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Dr. Elainie Lillios, composition, has won first prize in the “music with instruments” section at the 36th annual Bourges International
Competition in France. Lillios was notified in early July that her composition “Veiled Resonance,” written for soprano saxophone
and live electronics, had won.
The Institut International de Musique Electroacoustic de Bourges (IMEB), an international organization dedicated to the research
and creation of electroacoustic music, receives thousands of entries for this competition each year. An international jury,
including members from France, Spain, Great Britain, Hungary and China, selected this year’s award recipients.
For her entry, Lillios will receive a cash prize of 2,500 euros and a performance of the work at the weeklong international
Festival Synthèse in France during spring 2010. “Veiled Resonance” will also be included on a CD produced by IMEB, featuring
the festival’s winning compositions.
“I’m thrilled to be awarded this prize,” Lillios commented, adding that in the 36 years the competition has been held, only
nine American composers have been awarded a prize in this category. “Veiled Resonance” was commissioned by Steve Duke, saxophonist
and Distinguished Research Professor at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, and was composed over an eight-month period
in 2008 while Lillios was on sabbatical.
“Steve called me one day and said ‘Hey, Elainie, it’s time to start another project,’” Lillios said. “It was really a collaborative
effort.”
Lillios found her inspiration for this piece in the fifth stanza of “13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird,” by poet Wallace Stevens.
Each of the piece’s three movements is based on a different line from that stanza.
“A friend sent me [the poem] a few years ago thinking it might be inspiring,” Lillios said. “Steve and I wanted to come up
with a concept for the piece that we both felt resonated with us, and I showed him this poem.”
She explained that this interactive composition is subtly different each time it is performed. The work relies upon the interaction
between artist and computer to create the sounds heard by the audience.
“The piece revolves around Steve and his ability to play amazing extended techniques, as well as his ability to improvise,”
Lillios said.
Duke performs the piece with the computer on stage with him, using a foot pedal to control the composition’s unfolding. As
he depresses the pedal, the computer responds, at times processing his saxophone playing in real time and other times playing
pre-composed sound files. “Steve’s performing is integral to the success of this piece,” Lillios said, “He listens carefully
and expertly explores the environment that I’ve created.”
“Veiled Resonance” premiered in April 2008 in Salt Lake City at the National Conference of the Society for ElectroAcoustic
Music in the United States (SEAMUS). The society subsequently selected the work for its annual CD, “Music from SEAMUS Vol.
18,” which was released in July 2009.
The piece has been performed live five times, including a performance at BGSU’s 29th annual New Music Festival in 2008.
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