the light (excerpt)

another excerpt from my upcoming sound piece the light:

Full open bodies of air that shimmer with smog, reflecting the city light into the night sky, indigo, orange, red, violet.  Particles of dust, ash, hanging over the ocean, stopping planes from flying, the whole what-we-think-is-the-world paralyzed by a small hiccup deep below.  Halls with glass ceilings crosshatched by steel struts, designed by German engineers and Finnish architects, full of stranded people, sharing food.  Buildings crashing down, giant sinkholes opening in the middle of cities with no warning.  Grainy video posted on the internet of tidal waves coming over land, looking gentle but not stopping, never stopping, creeping forward in a slow breath when seen from the news helicopter, but raw chaos and white noise that will deafen you if that is you on the ground in the lower part of the frame.  Children buried in mudslides, cars floating upside down in the centre of the sea.

We are all particles if you look from high enough.

the light

i’ve been working on text for a new long form audio work, and thought i would share some here.  production begins in august.  let me know what you think, i’d be happy to hear from you.

Curve (2)
Space is curved.  Somewhere, in a library, probably in on one close to where you are sitting now, the math is there to prove it.  I tried to read the equations once, pages and pages of symbols that curve and slash.  It’s beautiful.  Pictures of the universe, approximations of matter, of heat and black holes, exploding stars.  The math necessarily imperfect, but approaching perfection.  Infinity expressed with integrals, Greek letters.

I wish I knew this language.  How to bend my tongue and shape my mouth around these words—are they even words?  What would be a vowel, a consonant—a star, a comet, a galaxy?  What are these symbols saying to us?  How do I take this page of curves and explode it outward to the far corners of an expanding universe?

It goes that far.

Each summation, each equation and set has a sound, a hum, a kind of vibration that finds resonance in matter.

There are languages that derive their sounds from the harmonics of planets moving, that are based on the path of stars and the resonant hum of the universe.  To err in its pronunciation is to be in dissonance with the pulse of reality, to be a parent who pushes his child’s swing too soon, before it reaches the end of the parabola defined by the length of chain from which it hangs.

For one who speaks this language, who was born into it, the shape of lip and tongue is easy, defying explanation or parsing.  It takes an outsider to break it down to its component parts, to expose the secrets of how air is shaped to give meaning.

What, then, are we, when we try to speak the language of planets, of particles?

sound and art: peggy baker, henry moore, brian jungen, and me

monday morning and i find myself at the AGO, surrounded by new works by brian jungen and gigantic plaster casts of henry moore works, doing a soundcheck for the peggy baker dance projects 2011 season.  in the moore gallery baker and dancer larry hahn will perform armour, a duet choreographed by new york’s doug varone and premiered in 2010.

my music is playing back in 4 channels, and the speakers are spread out evenly over the giant gallery.  baker and hahn are at one end, and as i watch them i can feel at my back the sound cascading around the space behind me, reflected by the huge and heavy moores and the smaller but equally powerful jungens.  the new jungen works are a 2011 counterpart to the moore pieces, raw and visceral in the same way as the moores, but different—of the land, more canadian, hides stretched over discarded car parts.  as with all of jungen’s work, simple and powerful in a way that really makes us see reality.  not in a different way, but in the way that it really is.

i am so blessed to be here.

catch the show in toronto—my music accompanies the above mentioned armour and the dance installation in walker court, move (which i am listening to as i write this post, a new 72 min score for 16 dancers).  details here: http://www.ago.net/interior-with-moving-figures

Project music

soundcloud is the new place i will be hosting music for various projects that are not available elsewhere.  These include soundtracks, dance scores, and other small snippets of projects and compositions, as well as full works.

all of it is here: http://soundcloud.com/debsinha/sets

check back often, and stay tuned.

Goodbye, Are You OK / Peggy Baker @ the AGO

aaaaaaaaaaand……i’m not done.

i am honoured to be providing music for 2 works in peggy baker dance projects’ 2011 season at the art gallery of ontario: a new one hour score for move, with 16 dancers (or thereabouts), and a remount of the duo Armour, (choreographed by doug varone), which premiered in the 2010 show confluence, which was, if you recall, a full evening show of works that i had the honour to score (in 6 channels!) as well.

it promises to be a special event.  to quote from her site: Peggy Baker Dance Projects invites to you a special performance of “interior with moving figures” at the Art Gallery of Ontario. Four works from the company’s repertoire will be simultaneously and continuously performed in four different galleries throughout the AGO for 70 minutes, allowing patrons to wander between the galleries to discover the next dance.

