Spirit-presence : for Jiari-shakuhachi and Jinashi-shakuhachi

    Research output: Creative WorksComposition

    Abstract

    Spirit-Presence was inspired by the earthy un-lacquered sounds of the Jinashi-Shakuhachi (Zensabo School) and Jim Franklin's Jiari-Shakuhachi (Kokusai Shakuhachi Kenshukan), especially the heart of his sound-rich reverberation echoes and bell hints from the Hearing Stillness recording made in the Abbey Church in Neresheim, Germany. The reverential honkyoku stillness and reverberation with Christian bell overtones inspired my own evocation of ecstatic glossolalia (speaking in tongues) of the Christian tradition with the spacious bellbird sounds reverberant in the lower Blue Mountains bush, near where I live in Sydney. My work opens with the earthy roughness of long held-note un-lacquered sounds graduating air-noise sounds to half-pitches with slowly evolving vibrato against bellbird-like punctuations of high ringing metal resonances (either crotales or Japanese temple bowl) and glossolalia attack hints. An intense ecstatic centre forms a culmination of the vocalize hints of glossolalia and manic birdsong inspired life through repeated-note chant and agitated-sounds of un-lacquered shakuhachi versus sustained high register arpeggios of smooth-lacquered sound perforated with tamane gurgles on both instruments. The earthy roughness of long evolving sounds merging between half-pitch and air sounds with tamane returning amidst metal resonances and chant phonemes to still the piece to earth again.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationGrosvenor Place, N.S.W.
    PublisherAustralian Music Centre
    Size1 audio score, 14 pages, 10min.
    Publication statusPublished - 2012

    Keywords

    • instrumental music
    • scores

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