Timpani and Piano – Application

November 4th, 2011

In this timpani and piano duet the timpani player is required to play quickly and quietly, change the tuning of the timpani while playing, and listen carefully through the sound of the timpani to hear the piano’s pulse. This piece can be quite difficult to play at the prescribed tempo, but it still sounds great when it is played slower than marked. Doing this can make it easier on both the timpani player and even some audiences. A danger to watch for is that the piano can be easily overpowered by the timpani in dark or very wet halls. Be sure to take the necessary precautions to make sure the piano is always heard clearly. This can be achieved by performing in a bright or less resonate hall, using a brighter piano such as a Yamaha, or by slightly muffling the timpani as a last resort. Artificial amplification might work, but the placement of the sound source for the piano has to be in a location that enables it to mix with the sound of the timpani on the stage.

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My friend, Amy, premiered this timpani and piano duet with the man she eventually married at the University of Illinois during her undergrad senior recital. She is an extremely talented performer and a passionate music educator. She asked me to write this piece specifically for her recital, and I accepted with eventual enthusiasm. I took the assignment as an opportunity to test my abilities after writing Transition and The Dark Process as well as to get my foot in the door for graduate school at the university; not to mention doing a favor for an old friend. After it was premiered I spoke with the department chair of percussion, and he said that he would put a good word in for me in the composition department. I have since been rejected for graduate studies at the University of Illinois and have finished a master’s at Michigan State University.

Below is an actual performance of the timpani and piano duet. Not the best recording, but it is a fantastic performance and will give you an idea of what it would be like to actually play it.


Brass Quintet – Waltz of the Savage

November 3rd, 2011

This work was written for a typical collegiate ensemble and is meant to be very standard, fitting in well with other brass quintet repertoire. This work does have its challenges of course, the main difficulty being the fast passages in 7/8 time. Other than this detail there is nothing atypical of a brass quintet piece that would prevent the average collegiate or even advanced high school ensemble from performing it.

The meaning behind the title is pretty straight forward…I am portraying distinguished looking westerners attempting to teach savage foreigners to dance. This is quickly thwarted when all the natives do is take what they learn and apply it to their own form of dance. Comical outcomes quickly surface.

This video is only a sample of the work. Total length is 4:45.

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Sample Score


Wind Band – Stifled Mystery

October 26th, 2011

Stifled Mystery was written in collaboration with a good friend of mine who is a band director and music educator. It is designed to be a challenging and lengthy work for high school wind band. However, it can of course be played convincingly by a collegiate wind band as well. Being approximately eleven minutes long, this work is intellectually demanding on both the wind band and its audience.

Typically, I write with an extra-musical agenda in mind. This piece, however, was written with no specific meaning until the latter stages of development. I decided on the title when I realized that it sounds as if the music is attempting to say something very profound. However, the meaning is being blocked from view by something within myself. While this can be enjoyed simply as a series of pleasing sounds put together, there is a deeper meaning that demands to be sought. It is difficult to seek this meaning, but we must because it is life changing. That said, this wind band piece hauntingly reminds me of my own reaction to the Gospel of Jesus in my darker moments. Throughout this work you will hear a theme that will not be fully revealed until the end of the work. Listen to the main theme as it weaves itself into the texture and tries to tell you the mystery for what it is.

The Mystery has the power to preserve life

We’ve forgotten that we die

 We’ll seek the meaning tomorrow…

This video is only a sample of the work. Click here to listen to full recording.

Download score and parts (PDF) ($114.99)
 Foreign Currency? Click Here.

Sample scoreSample parts

The download includes 8.5×11 and 11×17 versions of the score depending on you preference and/or accessibility to a large enough printer.

