SoSCC provided support for the upcoming August 8, 2021 BBC Proms commission to Augusta Read Thomas (“Gusty”) for her new work entitled “Dance Foldings (for orchestra).” The world premiere by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales will be ih the Royal Albert Hall in London, UK. The piece captures the process of protein synthesis (primary structure) and protein folding (secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structure). Important to our current emergence from the COVID-19 pandemic, Dance Foldings takes inspiration from the often frenzied biological ‘ballet’ of proteins that occurs when a messenger RNA vaccine initiates synthesis of the spike protein, which must then fold to the final folded structure. The folded spike protein then stimulates the antigenic response, producing antibodies to protect the human body to fight off subsequent viral challenges. (Click for a fascinating article by Megan Scudellari on the delta virus variant and brilliant animation of SARS-CoV2 virus particle by University of Utah’s Janet Iwasa.)
Continue readingCategory Archives: New Commissions
Scar Tissue premieres in Ottawa
SoSCC co-commissioned Scar Tissue by Vancouver, BC-based composer Jeffery Ryan, with librettist and Giller-prize winning novelist and poet Michael Redhill. The premiere of Scar Tissue, in Ottawa, ON, Canada at the Ottawa Chamber Fest Concert Series was performed by the iconic Canadian piano trio, the Gryphon Trio, in collaboration with the world-reknowned vocal ensemble Nordic Voices.
Themed on the concept of disturbance, recovery, and the role of relict structures in the recovery process, this piece captures in 9 movements how systems recover from devastating events and the establishment of a new normal. In human wound healing, in refugee crises, in weather disasters, in financial crashes, in rainforest deforestation, in accidents changing traffic flow, and in family transitions of death or divorce, the cycle of recovery is slow and never quite gets back to the original starting place.
Continue readingnegative expanse = black holes in Berkeley
SoSCC commissioned a work titled negative expanse by UC Berkeley composer Jon Kulpa and performed by the Friction Quartet.Themed on the dramatic orbiting and “descent” into a black hole, then collapse to a quantum singularity, this piece was been created for installation/performance in science venues, planetariums and other suitable spaces. negative expanse (2017) was premiered by the Friction Quartet in combination with an electronically interactive sound system in UC Berkeley’s Hearst Memorial Mining Building on April 30, 2017 as part of an astronomically-themed program entitled Spaced Out. The live performance was recorded and can be seen and heard here.
Continue readingThird Coast Percussion’s “Reaction Yield” Triumphs in Chicago!
In 2016, SoSCC has commissioned Reaction Yield, an innovative work about synthetic organic and medicinal chemistry to be composed and performed by Third Coast Percussion in association with the exciting Ear Taxi New Music Festival in Chicago from October 5-10, 2016. Reaction Yield draws the analogy between the creation of a new composition of music from motif building blocks of tones, aural colors, rhythms, dynamics, and tempi with the process of creating a new composition of matter using a chemical catalog of molecules and a synthetic strategy.
SOSCC Interviews Composer Nico Muhly and Videographer Josh Higgason
Pre-concert interview from December 5, 2015 featuring Nico Muhly & Josh Higgason with Glenn Prestwich, representing the Sounds of Science Commissioning Club (SOSCC)
Muhly’s Control (Five Landscapes for Orchestra) Premieres at Abravanel Hall
In Sounds of Science Commissioning Club’s second commission with the Utah Symphony, Control (Five Landscapes for Orchestra) by Nico Muhly premiered in Abravanel Hall on December 4 and 5, 2015
Control (Five Landscapes for Orchestra), composed by Nico Muhly and with videography by Josh Higgason, is a sequence of five episodes describing, in some way, an element of Utah’s natural environment as well as the ways in which humans interact with it. This post describes the piece and several rehearsal snippets. For additional information, please see the KSL Channel 5 News piece, as well as the next blog post highlighting the preconcert interviews. This is the third of three Utah Symphony Commissions by award-winning, living American composers. A CD with Control by Nico Muhly, Eos by Augusta Read Thomas and Switch by Andrew Norman will be released on 75th anniversary CD in March 2016. Two of these – Switch and Control – were co-commissioned by SoSCC!
Pre-Concert Interview: Switch is a Game of Control
On the evenings of November 6 and 7, 2015, Glenn Prestwich of Sounds of Science Commissioning Club (SOSCC), interviewed Switch composer Andrew Norman. The following are edited excerpts from that interview.
Switch – A Game of Control – Premieres in Salt Lake
From the Original Score, by Andrew Norman:
“Switch is a game of control. Each percussion instrument is a switch that controls other instruments in specific ways, making them play louder or softer, higher or lower, freezing them in place, and setting them in motion again. The soloist, dropped into this complex contraption of causes and effect, like the unwitting protagonist of a video game, must figure out the rules of this universe on the fly, all while trying to avoid the rewind-inducing missteps that prevent their progress from one side of the stage to the other. Continue reading
Emergence is a triumph in Logan!
Blog posting for Crossroads: Emergence
From SoSCC founder, Glenn Prestwich:
Although the music had already been commissioned by the Fry Street Quartet (FSQ) and composed by Libby Larsen, the project sounded like an ideal opportunity for the newly-formed SoSCC to become part of a quintessential embodiment of our mission – the expression of science through music, and creating a collaboration between science and the performing arts. To this end, I attended the February 2015 premiere of Libby Larsen’s music by the FSQ, and began a dialogue with Rob and the FSQ about how SoSCC could best participate. In the end, our sponsorship of Emergence took the form of support for videographer Conor Provenzano, whose video projections were presented with actor Robert Scott Smith and the FSQ playing the five-movement string quartet. Since the video was an integral part of the performance art piece, we were recognized in the program in the following manner: Continue reading