
“Conciso (1995/1996) for large ensemble is a direct follow-up to such pieces as Notturno (1995) for solo oboe and 11 instruments, and Passamezzo (1994) for saxophone quartet. In these pieces, written since Triade (1991), I have continued my pursuit of a more consonant, simple musical language. I found many of my own general artistic principles beautifully expressed by Italo Calvino in his “Six Memos for the Next Millennium.” Calvino wrote his 1985 collection of five lectures for Harvard University (the sixth was never written), shortly before his death. The memos sum up his vision of universal values in literature. His “memos” are: 1. Lightness 2. Quickness 3. Exactitude 4. Visibility 5. Mulitplicity 6. Consistency. At a time when sound imposes itself more and more on us purely through quantity, I am looking for a music that tries to banish any association with the industrial noise of, in particular, transport vehicles. Detailed, vulnerable music that moves within clear boundaries, without too many pretensions. Above all, music that not only holds the attention because of the sound, but also because of “the story,” and which avoids any form of long-windedness. In short, music with characteristics that are more likely to be found in the French / Italian tradition of composition rather than in the German / Dutch. Conciso in its current form is a two-part piece in a slow-fast sequence with the length ratios of 4:5. Much of the structural idea behind the piece is taken from Beethoven’s Piano Sonata op.101, in which the 4 movements relate in time as 4:5:3:6. I used these proportions as a starting point for the temporal division when composing the work. For the harmony, I used the opening chord of Sonata No. 8 op. 66 by Scriabin as a point of departure. That chord is a 6-tone chord which I have placed opposite a second 6-tone chord, so that together, these two chords form a chromatic total. I previously used a similar technique in Expulsie (1988-1990) for large ensemble. In Conciso, I have for the first time made use of a semi-spatial arrangement of the ensemble. The ensemble is placed in its entirety at the front of the stage, but not in its usual set up. It is split into two groups of winds and strings, made up of eight and seven members respectively, positioned to the left and right. Harp, piano and percussion form a buffer between these two groups and sometimes function as a game changer.”
– Theo Verbey
In Concert
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Press Quotes
“Conciso,” a 10-minute piece for 18 players by the contemporary Dutch composer Theo Verbey, opened the concert’s second half with a bustle of fidgeting strings, driving rhythms and tart Stravinskian wind voicings.” – Steve Smith, NY Times, Feb. 21, 2010
Recording
Ariadne
Ariadne
2019
Details
Duration:
16'
Instrumentation:
333 - 4431 - timp 2perc harp pf str (16.14.12.10.8)
Commissioned by:
The Concertgebouworkest
Premiered by:
The Concertgebouworkest on 30 January, 2020, conducted by Santtu-Matias Rouvali
Find on CD:
Recording
Press Quotes
“Verbey was known as one of our country’s best orchestrators and in Ariadne he wraps subtle instrumentations in an immaculate orchestra sound. Craftsmanship of the highest order.”
Joep Christenhusz, NRC, 2 February 2020
“Whilst writing his last notes, Verbey must have felt sympathy for the title heroine, the king’s daughter Ariadne. She helped her lover Theseus beat the Minotaur, after which the hero dumped her as a favour.”
Guido van Oorschot, de Volkskrant, 2 February 2020
Reviews
Nothing found.
Alliage
Details
Duration:
25'
Instrumentation:
4.4.4.4 - 6.4.3.1 - timp, 4perc,, 2hp, pf, str(16.14.12.10.8)
Commissioned by:
Koninklijke Nederlandse Hoogovens en Staalfabrieken
In Theo's Own Words
The first sketches of ‘Alliage’ (Fr. for ‘alloy’) dates from 1992 immediately after I accepted the commission to write a piece for a large orchestra on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of Hoogovens.
In 1993 I became seriously ill and the work came to a halt. The anniversary concert, in which the work was to be premiered, was cancelled because Hoogovens was in serious financial difficulty at that time and did not think it wise to celebrate the 75th anniversary exuberantly.
