Abstract
This paper presents an analysis of Annesley Black’s not thinking
about the elephants (2018), for saxophone quartet and live electronics. Written
for Montreal’s Quasar Saxophone Quartet, this work explores concepts of suppression
and emergence through traditional musical dimensions such as melody, counterpoint,
and form, but also through contemporary musical dimensions such as
psychoacoustics (difference tones), theatrical elements, and live electronics.
Black’s practice engages critically with the compositional process itself by
formulating dialectic relationships between material and compositional
strategies (both intuitive and systematic). This work encourages the listener to
engage in a multidimensional listening experience where conceptual extremes become a
catalyst for the building of narrative and tension.
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