NENAD SAVIĆ LECTURE RECITAL: BRYAN JOHANSON’S 13 WAYS OF LOOKING AT 12 STRINGS ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MUSIC ORGAN HALL APRIL 2, 2011 COMPOSER BIOGRAPHY Bryan Johanson is a composer, guitarist, professor of music, and the department chair at Portland State University. Born in 1951 in Portland, Oregon, Johanson has been praised for celebrating the unique taste and motifs of his native Portland in his compositions. As a member of Oregon Guitar Quartet, Johanson further conveys the textures of the vast American canon and Pacific Northwest by including his own arrangements and transcriptions of traditional folk tunes, ballads, drinking songs, bluegrass, and blues in the ensemble’s repertoire. He is also a member of Third Angle New Music Ensemble, which focuses on performing contemporary music from all over the World. Johanson is the founder of the guitar department at Portland State University and its Classical Guitar Recital Series. In 1991, he established the annual Portland Guitar Festival, which has become internationally recognized. Johanson studied composition with Charles Jones and William Bolcom and his guitar mentors include Christopher Parkening and Alirio Diaz, among others. A prolific recording artist and composer, Johanson has won national and international prizes and awards from institutions such as Aspen Music Festival, UCLA, The Kennedy Center, Esztergom International Guitar Festival, and others. As a guitarist and composer, Johanson is instantly recognized by his unique, yet very eclectic blend of influences. His inspiration and motifs have strong roots in his native Pacific Northwest milieu, and range from ancient mythology through Bach and Weiss to Jimmy Hendrix, Frank Zappa, and James Brown. JAMMUS VULGARIS The “big bang” is reserved for “Jammus Vulgaris,” which is the final movement of Part III, and the entire composition. It incorporates the twelve-bar blues progression, improvisation, rhythmic propulsion, powerful chords, unusual harmonics, and original sound effects. It is the longest of the movements, with a lengthy coda. Ex. “Jammus Vulgaris” vibrato harmonics and “cricket chirps,” mm. 1-15. INTRODUCTION 13 Ways of Looking at 12 Strings is an imaginative and inventive exploration into sonic possibilities for two guitars. Johanson created this piece to capture his wonderful mixture of capricious eclecticism bringing together as many influences, techniques, and sound effects as possible. According to the composer: I wrote this piece that will just kick your ass it’s so cool. It’s wacky, but the entertainment value is very high. It just does everything-- it’s like the world of the guitar. When I wrote it, I didn’t set out to write a long piece. I just had the goal that I wanted to incorporate everything I love about two guitars into one piece. I wanted to take the two guitars and look at them from every conceivable angle that I could imagine. I really wanted to explore this combination of two instruments and what they can do. –2– CONCLUSION From my performance perspective, 13 Ways of Looking at 12 Strings is a wonderfully entertaining and challenging work. It showcases Johanson’s eclectic and inventive approach to composing. This exciting piece appeals to music professionals and amateurs alike. Besides being a work of high artistic merit, 13 Ways of Looking at 12 Strings also plays an important role as a means to popularize classical guitar music. This composition connects with contemporary audience, while maintaining its responsibility to preserve and convey artistic and classical values. – 11 – FUGUETUDE “Fuguetude” requires a high level of virtuosity. The first movement of Part III is a canon, and this is also a fugue. Johanson is using more contrapuntal tools. Whereas imitation exists in other movements, in this movement it is a formalized fugue. It is also an etude: “I want it to be just smoking. It’s unrelenting. It’s a perpetuum mobile. It’s always moving, even when it goes to major in the more lyrical part.” 13 Ways of Looking at 12 Strings consists of thirteen movements grouped into three main parts: Cool Cubed, Pentadigitopia, and Cube Squared. Eleven movements, out of thirteen, are for two guitars. The two remaining movements are for solo guitar, which divide the work into three main sections. PART I: COOL CUBED TOCCATAESQUE 13 Ways of Looking at 12 Strings opens with “Toccataesque”. This allegro con fuoco movement entertains a duel-like exchange between the two guitars. The music dialogue is rich with syncopation and a constant, fast rhythmic drive. It features fast-moving virtuosic passages and brilliant licks BAD EGG CAFE “Bad Egg Cafe” is an example of Johanson’s use of encoded motifs in his compositional process. The title is a sequence of pitches in the melody: B,A,D,E,G,G,C,A,F,E, which recur throughout the entire movement. – 10 – –3– MR. OWL ATE MY METAL WORM “Mr. Owl Ate My Metal Worm” is a semantic as well as musical palindrome. In measure 47 the fulcrum figure at the center of the movement is where the music turns on itself . Ex. “Give the Strummer Some” excerpt from the improvisation-like introduction. The second part of the movement is dominated by powerful strums and exciting rhythmic patterns. Ex. “Give the Strummer Some” excerpt from strumming patterns enforced with snap pizzicatos, mm. 46-52. LE PETIT GROOVE ROYALE “Le Petit Groove Royale” relies on J.S.Bach’s Thema Regium from The Musical Offering. The original theme is characterized by intervallic leaps followed by a chromatic descent and is encrypted in this movement. –4– –9– EGAD! “EGAD!” is a backward reference to the “Bad Egg Cafe.” The title contains four pitches that are introduced first as harmonics and then as a short thematic material. “EGAD!” is a formalized and developed canon. The two guitar parts are chasing each other throughout. Extensive glissandos are combined with sharp staccatos in both guitars. String surface glissandos enforced with string percussion take over and create a remarkable movement finale. Ex. EGAD! PART II: PENTADIGITOPIA THE PHILOSOPHER AND THE FLY GIVE THE STRUMMER SOME “Give the Strummer Some” begins with a fairly extended improvisatory introduction. It exploits the idea of a strict timekeeper juxtaposed with the other expressive and rhythmically-free player. Guitar 2 keeps the steady harmonic and rhythmic pace utilizing slow and repetitive chords: –8– Part II begins with “A Philosopher’s Song,” the first movement of a miniature two-movement suite entitled The Philosopher and the Fly. The other movement is called “From the Dairy of a Fly,” and as movement number nine, it concludes Pentadigitopia. Ex.“A Philosopher’s Song” the ending line. –5– Ex. “From the Dairy of a Fly” opening motive, mm. 1-4. Ex. “Slide Rule” three-line notation, mm. 1-4. STEEL PANS “Steel Pans” is the third game. It calls for a metal piece woven through the strings. This movement imitates the Jamaican steel drum. Ex. “From the Diary of a Fly” closing phrase, final line. STRINGS ETOUFFE Between the two movements for solo guitar, we have the three little games of Pentadigitopia. The first one, “Strings Etouffee”, uses the mute (sordino). It’s largely about the texture, in tandem, mostly playing together. SLIDE RULE “Slide Rule” is the second game in Pentadigitopia. When it is performed, it looks like two scratch artists at turntables are on the stage. The guitar is to be held in the performer’s lap, strings facing upward. –6– PART III: CUBE SQUARED The last section, Cube Squared, blends all of the different compositional approaches from the previous movements. Improvisations, games and puzzles, and new and exciting techniques are gathered into these four movements, which are a little more engaged. These are the longer movements where all of the music material that comes up to the last movement sets up the last movement and presents it all together. The weight of the composition is felt at the end rather than in the beginning. –7–