Title from PDF of title page, viewed November 1, 2017Dissertation advisor: Chen YiVitaThesis (D.M.A.)--Conservatory of Music and Dance. University of Missouri--Kansas City, 2017BOOM!!! ...for Real! is a fifteen-minute chamber concerto for alto saxophone
(doubling tenor) and mixed chamber ensemble. The paintings and techniques of three
American expressionist painters—Cy Twombly, Franz Kline, and Jean-Michel Basquiat—
influence the concerto. Three continuous movements connected by two cadenzas organize
the composition. The movements portray and develop aspects of each painter's technique of
improvisation and structure, while the cadenzas serve as transitions between movements.
Twombly's use of loops and pseudo-script in the paintings Untitled (New York City),
1968 and the series Three Notes From Salalah and Camino Real influence the first movement
and first cadenza. Three sections divide the movement, with each section representing a work
or series. The movement explores linear gesture using a contrapuntal framework of
temporally independent voices within a tutti texture, creating a dichotomy between
independence and integration. The cadenza, scored for solo alto saxophone, continues the
preoccupation with line by merging improvisation and gesture. It is a collection of melodic
contours composed from tracing leaves gathered during an autumn hike.
The through-composed second movement explores shifting textural opacity reflected
in the work of Franz Kline. The manipulation of dissonances and orchestration color the
initial wide-spaced octaves. Outbursts of agitated melodic activity accumulate to activate the
foreground and create a sense of randomness. However, background strata such as pacing,
rhythmic durations, and structure are controlled using proportional relationships. The
dichotomy between melodic gesture and controlled background of the movement reflects
Kline's methodology versus public perception of his work.
The graffiti tags and paintings of Jean-Michel Basquiat inspire the second cadenza
and the final movement and feature the tenor saxophone. Spoken text, noise, rhythmic
momentum, and improvisation evoke the frenetic nature of Basquiat's work. The final
movement develops the energy of the cadenza, by adding a constant juxtaposition and
layering of fragmented and disparate musical material, comprised of noise, improvisation,
text, and hints of vernacular music genres. Rapid changes of texture, orchestration, volume,
and temporality shape the dramatic arc.
The complete concerto unfolds with spontaneity of form, vivid color, and dramatic
arc using the gestural and structural techniques of Twombly, Kline, and Basquiat.Instrumentation -- Performance notes -- Acknowledgments -- Boom!!! ...for Real