Additional information

Difficulty: Grade 3 or 4

Instrumentation

Woodwinds:
Flute 1
Flute 2
Oboe
Clarinet 1
Clarinet 2
Alto Saxophone
Tenor Saxophone
Baritone Saxophone
Bassoon*

Brass:
Trumpet 1
Trumpet 2
Horn 1
Horn 2
Trombone 1
Trombone 2
Euphonium
Tuba

Percussion:
Minimum: 4 players
4 Timpani (32” 29” 26” 23”)
Glockenspiel
Marimba (Mrb.)
Vibraphone (Vib.)
Snare Drum (S.Dr.)
Bass Drum
2 Suspended cymbals** (Sus. Cym.)
Crash cymbals (Crash Cyms.)
Tam-tam

All parts should be played by multiple performers at the wind band conductor’s digression.

*In the absence of a bassoon, the part can be played by other instruments as specified by cues that are distributed throughout the ensemble (both parts and score).
**There are several places where the percussionist playing snare drum is required to move between snare drum and suspended cymbal. The two players (snare and cymbal) may share a cymbal if necessary.


Acceptable Sounds in Worship; Objective Beauty

August 24th, 2011

“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.”  Really?  So if I find sin to be beautiful, then it is so for me?  While this saying may have been coined with good intentions I find no value in it as a Christian. If someone finds an object, action, or idea beautiful when God does not, then that person is wrong. That thing is not beautiful and the person believes in a lie.  There is beauty in the eye of the beholder only if the beholder we are referring to is God. At this point some may object, “That proverb only refers to things which are actually subjective.  For example, some may find a musical work to be beautiful while another finds it to be disgraceful and both views would be justified.  No proverb is without exception.”  But that’s a silly idea because there is an absolute standard for beauty, and that standard is Christ. Since perfect beauty is possible, human opinion is irrelevant.  Saying that beauty is subjective is as silly as moral relativism (and maybe just as diabolical).

Truth is what is; what is not is untrue. When something is untrue, it is a lie. Lies are not beautiful and no amount of postmodern relativism can make them true or beautiful.  In other words, truth is reality and lies point to nothingness. (I don’t understand why people think “what is truth?” is such a deep question. It seems to have the most obvious answer of any question ever asked.) Conversely, truth gives birth to beauty and goodness because beauty and goodness are real.  Were they not real, they would not be beauty and goodness. Therefore beauty and goodness cannot be subjective.  Truth is true and it does not create things that are unlike itself. If this does not settle the matter for you, read The Abolition of Man by C.S. Lewis.

In C.S. Lewis’ The Great Divorce, a conversation happens between two artists; one damned and the other glorified.  The heavenly artist said to the ghost, “When you painted on earth…it was because you caught glimpses of Heaven in the earthly landscape.  The success of your painting was that it enabled others to see the glimpses too.”  The ghost’s painting was good because it reflected heaven; because it tried to capture the reality (truth) from which beauty comes. (In this, Lewis also made it clear that Godless men can still depict heaven; which is why Christians should not hesitate to consume secular art when it is good.)  Music is the same way; it is only beautiful if it points beyond itself and towards the standard. Therefore, there is nothing subjective about beautiful music.  It is either beautiful or it is not. If music depicts a glimpse of heaven, then it is so and no amount of opinion or reasoning can undo its beauty; we are obligated to enjoy it.  If it does not point to heavenly beauty (especially if it does not even point beyond the author) then it is not beautiful.  If it is possible that one person can observe God’s beauty in a musical work and another cannot, then there is something wrong with one of the two people’s perspectives.