Showtimes are irregular, so be sure to double check the links above:
Wednesday May 11, 7:00pm
Saturday May 14, 2:00pm
Sunday May 15, 2:00pm
Wednesday May 18, 7:00pm

Wednesday night shows are free admission, and the other shows are free with ticketed admission.

are you ok, with michael healey, peggy baker, and daniel brooks has closed, and it was a great ride.  the audience reaction was palpable, every night, and national post critic robert cushman called it a “perfect jewel”.  i am honoured to have shared the stage with such great artists.

stay tuned, as always, for more…

Are you OK.

a short trailer for “are you ok“, an upcoming show running march 4-11 @ factory studio theatre.  featuring the inimitable peggy baker, the stupendous michael healey, the illustrious daniel brooks, and myself.

like a genius, i’ve decided that the soundscape will be enhanced by my playing vibraphone, among other things.  not the smartest decision i’ve made but hopefully it will result in something good.

hope to see you there.

the light

just received word that i have been awarded a grant from the ontario arts council through their new media program for mid career and established artists.

with the funds i will be producing a new feature length (approximately 1 hour) audio work entitled the light, an exploration of the properties of light and the quest for light within.  it will have a radio broadcast version, a surround sound mix, and a performance version.  i’m currently working on the text….writing text is very, very hard…..

thanks to the OAC and the jury for granting the funds, and to all the other recipients as well.

Ahmed Hassan, rest in peace.

A great friend and musician died recently: Ahmed Hassan, percussionist and composer.

I met Ahmed soon after moving to Toronto, after seeing a performance of Sable/Sand by Dancemakers (this was the shorter piece that he worked on with Maryem Tollar, Colin Couch and another musician whose name escapes me)).  The full evening work  of Sable/Sand was one that we (Ahmed, Ernie Tollar, Colin Couch, myself and Maryem Tollar) did a few years later.  Anyhow, he invited me over to his house, where I met Maryem and his wife and now colleague Peggy Baker, and soon after I met everyone who I would end up playing music with for the next 8 years or so at Arabic music classes at his house.  It was he and Peggy that told me about how drummers accompany dance classes, and Ahmed and I went around to various classes in Toronto to sit in.  That was the start of a very important practice for me, playing for dance, and it continues today.

I spent a lot of time around Ahmed helping him (I was doing home care work at the time) and started to become more familiar with the work he and Peggy did together.  Sanctum in particular held a certain fascination for me, but I was unable to articulate why.  I realize now that that score and performance, which I have had the great fortune to perform with Peggy and with Helen Jones, was an actualization of everything that I try to bring to my creative practice in music, composition, and new media.  The score, and the piece itself, is a beautiful and nuanced play with sound, silence, space, and (if I may) the humming of the universe.  To perform it, one must become it—there is no simple “execution” of it, and the integration of the music and the performance in that piece is something that I think just came naturally to Ahmed.  His music is a total abandoning of ego and self—he was someone who really gave himself over when he made music.

I remember learning this score with him and from him, and performing it with Peggy was one of the greatest experiences of my life.   I know that he saw himself a little bit in me, and he always encouraged me to let go and just play, in every sense of the word.  He was so generous with his time and his equipment, never once saying “no”.   I sensed that, as his ability to play and motor control decreased, he found it difficult to sometimes be with me as my ability developed.  But even so, he never, ever once put that burden on me, and chose instead to remain engaged to the moment and put his energies where he could, be it advocacy, seeking out new possibilities to deal with his health, or simply enjoying a cup of coffee or slice of pizza (and I mean really enjoying it!).

I learned much from my years with Ahmed, and it all resonates still.

Rest in peace, Ahmed, my friend, and I welcome the light you continue to shine on us.

the known world wrap up / hny

a short document of the ice field and cloudfield installations from the known world are below.  thanks to everyone who came out to the show—my first but hopefully not my last.  it was a great experience to mount a solo show and i am very excited about 2011.  besides working with peggy baker/michael healy/daniel brooks, minor empire, theatre direct, pleiades theatre, and a host of others besides, i have a number of new projects just itching to get out of the starting block.

happy new year to everyone, and keep it locked for new info.