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Steven Lebetkin

Composer, Speaker, Thought Leader

Concerto for Soprano Saxophone, Vibraphone, and String Orchestra

October 26, 2016 By Steven Lebetkin

Composed in September, 2016

 

Based in part on the music of Brazil

I. Proclamation
II. Canción del Corazon (Batucada)
III. Congo-Angola, for Dandalunda

Congo Angola, for Dandalunda is an ancient religious song from the Congo Angola religious cult of Central Africa. The thematic material of this song was adapted for use in this concerto movement.

African religious music is a major part of Bahia, one of 26 states of Brazil. The religious traditions of the Congo Angola cult of western Central Africa, which is an integral part of the Bahia culture. Bahia is often spoken of as the “Rome of the Africanos”.

A principal of belief system of all of these groups is that the “destiny of the Universe is in the hands of deities that are everywhere the same, though the names they bear vary from region to region and from people to people according to the language that is spoken. The destiny of man, who is but a modest part of this Universe, is ruled by the same gods……” by Melville J. and Frances S. Herskovits

Filed Under: Music Composer

Elegy For String Orchestra

October 20, 2016 By Steven Lebetkin

Originally the second movement of Sextet for String Quartet, Double Bass, and Harpsichord.

Revised and orchestrated on October 20, 2016

Scored for double string orchestra or divided orchestra (stage left and stage right groups)

 

Filed Under: Music Composer

Just The Right Next Note – The Stuff They Don’t Teach In Music Composition School

October 10, 2016 By Steven Lebetkin

Just The Right Next Note

The Stuff They Don’t Teach In Music Composition School

I recently came across a facsimile manuscript of a Beethoven work for a chamber group, filled with cross outs, crowded changes, extended musical staves with additional notes and margins, a calligraphic mess. Beethoven’s sloppy scores containing ingenious music are the stuff of legends. But what does this tell us about the compositional process?

 

Beethoven Manuscript

The hunt was on. Beethoven was searching for Just The Right Next Note (or passage), not satisfied with a musically correct one, but the very best choice. Yes, the key word here is choice; the mathematical possibilities of choices for next notes or passages is seemingly endless, but consistently making the best choices along the way is the make or break goal. How is that achieved? Keep reading.

It wasn’t until I learned to compose effectively with modern music notation software (i.e. word processing for music notation) and in my late period that I began to understand why the Beethoven sketches are so sloppy. In order to compose music that has real drive and what I call the Principal of Musical Inevitability, it takes an enormous effort to find the most exciting notes to follow all the notes that have come beforehand. Manual transcription is very difficult to achieve during the compositional process. The pen or pencil gets in the way. Modern notation programs make it easier to find just the right next note to follow and notate (and save) the choices more quickly. Herr Beethoven, I get it – the struggle was writing it down as quickly as you heard it. Mozart was the exception – doing all the sketching and simultaneously in his head. There are no Mozart sketches, only final scores. For those of us composing at a high level (particularly late in life composers) there are very few sketches. The preponderance of composition and editing takes place in silent thought.

The Principle of Musical Inevitability

CcGreat composers hear music and make choices based upon their best perception of the human experience and how we hear music – vertically (a moment in time), linearly (moving forward), and contextually retrospective (current musical sounds in relationship to what has been heard previously)

The Compositional Technique For Achieving Musical Inevitability

First things first. Before one can consistently compose exciting music that maintains continued interest from beginning to end, a composer must be facile and at ease with the Primary Techniques Of Composition (Hint – they have little to do with harmony!). With these syntactic tools firmly under control, here are the steps that embrace this essential technique:

  1. Playback of the score composed thus far in your mind (not physically or electronically. Understand and feel the musical and emotional gestures, whether motivically, short phrases, or large movements. Keep all that precedes the moment at top of mind (including multi-movement works).
  2. Let your mind’s ear take you to the next note and section, while maintaining a keen awareness of all your compositional tools at all times.
  3. Edit, edit, and edit some more.
  4. Come back another time and listen again with a fresh ear (in silence). Keep editing.

Tension And Release Sensitivity – Not The Kind You Would Think

The concept of tension and release is generally associated with the cadential resolution of a dissonant chord to a consonant chord. But there is another type of tension and release that advanced composers are especially sensitive towards, particularly as directed towards the goal of achieving Musical Inevitability.

Skilled composers look at tension and release across time horizons and in an adjusted manner. They look at how and when to crank up the tension AND BY HOW MUCH, and in relation to what has occurred previously in the music. This is really complicated stuff, and composers rely heavily on instinct to identify and relate to the peaks and valleys. Composers are looking at and identifying the depth of the valleys preceded emotionally, the heights of the emotional peaks that are to come, and measure/grade them to maintain drive, avoid disinterest, establish and mini and grand arches, and work towards the final resolution through release to end the piece. This is not mathematical, but it is very much a part of the conscience creative process and planning.

In multi-movement pieces, this is even harder to achieve. Each movement, film cue, song, aria, instrumental interlude, must work on its own as an independent/standalone work. However, to compose effective music for a large scale work, whether symphony or film music, the composer’s challenge is to plan for and execute a broader and more complex scheme to relate all the movements (or film cues) in a way that takes into account deeper retrospective and contextual experiences across timelines and that are emotionally cohesive. This is not easy to do.

The Joy Of Composing Music That Is Inevitable

I have been listening to, studying and composing music for my entire adult life. The joy of musical composition is the processing of making the best choices, from music written before each moment, to select just the right next note or phrase and move the piece forward beautifully. And then to do it again and again until the piece is finished. This feeling is the wonderful joy of creation for me and composers before me that we reach for in our creative lives; it is why we are here and what drives us to write the very best music that we can. We know when we listen to a completed work that has been gestated and birthed from us when we have achieved a sense of inevitability, and it’s wonderful.

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Piano Concerto

August 20, 2016 By Steven Lebetkin

Composed in the summer 2016, this concerto continues on my path towards reaching broader audiences in the twenty first century.

Click on the image to hear this concerto.

Piano-Wallpaper

 

 

Filed Under: Music Composer

Cycle of the Earth – The Complete Ballet Recordings on Youtube

August 4, 2016 By Steven Lebetkin

Cycle of the Earth (Youtube Playlist)

 

Cycle of the Earth is a ballet for symphony orchestra. It is a musical and dance work reflective of the earth’s life cycle. The ballet traces the earth’s environmental experience from its origins through the Ice Ages (where the music of the ballet begins). Mankind defiles the earth, which results in the premature destruction of life on earth. The earth devours its visitors (mankind) and returns triumphantly to the next Ice Age.

Cycle of the Earh

The movements of the ballet are:

I. Ice Age Dance
II. The Sea
III. Garden of Eden (in three scenes)
IV. The Epitaph of Seikilos
V. The Earth Devours Mankind
VI. Ice Age Hymn

Filed Under: Music Composer

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