There is an obvious exception that must be addressed.  Some art is beautiful despite the use of ugliness. In fact, ugliness seems to be the very thing that makes certain varieties of beauty more beautiful.  If this were not true, God’s plan for redemption would be darkened by our sin thereby making redemptive history one enormous contradiction. For light does not do battle with darkness but rather transforms it into more light.  Mel Gibson’s “The Passion of the Christ” is the most obvious example.  It is the ugliest movie ever made: “Let’s sit in a dark theater and watch a perfectly innocent man get sentenced to death by corrupt authorities, beaten to to bloody pulp, mocked by evil, ugly people, and then put to death by being nailed to a splintery cross and slowly suffocating.”  Why is this beautiful? The best it could possibly be is boring if not the sickest and ugliest thing you’ve ever watched.  This is not the case, however, because every ugly element in that movie is transformed by the Object of perfect beauty.  Every insult, every lash, every slap and punch, every nail, and every painful breath was transformed into a beautiful act of forgiveness and compassion because Jesus makes all things new through his own perfection.  Not only that, but those wounds also turned into victory through the resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:54)!  Such amazing beauty could not exist without something ugly being redeemed.  If you let this line of thought go through to its logical conclusion, you will understand why a good God allows evil to exist.  Sin turns into God’s goodness (Romans 5:20-21).  We can also see that unredeemed ugliness can also be beautiful so long as the ugliness knows that it is ugly and is seeking help; there is beauty in ugliness’s search for a cure to its ugliness. However, when ugliness does not desire to be redeemed or does not even realize that it is ugly, then it is intolerable.  The only exception is when unrepentant ugliness is depicted honestly; to point out a lie is to tell the truth, and this is also beautiful.

So then, there are three ways to express beauty.  One is to depict heaven through divine inspiration. The very thought of doing this makes me very nervous, although I have written a few pieces out of passionate joy that turned out very well.  To call it divinely inspired, however, is someone else’s job.  Another (and much safer way) to depict beauty is through redeeming ugliness or pointing out ugliness for what it is.  The third is to reveal lies for what they are. These three ways of creating beauty are all very difficult, but the only other alternative is to write pretentious lies.

When we apply all of this to the music in our worship services, we can see that many people take musical preference far too seriously. When a certain type of music is used because that is what people prefer, there is a risk of using music that doesn’t reflect heaven. The reason we select or create a style of music for worship should not be due to anyone’s preference, but rather to what music is the most true and beautiful. Whether truth is in the music through heaven being reflected, ugliness transformed, or lies dismantled, the music in worship services must be inherently beautiful. If this is done honestly, not everyone is going to naturally favor the music that is used because our sin keeps us from recognizing beauty. It causes our judgement to be biased towards ugliness.  There is therefore no possibility of every individual getting the music they naturally want in light of this truth. There will always be details of beauty that bother some people and not others since we are all uniquely imperfect.  All we can do is create and use music that is as true as possible. But as time progresses our music must point to heaven more and more (or reach out for it). How do we do this?

Technique 1; make beautiful music for beautiful reasons: The measurable and universal characteristics of musical truth must be used (we’ve already addressed this in “Acceptable Sounds in Worship; Quality”). We must also not be picky about what genres to use (this should be based on cultural context), but rather what specific sounds and patterns are based on aesthetic truth and theoretical concepts. Obvious falsehood should be avoided.  For example, heavily distorted electric guitars should not be used simply because the guitarist desires to sound powerful. This depicts God to be more like Thor than YHWH. Traditional western harmony, four part homophony, and strophic form should not be used for the sake of idolatrous nostalgia. The organ should not be abandoned (it’s being replaced by electronic keyboards, let’s face it) because it is quite possibly the most beautifully powerful instrument in the world.  The music is not to be easy simply because people are content to be unskilled; the sounds they make will reflect their poor attitude.  Yet all of these things are becoming rampant and are but a few examples of why the music in many worship services is becoming less and less beautiful.

Technique 2; admit that your music is ugly: All church music is ugly to a certain degree. This should not be a surprise and if it is I hope that it is only as surprising as Romans 3:32. To think that sinful people could create indisputable canonic music is like saying that people are basically good.  Only through divine inspiration could a person make a sound of perfect beauty.  And yet this debate of “traditional vs. contemporary” is still in session.  Just as all people are sinful, so our music is ugly. So instead of forcing music to be something that can only come through divine inspiration, expose the ugliness for what it is and redeem it.  Let the Thor-like guitar be Thor, but redeem it.  You will instantly hear the power of our all-mighty God taking the strength of a brute and turning it into divine power, glory, and majesty. Stop hiding your ugly sounds with lies and depict the ugly sounds reaching for heaven so that we may hear the saintly cry for mercy and God’s response of redemption. Who has the wisdom to attempt anything else? It’s very difficult to do, but I’d rather attempt to make sounds like that than sing lies.

