A Wilderness Science and Art Collaboration

Aldo & Leonardo, a partnership between Colorado Art Ranch and the Aldo Leopold Wilderness Research Institute, is a project to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act. The project is inspired by the scientific wisdom of Aldo Leopold and the artistic genius of Leonardo da Vinci. Our endeavor is an interdisciplinary collaboration of artists and scientists designed to celebrate the lands, resources and opportunities protected by the Wilderness Act. In 2013, we are hosting one-month residencies in six diverse wilderness areas. Artists will work alongside wildland research scientists and gain firsthand knowledge of the wonders, complexities and challenges of our nation's wildest places. The result will be a body of work that creatively illustrates the value of wild areas and honors the scientific efforts to preserve wilderness for the next fifty years.
Showing posts with label cello. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cello. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

dear Scientist by erogerscello


dear Scientist,

Yesterday my painter co-artist and I went up to the Las Platas. We walked partway up the trail head road after becoming anxious about protruding stones on tires, and panting from high altitude we sat in an alpine meadow and had lunch. After lunch I sat and wrote in my journal, and Leslie scrambled and crawled around 'shooting' rocks and grass and things.

I wrote and drew stick figures in my journal. And I became fixated on one of the pictures. There are two stick people holding a circle split in half, and they represent to me the idea of collaboration.

Collaboration to me, is at least two participants, each fully present in all that they bring to the table - as people, as professionals, as thinkers, as doers, as questioners... holding an equal part of an undertaking. The circle split in half is the 'ation' of collaborate. The acting/making, the process of whatever topic, goal, or aim is on the table.

To me, true collaboration is only possible to the extent that the participants involved hold the same fraction of the circle. ( More to discuss on that in a future PHD I hope... )

Scientist, I don't think you have seen my half of the circle, and I'd like to tell you about it...

Scientist, my side of the circle is yes, about me as the hiker, the one that's afraid of snakes, the one that is quiet a lot and wears a red bandana sometimes, the one that asks simpler questions about your job and needs a kid definition of those geologic words I can't remember, the one who held the camera clicker for you... but there's also that part of the circle that says ARTIST; the part of the circle that says CELLIST, the part of the circle that in this residency you are labeled to be interacting with...

Scientist, I think you might actually be interested in more of this part of my circle...

Actually, I don't really think its important if you are interested, but it is important for me to show up with my entire half of the circle and there is a big chunk of my half that you haven't seen.

Last night I declined an invitation to a party. I'm not really a party person and I wanted some quiet space. I also wanted to do some work. Work for me last night meant going to the museum and sketching shapes from the ceramic work that inspired me, sitting in the Englehart exhibit with my Nascam and earphones to transcribe music I had already recorded, working on emails to contact parents and set up performance dates for my work in Rochester, and finally sitting down with Scubba the cello.

When I sat down with Scubba my hands felt awkward and achy from all the hiking, dehydration, and lack of working out and stretching. I played some scales, worked out my left thumb muscle for a bit, tried to improvise and got irritated, and ended up working on a little project I started my first week here.

My project is to explore hand shape possibilities in microtonal music.

It is rooted in topics including pythagorean chains of ratios, anatomy of the hand, sound waves... In current traditional western music the octave is split into 12 semitone intervals. These intervals are represented for cellists in two basic hand positions. We call them open and closed, or regular and extension. In the regular hand shape we have semitone steps between each of our fingers pointer to pinky. In extension, we have two semitone steps between pointer and middle and one semitone between the other fingers. These two positions form the basis of the way we approach music physically in first to seventh position. It seems to be the best way to avoid injury, and the most effective way to get around the instrument.

In microtonal music the scale is split into other divisions rather than 12. The microtonal set I am working with splits the octave into 24 pitches. While I have played music which included notation for "quarter tones" it was never clear to me which pitch division the composer had in mind, and more practically, how I was supposed to play those notes with my hand. Usually the method used is some kind of pitch bending- a loose method of playing slightly higher or lower than the 12 tone pitch. I wanted to explore how I could cohesively finger pitches within a 24 note division.

