Welcome! Here are the texts for tonight’s show:

PERFORMERS

Maria Garcia | piano
Chris Whyte | percussion

PROGRAM


Dancist (2019, arr. 2023)
The Filthy Fifteen (2016)
Black MIDI (2017, arr. 2023)


all works by Nicole Lizée

DOORS AT 7:00PM, SHOW AT 7:30
RUNTIME: 6O MINUTES


Program Notes from Nicole Lizée

  • Taking its title from the notorious list of ‘offensive songs’ compiled by the Parents’ Music Resource Center in the mid-1980s, The Filthy Fifteen is my interpretive, stylized documentary on censorship, referencing specifically the PMRC and its impact on music in the 1980s. Aspects of news footage (i.e. the pitch and inflection in PMRC members' voices, the rhythmic gestures that emerge during Zappa's animated display of disdain for the PMRC, etc. ) are extracted, manipulated and shaped into musical material, becoming a type of instrument, which is coloured and transformed live by the percussionist. I’ve labelled the percussion set-up ‘The Censorship Kit’ as it integrates a typewriter, duct tape, chains, a saw blade, books (preferably banned), and a vinyl record (selected by the performer) from the PMRC’s official Filthy Fifteen list.

    Censorship is a subject I’ve always felt strongly about - it was the PMRC’s emergence in 1985 that led to my awareness of the concept of censorship - and this project was an important one for me.

  • In the spirit David Lynch’s Twin Peaks, Rabbits or the Black Mirror series, the work is constructed as a quasi documentary or an episode of a fictional TV drama where a scene is set up and subsequently enhanced and manipulated by the performers. This episode tells a story of one person’s quest to learn about dance music, with unexpected results.

  • This piece is an interpretation of the underground phenomenon known as Black MIDI. This can be defined as a microgenre that is created using Musical Instrument Digital Interface (MIDI). Music notation software and MIDI sequencers are recklessly and arbitrarily ‘blackened’ by layering thousands of notes or MIDI data. This has extended into the colour world via software sequencers and drum machines.

    This definition is merely the starting point for the piece. I believe the genre has potential for expansion into territory for which it was never intended. In its current state the amount of notes and speed of the notes are Black MIDI’s sole identifiers. The interpretation can be expanded to include splicing, spontaneous tempo and metre changes, metric modulation, accelerandos, extreme stretching or slowing down of material, dropped frames, pixelation, etc. Using live ensemble and film this piece explores what Black MIDI could be - how it could be reimagined using live musicians in meticulous synchronization with film, emphasizing its inherent beauty and mysticism.

    The piece tells a story of how what begins as artificially imposed MIDI commands can then spur the imagination and cross into the analogue or human world. The visuals magnify this reinterpretation taking MIDI out of its purely data context and into an impressionistic and hallucinatory one.


ABOUT THE ARTISTS

Nicole Lizée | composer/filmmaker

Called “a brilliant musical scientist” (CBC), “breathtakingly inventive” (Sydney Times Herald, Australia), and lauded for “creating a stir with listeners for her breathless imagination and ability to capture Gen-X and beyond generation” (Winnipeg Free Press), award winning composer and video artist composer Nicole Lizée creates new music from an eclectic mix of influences including the earliest MTV videos, turntablism, rave culture, Hitchcock, Kubrick, Alexander McQueen, thrash metal, early video game culture, 1960s psychedelia and 1960s modernism. She is fascinated by the glitches made by outmoded and well-worn technology and captures these glitches, notates them and integrates them into live performance.

Nicole’s compositions range from works for orchestra and solo turntablist featuring DJ techniques fully notated and integrated into a concert music setting, to other unorthodox instrument combinations that include the Atari 2600 video game console, omnichords, stylophones, Simon™, vintage board games, and karaoke tapes. In the broad scope of her evolving oeuvre she explores such themes as malfunction, reviving the obsolete, and the harnessing of imperfection and glitch to create a new kind of precision.

In 2001 Nicole received a Master of Music degree from McGill University. After a decade and a half of composition, her commission list of over 50 works is varied and distinguished and includes the Kronos Quartet, Carnegie Hall, the New York Philharmonic, the BBC Proms, the San Francisco Symphony, the National Arts Centre Orchestra, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, l’Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, the Banff Centre, Bang On A Can, So Percussion, Eve Egoyan, stargaze, the Australian Art Orchestra, l’Orchestre Métropolitain du Grand Montréal, CBC, Radio-Canada, NYC’s Kaufman Center, Joby Burgess/Powerplant, Music on Main, Darcy James Argue’s Secret Society, Ben Reimer, Vicky Chow, Tapestry Opera, Standing Wave, Gryphon Trio, MATA Festival, TorQ Percussion, Fondation Arte Musica/Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, E-Gré National Music Competition, Innovations en Concert, Continuum, Soundstreams, SMCQ, Arraymusic, Megumi Masaki, ECM+, and the Kitchener-Waterloo Symphony. Her music has been performed worldwide in renowned venues including Carnegie Hall (NYC), Royal Albert Hall (London), Muziekgebouw (Amsterdam) and Cité de la Musique (Paris) – and in festivals including the BBC Proms (UK), Huddersfield (UK), Roskilde (Denmark), Bang On a Can (USA), Classical:NEXT (Rotterdam), All Tomorrow’s Parties (UK), Barbican’s Sound Unbound (UK), Metropolis (Australia), Sydney Festival (Australia), X Avant (Canada), Luminato (Canada), Other Minds (San Francisco), C3 (Berlin), Ecstatic (NYC), Switchboard (San Francisco), Melos-Ethos (Slovakia), Casalmaggiore (Italy), and Dark Music Days (Iceland).