Technique 3; give control to God: Stop and think about a few things that you find beautiful. Take the things you thought about; consider how much control you have over each of them. You’ll find that you have very little if any at all. When we consider Christ as the object of ultimate beauty, we realize that the reason we find him beautiful is not because we have control over him but rather because of who he is without our meddling. This idea holds true in our faith and all the way down through the created order.  We find beauty only when we discover something we don’t know. We discover it in the depths of the unpredictable and constantly changing details of life. My wife is beautiful because she has new things for me to discover each and every day.  She is beautiful because she is growing. Changing. Completely outside of my control. Free to be the woman God designed her to be. Were I to manage this freedom that makes her beautiful, every component of her being that I successfully controlled would no longer be beautiful to me. It would be like capturing a flame in a jar to take wherever I pleased while it slowly faded out of existence. I love the way she thinks because its not the way I think. I love the way she teaches because it’s not the way I teach. I find her beautiful because I do not have control over her, and we attend to each other’s aesthetics like gardeners attending to trees we don’t even know the names of. As should be the case with how we handle all beauty; particularly the bride of Christ and the sound she makes.

Regardless of what generation you are from, your music is not finished developing. I understand that many (particularly my elders,) hesitate to step outside of what they are comfortable with musically, but beauty is born out of the truth we are designed to revel in and there is no such thing as perfect beauty when it comes to man creating art in this life. It has to constantly continue becoming more true and more beautiful. So If the music in your church has not become any more beautiful for several years (let alone a century), then that should indicate a very serious problem: God’s spirit is not developing or moving in your music. Our music needs to progress in the same way that our understanding of God does because our music is an expression of worship created through our understanding of God. If you do not desire for your worship music to develop into deeper and truer beauty, it is very likely that your worship itself is not becoming deeper or truer either.

If you will not grow, then you will die.


Acceptable Sounds for Worship; The Salty Aesthetic

May 7th, 2011

Before we make an attempt discover what Christian music should sound like, I’d like to take a moment to remind ourselves of what the fundamental truths of Christianity are. Phillipians 2:6-11 (NIV) says,

“Who, being in very nature God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
And being found in appearance as a man,
he humbled himself
and became obedient to death—
even death on a cross!
Therefore God exalted him to the highest place
and gave him the name that is above every name,
that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.”

The first fundamental truth of Christianity is that Jesus is Lord. If he is not, then the Bible is false and so is our faith. In fact, Romans 10:9 says that this truth is also how we are saved from judgement: “That if you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved”. Our lives have to reflect this because faith without works is dead and cannot save you (James 2:14-26).

“Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see (Hebrews 11:1).” If we’re certain that Jesus is Lord even though sometimes it doesn’t seem like it, our lives will reflect our faith by obeying Jesus’ laws and seeing sin as high treason to the crown of the Kingdom of God. At this point, it will also be useful for us all to be clear on what exactly Christian worship is. Dictionary.com defines worship as “reverent honor and homage paid to god or a sacred personage, or to any object regarded as sacred.” Since we are citizens in the kingdom of God (Phillipians 3:20) and Jesus is Lord of that Kingdom (Colossians 1:15), worship is simply giving Jesus (and no one else) the reverent honor and homage he deserves.

So then, a Christian is a person whose national identity is that of the Kingdom of God and who pays homage to Jesus Christ. Again, 1 Peter 2:9-10 says, “But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.” So then, the broad category of Christian music can be said to be music that reflects this national identity. It has nothing to do with genre, instrumentation, or any other subcultural classification of music. Just as American music is music rooted in America and South African music is music rooted in South Africa, so Christian music is music rooted in the kingdom of God. It cannot be based on any other classification because the “Christian” in Christian music refers to a certain group of people who are citizens of a certain nation and who identify themselves as the people of a certain King who they love dearly. Christian music is simply music produced by Christians. This is not to be confused with Christian worship music, which I have already defined as harmony, melody, color, and rhythm that is organized for the expressed purpose of paying homage to Christ and portraying or teaching the Christian worldview with its cumulative effect on a sentient being. Christian music does not have to be all of those things to be Christian music. However it does have to be something which Christ can enjoy with you.

