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Song of the Tides (10') 2006
concert band / wind ensemble

Commissioned by Mark Hopkins for the Acadia University Wind Ensemble. Funding from the Canadian Music Centre Atlantic, New Music in New Places and SOCAN.

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Instrumentation

1 - Conductor

2 - Flute 1
2 - Flute 2
2 - Flute 3
2 - Oboes 1, 2
2 - Bassoon
4 - Clarinet 1
4 - Clarinet 2
4 - Clarinet 3
2 - Bass Clarinet
2 - Alto Sax 1
2 - Alto Sax 2
2 - Tenor Sax
1 - Bari Sax

4 - Trumpet 1
4 - Trumpet 2
4 - Trumpet 3
2 - F Horn 1
2 - F Horn 2
2 - Trombone 1
2 - Trombone 2
2 - Trombone 3
2 - Baritone B.C. or T.C.
4 - Tuba
3 - Percussion
1 - CD player or Computer

"Song of the Tides" for junior high-school band and pre-recorded sounds of the Bay of Fundy and Nova Scotia's South Shore. The work is in two movements #1 Low Tide and #2 High Tide. The first or second movements can be played on their own, or the two movements can be joined to create a longer work.

The work is aimed towards younger players in grades 7 through 9 (junior high-school level).

The first movement is designed as workshop material that can be extracted and used by the band director as teaching material or for a class project. Students are asked to listen to the provided soundtrack that accompanies this movement and discover ways in which to imitate these sounds on their instruments. A selected group of soloists, or the entire ensemble, improvises over the soundtrack using sounds they have discovered. An additional option requires that students discover a way to notate these sounds using graphic notation and then create a score. This component of the composition will be different every time it is performed and allows the band some ownership of the score!

Movement 2 "High Tide" is fully composed and introduces extended techniques for younger players including glissandos, aeolian (air and breath) sounds, aleatoric notations and tapping on the bell of the instrument. A pre-recorded sound track plays only periodically during this movement.

The sound track includes wind, water, foghorns, seagulls and the sound of the tide roaring through the entrance of the Minas Basin at the tip of Cape Split, Nova Scotia.

Students are introduced to soundscapes, electroacoustic composition, graphic notation and improvisation. Pre-recorded sounds are played back on a CD player or using a laptop computer. The main body of the second movement consists of typical pandiatonic harmony and melody used in conjunction with acousmatic soundscapes.  This allows the student to hear the use of 'traditional' band writing in conjunction with deeper listening soundscapes. Computers are increasingly important to the creation of music therefore incorporation of musique concrète underscores a crucial facet of contemporary teaching practice by integrating technology in formative years of musical studies.

Extended techniques are used as a teaching device aimed towards strengthening traditional performance practice.  For example during the second movement almost all instruments must glissando down a step and return to the original pitch at some point in the composition. This teaches tuning and intonation - ideally when the student returns to the starting pitch intonation and tone improves as a result of 'finding the pitch'. Aeolian and breath sounds, blowing air in and out of the instrument at slow and regular intervals, helps increase awareness of the students breathing.

Ranges of instruments have been deliberately left in an easier tessitura and melodic lines are more conjunct than disjunct.  Instruments should avoid doubling a cue when the cued instrument is present in the ensemble in order to achieve the fullest pallet of colours available to the ensemble.



JOURNAL


Aug. 09, 2006 Cape Split and Scot's Bay N.S.

photos
sound clip 1


Aug. 19, 2006 Halls Harbour, N.S.

photos
sound clip 2
sound clip 3


Aug. 20, 2006 Digby, N.S.

sound clip 4 The fog horn from the Princess of Acadia ferry (Digby to St. John) Thanks to the captain and crew for blowing their horn just for us!


Aug. 21, 2006 Blue Rocks, N.S.

photos
sound clip 5



Funding provided by

New Music in New Places is a national Canadian Music Centre project, which puts the focus on new Canadian music by presenting it in new or unusual venues across the country. So far, close to forty events have taken place in venues such as hotels, shopping malls, office buildings, industrial sites, a winery and a prison. The Canadian Music Centre gratefully acknowledges the support of the SOCAN Foundation and the Government of Canada through the Canada Music Fund.

The CMC, founded in 1959 is Canada's primary place to find scores, parts and recordings of contemporary Canadian music composers. Housing Canada's largest collection of Canadian classical music works, the CMC exists to promote the works of its Associate Composer in Canada and around the world. The Centre males available on loans more than 16,000 scores and/or works of Canadian contemporary classical music composers through it library. Visit www.musiccentre.ca