A secular carol
The impulse of the Agincourt Carol is different from sacred texts from this time. A kind of barely polyphonic visceral movement that shoots through the
music both with and against the prevailing pulse. Yielding unexpected eruptions
of rhythmic complexity. Leading to a larger form than expected in my own
version, in order to work through the material. I like the idea of returning to
the first idea, with changes. Here, the first idea was formed around a
found/appropriated musical fragment - and then the return is formed around the
first idea - a sort of layer up. The original tune is made more complex with
chromatic interpolations while still retaining its fundamental shape, just as
the original rhythm is expanded and extended with interpolations. [In fact all this
leads me back to my original question: if you create a piece from anything, why
do you need the anything in the first place? Is it about finding a ground in music, a secure basis for creative ornamentation?]
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