Tag: love in the time of connectivity

15 Apr 2010
Tags: , , ,

Jason Caslor con­ducts Love in the Time of Con­nec­tiv­ity with mem­bers of the Ari­zona State music department.

7:30 pm, Katzin Concert Hall
Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts, School of Music (map)
Tempe, AZ, USA
music.asu.edu/facilities/katzin.php    www.jasoncaslor.com    
10 Sep 2009
Tags: , ,

ork­est de ereprijs per­forms my piece, Love in the Time of Con­nec­tiv­ity, at the Gaudea­mus Music Week. This is the same piece that won their Young Com­posers Com­pe­ti­tion in Feb­ru­ary 2009.

12:30pm, Bernard Haitink Hall, Amsterdam Conservatory
Oosterdokskade 151 (map)
Amsterdam, the Netherlands
www.ereprijs.nl    www.english.conservatoriumvanamsterdam.nl/en/    
13 Feb 2009
Tags: , ,

Pre­mière of a new work writ­ten for the ensem­ble, a col­lage based on love songs.

8:00pm, Podium Gigant
Nieuwstraat 377 (map)
Apeldoorn, the Netherlands
www.ereprijs.nl    www.gigant.nl    
Instru­men­ta­tion: sop, sop, m-sop, flt, flt, clar, alto sax, bari sax, hrn, trpt, tbn, tbn, tba, pno, elec gtr, bass gtr, drums
Dura­tion: 3’30
Commissioned by orkest de ereprijs
mp3 listen to Love in the Time of Connectivity
Per­form­ers: orkest de ereprijs, conductor: Rob Vermeulen
Pro­gramme Note

Love in the Time of Con­nec­tiv­ity is a col­lage. In fact, even the title is a col­lage: I took the title of Gabriel Gar­cía Márquez’s novel, Love in the Time of Cholera, and com­bined it with a ref­er­ence to the cul­ture of Inter­net file shar­ing. I have been inter­ested in col­lage and the reap­pro­pri­a­tion of mate­r­ial for some time, because as the say­ing goes, good artists bor­row but great artists steal. Col­lage is the most hon­est way to hon­our that prin­ci­ple, and I spent most of 2008 work­ing in this direction.

Col­lage, as well as related ideas such as sam­pling, remix, and mash-up, are among the few uni­fy­ing forces dri­ving artis­tic change today. Through video sites like YouTube and audio sites like ccMix­ter, these ideas have been respon­si­ble for renew­ing ama­teur art on a mass scale, for chal­leng­ing the stan­dards of cre­ativ­ity, for expand­ing musi­cal taste, and even for influ­enc­ing legal precedent.

For the first time in his­tory, we are drown­ing in art. There is too much music of the high­est artis­tic qual­ity for any­one to ever hope to expe­ri­ence. So how can artists con­tribute to cul­ture in a sit­u­a­tion like this? I think col­lage is an impor­tant part of the answer, and the proof is in the atti­tudes of those who grew up with the Inter­net. For many of them, art is not some­thing sim­ply to be expe­ri­enced, it is a resource to be adapted, changed, built upon, and shared.

While com­pos­ing Love in the Time of Con­nec­tiv­ity, I gave myself some restric­tions in order to inspire cre­ativ­ity. For exam­ple, I decided to try to present all quo­ta­tions in as rec­og­niz­able a form as pos­si­ble. I did not allow myself to trans­pose frag­ments from their orig­i­nal tonal­i­ties, and I did not allow myself to com­pose my own new mate­r­ial to bridge together the quo­ta­tions—every note is bor­rowed. I also made tempo an inte­gral part of the musi­cal devel­op­ment, and I tried to make gram­mat­i­cal sense of all the text frag­ments I com­bined. Finally, every quote relates to the oth­ers in some way, either in terms of theme, title, text, artist, or (obvi­ously) musi­cal sounds.