We have to be very careful when determining whether or not music is Christian. If you do not know the musicians that produced it personally, how can you be sure that they are Christians unless you observe their lives and they clearly show what they believe? I cringe inside when certain artists are labeled “Christian” when a passing glance at their cover art tells me otherwise. Such cases are even more subtle and diabolical when artists make attempts to sound exactly like their secular counterparts in order to yield a greater profit for their labels. Sounds that are typically associated with gross sexuality, selfishness, and inherent arrogance are set with a new text that is supposedly not offensive to the kingdom of God. I have two problems with this: 1) this shows an unsettling lack of creativity and 2) the sounds are being used because they have been made popular; it matters little that the sounds were crafted to be used in a culture of sin and death. This puts music that uses these sounds far from a redemptive category and firmly into the camp of syncretism.

I am not saying that these sounds are evil, but rather that these sounds have been clearly associated with evil. Why would we use them when God gave us wonderfully imaginative minds that can come up with sounds that are much more beautiful and creative? I am not here to tell people that they are immoral because they enjoy certain sounds. As I said previously, the dark forces do not have such specificity in their dominion over the physical world that they have actually taken control of certain sound waves and mathematical patterns when executed through time. I am simply here to say that we can do better.

The most prominent characteristic of Christian music should be its inherent transcendent beauty.  No music in the world should be as beautiful or as interesting as Christian music because what inspires it are truth and beauty themselves.  The Spirit of God has clearly manifested itself in the most beautiful art in human history, but God has not so clearly manifested himself in “Christian music” because I am not convinced that very much Christian music has actually been attempted. We have plenty of music that has been borrowed and put to Christian texts, but this is not Christian music.  How can we have a sound that establishes a distinct national identity when all we do is borrow from our secular counterparts?  Consider the sounds you hear on Christian radio and in church.  Who are the musical ancestors of those sounds?  The strophic form used for traditional church music goes back to romantic Germany; Schubert, Wolf, Schumann, Brahms, etc. (hardly Saints).  Western harmony itself is hardly Christian, Bach and Handel being the only Christian composers from those time periods (and calling Bach a Christian is a stretch).  It is common knowledge where the sounds in contemporary Christian music came from.  While I have no problem with our musicians being influenced by these sounds and using them, calling these sounds Christian would be like jazz African music.  These sounds are not salty.  They are not useful in creating a Christian national identity.  Please note that I am not suggesting that Christians have been writing secular music.  I am suggesting that they have not been writing music at all.

Christian music then, while it is influenced by the sounds it gets from the culture around it, should develop into something very distinct. Something alien. Something the world only hears in music produced by Christians.  Something divine.  Something better than humanly possible because of the intervention of the Holy Spirt throughout the creative process. After all, if the core of our being is to be salt and light in this dark world, should not our art reflect the glory of God also? Even in the case of comical Christian music, there should be something there that is distinctly and unmistakably Christian. Again, this distinctive quality is not the text used or implied in the music; many Godless men have proven this to be false. Ultimately, this will sound like the music that will be produced on the new earth. It should sound like truth. It should sound like wisdom. It should sound like Isaiah 6:1-5, Daniel 7:9-10, and Revelation 4. It should sound like music that is dripping or at least sprinkled with the overflow of the artist’s passionate worship of God. If it’s music about God’s creation, it should somehow point back to our Father. If it’s music about the dark events in this world, it should somehow point back to Jesus. If it’s a love song celebrating a romantic relationship, it should sound like the Song of Solomon and give glory to God. There is no room in Christian music for anything that isn’t holy, sincere, and honoring to the King of the universe.  And it should be awesome.

It is not my place to judge for you what fits this description and what doesn’t. You have to judge this for yourself. But if homesickness is your default state of mind as it should be, you will know the sound when you hear it because it will fill you with longing for the world you were made for (Romans 8:18-27).

As a Christian musician, my greatest goal is to make my fellow believers long for the return of the King.

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