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  • It's so hard to pick one word to describe a piece, but something that I

  • really had in mind while I was writing my new piece was the word momentum. I

  • think that especially through music, because it involves time, it's really a

  • window into someone's inner landscape or something about their world or

  • their mind. I have a routine where if I'm in LA I'll get up in the morning early

  • and take a jog and then I'll come back and write for a while, and it takes a

  • while to have an idea, so I'll try to create ample space to write. I usually

  • start by making a drawing of the piece. So for this new piece I had this image

  • of this golden arrow that was shaped like a spiral, and I think it had to do

  • with the ostinato, it had to do with that momentum we were talking about, and I had

  • to do it kind of, the way that I wanted the piece to happen, where it had to come

  • from somewhere and then land very centrally, so it had to

  • move into you as you listen to it. It really helps to have those

  • shapes and that physical expression of the piece, just because it exists, and it's

  • something you can hang onto when you're bringing something out of the ether.

  • I try to make it a full-body experience. I think it's more impactful,

  • because that's where we feel music, and I'm really into expression and

  • expressing emotions, and through that, I think people connect, and that's the

  • magic of music. So I'll sometimes take the pieces on a walk or on a jog or like

  • move around the room with them, or I'll sing lines so that there's a physicality

  • to it, and I kind of bring it into my body before I put it on the page in

  • different ways. "When the World as You've Known It Doesn't Exist" is a piece that I

  • wrote right after I had finished doing "p r i s m," and doing that was such a full-on

  • experience that I felt disconnected from my own energy in a way that I've never

  • felt before. It wasn't depression; I just didn't feel

  • like I could move into the work, and so there was something that felt like

  • something was around the edges that I wanted to try to touch on.

  • I'm a five-foot-tall woman, so the fact that I think my emotions belong on that

  • stage is a political statement, so I just went very personal and was

  • writing about my emotional landscape for the past year, and that's what the piece

  • is based on. Project 19 with the New York Phil is a really exciting project. I'm so

  • grateful to be involved in it. All the other composers I'm obsessed with, so

  • it's incredible, it's truly incredible. I mean what the New York Phil is saying is

  • that these voices matter; these voices belong in our institutions in this major

  • way. The momentum that that's creating in the field, you can feel the

  • ripples. People are talking about this, and there's a lot of support behind the

  • pieces that we're doing. The New York Phil is a place where people look

  • to to see what is happening: what are they doing? Because that's the cutting edge,

  • and for the New York Phil to step up and commit to all of these commissions is so

  • incredible. It's setting a really high bar. The creativity was always there,

  • so there's nothing new there. What's changed is that I think a broader

  • audience is more interested in listening, and that's because of the work the

  • New York Phil's doing, where they're saying, You should hear this; this

  • matters. I love the idea of momentum because it is forward-moving, but it's

  • also just the beginning, and there's something so exciting about the idea of

  • momentum. Somebody had to start it, so that I feel like I'm getting to ride

  • this wave of momentum from female- identifying composers before me who

  • fought to have their voices heard, and the work itself will hopefully

  • send us into the rest of the concert and the rest of the evening.

  • I think art is the closest we can get to understanding someone else's experience,

  • so it's so important to show a wide diversity of experience, but it's also a

  • celebration of being alive and you know, that feeling anything is a privilege.

  • Truly, like the fact that we can. So that's what I aim to celebrate in my

  • work.

It's so hard to pick one word to describe a piece, but something that I

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プロジェクト19 プロフィール。エレン・リード (Project 19 Profile: Ellen Reid)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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