violon, piano [préparé], mandoline, guitare, harpe, percussionniste, trompette
Pays-Bas, Amsterdam, Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ
le Nieuw Ensemble, direction : Celso Antunes.
Immediately upon receiving this commission from the Nieuw Ensemble, the  Southwest Ensemble and the Wittener Tage für Neue Kammermusik, I thought  about composing a work related to pantomime. I was especially inspired  by the unique instrumental structure of the Nieuw Ensemble - in the  imaginary theatre of cosmigimmicks, plucked instruments  (guitar, mandoline and harp) play the main roles, while the other  instruments (prepared piano, violin, trumpet and percussion) disguise  themselves in order to join in a play of masques and mimicry.  Frequently, all instruments meld into a single ‘super-instrument’: both  the pianist and the violinist imitate the plucked instruments, the  former by means of preparation, the latter by employing unusual playing  techniques; last but not least, the array of percussion instruments  (which are partly also played by the trumpeter) is employed to attain  the greatest possible symbiosis of sound with the other instruments. The  overall timbre of the piece is metallic and highly fragile. 
This  unusual tonal character of the instrumentation called forth structural,  harmonic and rhythmical ideas as well, all of them linked to the notion  of musical pantomime. Why pantomime? What especially fascinates me is a  good mime’s ability to incisively sum up archetypes and whole life  stories in a few gestures without having to be concerned about linear  time or plain narrative. At best, pantomime is able to embrace both the  sublime and the low in an often baffling mixture of ritual and nonsense,  of street and high art, of madness and contemplation, of the tragic and  the roughly comical. 
Pantomime stems from a time in which man  did not yet speak, and has ever since appeared in a great variety of  forms. There exist Asian traditions of mime which tend to be extremely  formalized and highly complex. In Europe, the art of pantomime, which  was often frowned upon by church and the powers that be, had been a  strong undercurrent in the history of theatre since the Ancient Greeks:  as Martin Esslin has pointed out, there exists a congeniality of  expression between phenomena as diverse as the Commedia dell’arte,  Shakespeare’s fools, the masters of the silent film and the Theatre of  the Absurd.
However, in cosmigimmicks I was not at all keen to  mapping the history of the pantomime. Instead, I chose to concentrate on  three scenes important for me. These scenes are not narratives, but  rather object-like impressions which have been expanded into musical  time, and which frequently possess a feverish monotony.
The first movement, Shadow Play,  is not related to pantomime at all, but to shadow puppetry. It starts  with mere noise, of which tones and harmonies gradually emerge. The  musical gestures are shadowlike; figures appear and disappear as quick  as a flash. These gestures are enigmatic, impalpable and unpredictable  like Kafka’s Odradek. Spatial and textural contrasts (between far and  near and between blurry and clear) are explored. The music is frequently  between the border of noise and sound, as if zooming the gestures in  and out. In the course of the movement, the music gets more and more  complex, the extremely fast figures becoming in turn slower and more  expanded. 
The second movement, Quad, was inspired by  Samuel Beckett’s two homonymous TV plays (which are, in fact,  ‘geometrical pantomimes’). This is a strongly rhythmical scene, simple  and regular, the pace-like movement being constantly accelerated by  means of a kind of metric modulation. Each instrument is transformed  here into a kind of a percussion. 
The last movement, titled Thall,  is a homage to György Ligeti. The title is Korean and means ‘mask’. The  guitar is at the centre of this movement, playing a quasi-melody  consisting of a few microtones, which is repeated time and again. In  accordance with the changing harmonies of the other instruments, this  ‘melody’ changes, similar to a transformation of a mime’s facial  expression (a little bit like Marcel Marceau’s Le Fabricant de Masques). The overall character of Thall is both slightly sentimental and macabre, describing the psyche of a  torn person, the change of mental states being illustrated by means of  alteration of the harmonic language. 
Despite all mentioned  references and stimuli, cosmigimmicks is highly abstract and subjective  and certainly not literary programme music.
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