In 1994, after my recovery, I started on the revisions of ‘Triade’ (1991) for chamber orchestra and also rewrote ‘Passamezzo’ (1991) for saxophone quartet. In the years that followed, I wrote such works as ‘Notturno’ for oboe solo and 11 instruments, and Conciso for large ensemble (commissioned by the Holland Festival 1996). I only resumed work on ‘Alliage’ in December 1996. Of the first version, I only kept the first 26 bars; the other 663 measures are new. I completed the score in November 1997.
Various ideas underlie the piece. The idea of the five-part structure came to mind first, suggested by the Hoogovens logo. Like all my previous works, this work also has a fractal form, ie. a particular series of proportions determines both the largest and the smallest length ratio over time. The number sequence in ‘Alliage’ is 5:6:4:7:3. This adds up to a total time for the piece of 25 minutes; the movements follow one another without interruption.A second idea was prompted by Hoogovens’ wish to integrate aspects of their company into the piece. The title therefore refers to an alloy of melodic material from different musical cultures. For example, a number of motifs are derived from Russian avant-garde music from the beginning of the twentieth century (Scriabin, Stravinsky), some are from South African folk music, and still others are from English / American popular music, ranging from Ellington to Lennon / McCartney. Of course I did my best to forge these very different components into one personal unity.
Part I opens with the six-tone chord found at the beginning of Scriabin’s Sonata No. 8, Op.66; it’s immediately followed by the six-tone chord containing the other six notes of the chromatic total of 12 within the octave. These two six-tone chords are important ingredients of the entire work’s harmony. I had already approached the harmony this way in my work, ‘Expulsie’ (1988-1990). In a moderately fast tempo (Moderato), two motifs are introduced one after the other, first in the horn solo, and then in canon form by 3 clarinets. Eventually, the first movement develops in an arc form: ABCBA.
In Part II, two very different themes are played one after the other at a fast tempo (Allegro). In the development that follows, motifs from the first movement are brought back and employed as accompanying voices. What follows is a renewed version of the two themes, which have now been brought into tonal balance.
In part III (Andante, moderately slow) another motif from part I is developed, after which a quiet, even movement in the harp begins; after a middle section that leads to a climax, the beginning of this movement is repeated. In terms of structure, this movement is very similar to Part I: ABCBA.Part IV (Allegro molto, very fast) is a cross between a Gigue (an 18th century dance form), and a regular feature of the 19th century classical symphony, or the Scherzo. An accelerated form of the motif from section C of the previous movement is used as material for a first theme, after which a variation of a motif from part II appears as a second theme. This is also followed by a development and a reprise. In its sonata form, this movement is very similar to the second movement.
Finally, Part V concludes the entire work in a slow temp.
– Theo Verbey
After the Great War
Details
Duration:
32'
Instrumentation:
3(picc)3(eh)3(bcl)3(cbn) - 4331 - timp 4perc 2hp - str(14.12.10.8.6)
Commissioned by:
Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra and Residentie Orchestra, with financial support from the Performing Arts Fund NL and Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra
In Theo's Own Words
“2018 marks the ending, one hundred years ago, of the First World War. Today, it is almost impossible to reconstruct the shock of war on such a massive scale. The way that particular war began reveals a disconcerting image of international politics. That image, however, bears some disturbing parallels with current times. After the Great War originated with the idea of a confrontation between the two styles of musical composition prevalent one hundred years ago: the German/Austrian late Romantic style of Richard Strauss and Gustav Mahler on the one hand, and, on the other, the French Impressionism of Claude Debussy, Maurice Ravel and others. Neither style had boundaries that were clearly defined, and there were even some similarities, including a fascination with cultures outside of Europe. After the Great War has a five-part palindrome structure: A B C B A. This structure is underlined by the alternating musical tempos: slow-fast-slow-fast-slow. The total duration of the piece is thirty minutes. The work was commissioned jointly by the Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra and the Residentie Orkest in The Hague.”
– Theo Verbey
In Concert
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