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John Mayrose,
Caroline Mallonée,
and Carl Schimmel,
Ph.D. candidates
Ending on a High Note
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| Composed and awarded:
from left, Mallonée, Schimmel, and Mayrose |
| Photo:
Les Todd |
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ohn
Mayrose, Caroline Mallonée, and Carl Schimmel, students
in the Ph.D. program in music composition, couldn't have written
better codas to conclude the year. Mayrose and Mallonée
won the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers
Foundation/Morton Gould Young Composer awards for their chamber
works, What Hath
God Wrought? and Throwing Mountains, respectively. For his piece,
Five Lies, also a chamber work, Schimmel received the composition
prize from the Society of Composers Inc.
"They're highly textured and boldly rhythmic pieces," says
Stephen Jaffe, Mary D.B.T.and James H. Semans Professor of music. "Very
cool music."
Mayrose, a native of Columbia, South Carolina, grew up playing "pluck
string" instruments, mostly banjo and guitar. He earned a
degree in music performance from the University of South Carolina
and entered the graduate music-composition program at Duke in 2000.
One day, while driving, Mayrose listened to a show on NPR about
Samuel F.B. Morse and the first message sent in his newly minted
code, "What hath God wrought!" Mayrose thought to himself, "I
should write a piece on this."
And he did, using Morse code "as a means to create musical
figures, form, and rhythm," he says. "In some sections,
the code directly corresponds to rhythmic motives. For instance,
'What' is dot, dash-dash, dot-dot-dot, dot-dash, dash in code.
I gave the dots a short value, usually eighth notes and the dashes,
quarter notes."
"He's made a fascinating piece, and, rightly, he thinks of
it as a breakthrough composition for him," says Jaffe.
"Before you start writing, you set up rules that determine
the parameters of the piece," says Mallonée, who graduated
from Harvard with a major in music and helped found the Harvard-Radcliffe
Contemporary Music Ensemble. "The notes, the instruments,
the pitch, the rhythm. They all have to fit in your system." Throwing
Mountains, written for bass clarinet, cello, contrabass, and piano,
grew out of a hobby. "I used to throw pottery, and I was fascinated
with the idea of making something symmetrical out of natural materials.
And so for Throwing Mountains, I use a piano but with natural materials:
paper stuffed in the bottom to make it rattle on the low notes,
and metal inserted on top, which, on the high notes, sounds like
bells chiming." Besides the ASCAP Award, Mallonée won
a Fulbright Fellowship and the Graduate School's Advanced International
Fellowship in Amsterdam, where she'll study next year under the
renowned composer Louis Andriessen.
Schimmel is a former actuarial assistant with a degree in mathematics
from Case Western Reserve University. He applies math to his compositions, "to
determine the different possible ways of using a set of notes,
or to determine the proportions of a piece," he says. His
award-winning Five Lies is scored for a large ensemble including
accordion. The work, which was the result of a collaboration with
a virtuoso accordionist also named Schimmel, though of no relation,
is "humorous, obsessed with mathematical structures, and quite
strangely captivating," says Jaffe.
For each of the five movements in the work, Schimmel used a different
set of notes contained in a perfect fifth. "Each movement
is about a particular lie," he says. "The first is about
political and corporate lies; the second is about trying to be
someone you're not; the third is about religious extremism; the
fourth is about gossip; and the fifth is about lying to one's lover."
--Patrick Adams
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