Nicole was recently awarded the prestigious 2019 Prix Opus for Composer of the Year. In 2017 she received the SOCAN Jan. V. Matejcek Award. In 2013 she received the Canada Council for the Arts Jules Léger Prize for New Chamber Music. She is a two time JUNO nominee for composition of the year. She is a Lucas Artists Fellow (California) and a Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellow (Italy). In 2015 she was selected by acclaimed composer and conductor Howard Shore to be his protégée as part of the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards. This Will Not Be Televised, her seminal piece for chamber ensemble and turntables, placed in the 2008 UNESCO International Rostrum of Composers’ Top 10 Works. Her work for piano and notated glitch, Hitchcock Études, was chosen by the International Society for Contemporary Music and featured at the 2014 World Music Days in Wroclaw, Poland. Additional awards and nominations include an Images Festival Award (2016), Dora Mavor Moore nomination in Opera (2015), Prix Opus nomination (2013), two Prix collégien de musique contemporaine, (2012, 2013) and the 2002 Canada Council for the Arts Robert Fleming Prize for achievements in composition.
Nicole was the Composer in Residence at Vancouver’s Music on Main from 2016-18.
She is a Korg Canada and Arturia artist.

Maria Garcia | piano

Maria began piano studies in her native Puerto Rico at the age of four making her debut with the Puerto Rico Symphony Orchestra at the age of ten. She holds a Bachelor’s of Music with Distinction in Performance from the New England Conservatory of Music and a Master’s degree as well as Doctoral studies from SUNY Stony Brook. Her main teachers have been Luz Hutchinson, Victor Rosenbaum and Gilbert Kalish.

An active chamber musician and soloist, Maria has performed throughout the United States, Europe, the Middle East and Latin America with groups like the Mark Morris Dance Company, her former Piano Trio Melànge, the Bamberg and Madawaska String Quartets, Musical Chairs Ensemble, and Poetica Musica participating in international festivals such as the Bergen and Casals Festivals.

As teacher she has served on the faculties of the Manhattan School of Music Pre-College Division, CUNY Pre-College, New Jersey City University, the 92nd Street Y School of Music, and the Stony Brook Summer Chamber Music Festival. Now a Portlander she’s best known as one half of the dynamic 20 Digitus Duo, a joyous occasional collaborator with Third Angle Ensemble, a piano teacher and chamber musician.

Chris Whyte | percussion

Called “hypnotic, enthralling…dynamic” (Oregon ArtsWatch), with playing described as “a striking diversity of styles and spirit” (Boston Musical Intelligencer), Christopher Whyte (b. 1983) is known for his wide-ranging artistry as a percussionist, timpanist, collaborator, composer, and educator. He has presented recitals, concerts, and masterclasses internationally in Asia, Europe, Canada and throughout the United States. 

As an original member of the Portland Percussion Group, he is dedicated to fostering percussion performance through dynamic concerts, engaging collaborations, and the creation of new music. Through their annual call for scores, the Portland Percussion Group has provided the impetus for over sixty new works for percussion chamber ensemble. In October 2020, the quartet made its European debut performing a full-length concert at the GAIDA Festival of Contemporary Music in Vilinus, Lithuania in addition to collaborating on Steve Reich’s iconic Drumming with the Colin Currie Quartet. 

He is a founding member and resident faculty of the International Percussion Institute, a summer percussion performance and research institute, marimba competition, and composers workshop held annually in Aberdeen, Scotland. Recent projects of the Institute include a collaboration with British composer Joe Duddell and the Sound Festival to develop new works through shared experiences between young composers and Institute percussionists. Whyte also serves as resident percussionist with Third Angle New Music Ensemble, collaborating with a wide range of musicians and composers to advance the development and performance of new music. He has collaborated closely with composers Gabriela Lena Frank, Pauline Oliveros, Sarah Hennies, William Kraft, Allen Strange, Stephen Taylor, Michael Johanson, and Mendel Lee, among others as an active commissioner of new music for percussion. 

Read more here


A SPECIAL THANK YOU TO OUR SEASON SPONSORS AND DONORS

Ronni Lacroute, John Montague & Linda Hutchins, Regional Arts and Culture Council, Oregon Arts Commission, The Miller Foundation, Amphion Foundation, The Brookby Foundation, The Bodecker Foundation, The Pacific Power Foundation, The National Endowment for the Arts &  The Aaron Copland Fund.


ABOUT THE VENUE


ABOUT THE 23/24 SEASON

Third Angle’s 23/24 Season embarks on a journey from dreamworlds, to human connection, and even to the absurd. We’ll bend your mind with a glitching multimedia experience that turns censorship and surrealist video into musical psychedelia; ascend into a sky of ancient souls; celebrate Queer love and joy; and unify sound, mind, and body through vibration.