Dystopia

for trumpet, drum set, piano, and electronics

  1. i do not belong here

  2. Extricate

  3. DEMONS

  4. …against the machine

Length: 25 minutes
Composed: 2024

Commission/Premiere: Dystopia was commissioned by SPLICE Ensemble and premiered on January 24, 2025 at Wester Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI.

Program Notes:
DYSTOPIA (2024) for trumpet, drum set, piano, and electronics was commissioned by and dedicated to the SPLICE Ensemble and was composed mostly in the summer of 2023 and completed in early 2024. I am very grateful for their amazing support, musicianship, and friendship which have been integral in bringing this piece to life.

Following the pandemic I found it extremely difficult to write music for several years. Apart from one short piano piece completed in early 2021, DYSTOPIA is my first completed composition since early 2020. It is my longest piece to date (about 30 minutes), and perhaps also my most personal. I realize looking at it now that the work is a sort of emotional retrospective of the past few years, almost as if I needed to purge these feelings from my system in order to start composing again.

The form of the piece is inspired by Haydn’s Symphony #49 in F Minor “The Passion” which I first heard in the depths of the pandemic and at that moment struck me as the most beautiful and deeply affecting music I had ever heard. This symphony was part of Haydn’s “sturm und drang” period, known for its turbulent and dramatic emotions, and was composed in the archaic “sonata de chiesa” format. Rather than the typical fast, upbeat Allegro movement, it starts with a devastating and intense Adagio. The 2nd movement then suddenly shifts to a blistering and intense Allegro. The 3rd movement is a minuet (still in F minor) and the 4th a relentlessly driving Presto. This ordering of the movements creates a powerful emotional trajectory; beginning in a place of intense and drawn out emotion, followed by an incredible release of pent-up energy that only builds in intensity as the piece progresses.

DYSTOPIA’s 1st movement “i do not belong here” begins in a place of utter despair, with moody, sustained piano harmonies sharply contrasting with blunt and strangled air sounds and split-tones from the trumpet. The 2nd movement “Extricate” strikes a suddenly more upbeat and optimistic mood that slowly spirals into frantic madness. This movement’s attempt at sonata form is thwarted by the sudden return of material from the 1st movement, a relapse rather than a recapitulation. In place of the minuet, I thought of the 3rd movement as the “metal” movement. In the Classical era this was the place where a symphony became more streamlined and direct in its musical language, using a popular dance form that listeners at the time would have intuitively understood. For me, rock and metal music fills that role. This movement is titled “DEMONS” after the novel by Dostoevsky that I was reading while writing the piece. Although set in late 19th century Russia, this novel struck me as eerily prophetic of present day America, depicting a society slowly driven mad by destructive, nihilistic ideas. The final movement, “…against the machine,” is a fast-paced presto whose relentless pace is increasingly driven by the electronics.

A subtext throughout the piece is the sinister and growing influence of technology, represented by both live and fixed electronics. DYSTOPIA begins totally acoustically, with just the trumpet amplified; one small element of dissent from its surroundings. At the end of the 1st movement, live electronic processing is introduced, enhancing and extending the instruments. The 3rd movement features more elaborate processing and fixed electronic elements also begin to creep in. In the final movement, the musicians must play to a fixed electronic track created from a multi-genre collage of music sampled from various recordings. The musicians alternately try to fight or conform to the electronic track as it gradually takes over.

Please contact the composer to purchase score/parts.