Last night I discovered that for quarter tone spaces, within the same physical distance there are multiple hand shapes possible. This sort of blew my mind. To spend 24 years studying the management of two hand shapes and then to discover that there are at least 5 (I'm still working on this) was pretty amazing. I'm not sure what research is out there about this, but look at this quote from wicki:
       "Bowed string instruments (notably violin/viola/cello/bass) can easily and almost unlimitedly play microtonal music, and in fact are easier to retrofit due to the lack of frets. Unfortunately, most trained players of the instruments are going to be finnicky about playing in any way other than the way they're used to, thanks to the pedagogy. There are two important tools in making microtonal string music work, scordatura and fingerboard marking." ( In other words the only way to play other pitch sets is either to re-tune the strings, or draw a line on the fingerboard so you can find the spot. )
I'll have to talk to cellists about it and see who is playing microtonal music and how they are fingering it, if anyone has ever written the pedagogy of this stuff down...

There now, Scientist, I feel better because I've told you about what I did yesterday. I'm not sure this actually makes any difference to you, and it may just be me trying to prove that I can be smart and sciency too, but maybe I feel better because my part of the circle went from an eighth to a quarter.

 

 
 











Friday, July 19, 2013

Tidbits

By Esther Rogers

*Constantly in the back of my mind,are miscellaneous disorganized tidbits.
-disorganized tidbits of ruminating about this Colorado trip...
*
H asked if four corners was where the kivas are.
Kiva: "A large underground or partly underground room in a Pueblo Indian village, used chiefly for religious 
ceremonies." In what ways will learning about the tradition of spiritual practice by the Anasazi and Pueblo - so intricately connected with the famous kiva structures themselves - influence my music, or my own faith?
*
Cluster harmonics/Singing or tonalizing while playing cello/Sounds of wind, echoes/Resonances. "Esther and Scubba in a canyon creating/composing melodic lines ready for orchestration at a later date..." (B)
*"The problem with Tompkins wasn't his plan to save the land, it was his plan to freeze the people in place. The conflation of a natural ecosystem with a 'natural' culture was dangerous, it condemned the Chileans to not becoming what they might become." (Patrick Symmes) How will I participate in wilderness preservation but also contribute to a modern, current art?
*
Rosin
Tuner
Music stand. Can I borrow a music stand from someone in the area community rather than packing mine? (for when I'm not on site)
Zoom recorder. G says I have to learn to control the amount of conversion...
*

How many snacks will I need to pack for my 2 day journey on the train?? 
*

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Tickets, Dampits, and Wish list

By Esther Rogers

Taking a little break from practicing and thought I would let you in on some of my preparations for the Canyon of the Ancients residency in September.

I'm about to purchase my tickets -Yes, tickets plural - from Rochester to Durango; one for me and one for 'Scubba the cello' who will travel alongside me the entire way, perhaps even getting me a better seat without paying for it if the flight attendants decide it is safer for us to ride in the front of the plane... I get asked all sorts of questions while flying with my cello. 'What does it weigh?' 'Is that a guitar?' 'Are you in a symphony?' etc. Some people are impressed, the rest are annoyed when I board early, or bump them while trying to navigate the aisle carrying my instrument sideways along with my carry-on backpack (or take their seat!). Often the flight attendants insist passionately that I cannot take Scubba on the plane; that he won't fit in the overhead! It takes several times of me patiently waving my TWO tickets in front of them before they relax... since 9/11 you can't gate-check a cello so the only safe option is to purchase a ticket or an incredibly large and almost equally expensive flight case.

Last night my parents and I were discussing the work I hope to do in Colorado and Mom was asking how the climate would affect my cello. Wooden instruments respond daily to changes in temperature and humidity. As the wood expands and contracts the sound changes, the level of the strings alters, and the general feel and finicky-ness of the instrument moves around. At a certain level of aridity the wood will crack causing irreversible damage - the instrument will never sound the same again even if repaired. To combat dry conditions string players use rubber coated damp sponges called dampits which are placed inside the instrument, as well as various kinds of humidifiers. I would like to purchase a Stretto hygrometer and humidifier to take with me which are small enough to fit into my cello case and according to this article work as well and better than dampits while also requiring less water. I think with the combination Scubba will be okay.

Another thing on my to-buy wish list is a professional quality hand held sized recording device with microphone (and which is battery operated). I'd love to be able to capture the sounds of the desert as well as the acoustics within structures or rock formations. Sound environments are known historically to influence music creation; the sounds of nature and types of sound objects available as well as the kind of acoustic resonance. My parents asked if I had done any research on the peoples of the canyon and if there were known/assumed musical traditions etc. The "to research" list lengthens...

Well, time to get back to the current project!
Ciao!