Skip to main content

UK Composer Lee Scott Chats about Tod Machover and New Web Opera The Village

Composer Lee Scott

On May 1, 2015 UK Composer Lee Scott's innovative web opera The Village will break boundaries

Be a Part of the The Village!

An Interview with Lee Scott

1. Three words to describe your music:

Collaborative, reflective, voice-driven 

2. Who are your influences?

I'm a guitarist first and foremost, so i'd name such figures as Chet Atkins, Frank Zappa, Brian May, Wes Montgomery, Django Reinhardt as influences. Jazz song convention and harmony certainly seems to find its way into my work one way or another, as can be heard in the many of the vocal lines in The Village. In terms of composers, I'm been drawn to music with an emotional underpinning, so works by Debussy, Puccini, but i'm also interested in dadaism and indeterminacy in a musical context so i'd include Satie, Stockhausen, Pousseur as loose inspirations. My everyday listening features Radiohead, Carpark North (Danish electrorock) and Mars Volta

LIKE The Village Facebook Page! https://www.facebook.com/thevillageopera

3. What is the Village Opera? How does this opera break new ground?

SNOUT - Just one of the colorful quirky Village characters
The Village is an interpretation of what a web opera might look and sound like, and more broadly aims to contribute to an understanding of what 'opera' means in the digital age. Digital technologies have become rather pervasive in staged opera over the last 10 or so years. They are mostly exploited in a scenographic context or to disseminate productions to cinema or online spectators, but occasionally, in works such as Scott Deal and Matthew Butner'sAuksalaq, Bill Duckworth's iOrpheus and Tod Machover's Brain Opera, the provisions of digital media help enlist the audience in the production or performance of the opera itself. The Village, first and foremost extends this approach into web opera by encouraging visitors to assume the role of a 'villager' and form their own mini-stories that enrich and recontextualise the central narrative. These contributes are text-based (this time) and are submitted directly from the website itself. Do join in!

The second quality about the Village that makes it different to traditional other opera productions is that the music is not written by one person. In fact, there are 7 composers of this work - one for each character - who are based all over the world (UK, Malta, China, US). My vision here is one of eclecticism. The web, to quote David Pountney. is a "strange blend of jewels and junk" - a melting pot of the weird and the wonderful. I want the opera to be a music-led celebration of such a view. A mixing of styles, influences and cultural resonances. There is no way i could do that on my own, and so I feel very lucky that I get to call on talents of my composer friends to make it a reality. 

In terms of process, i pen the narrative, and write/record the vocal lines (there are 8 singers in the opera) and then hand these materials over to the composers, who bring the characters to life through music. Images of the virtual world and the characters themselves are provided also to help inform the mood of the arias they create. In total there are up to 5 arias per character, which are released episodically over 5 weeks via www.thevillageopera.com. The story begins to unfold on May 1. 

4. What piece of advice would you give your younger you?

This is a really tough question! 

You know, I think I'd be deliberately vague. I believe that the things that you create are a product of what you are - for better of worse - and what you are is a collision of all you have experienced over the years - the lifts and the falls. Who knows, one seemingly illuminating piece of advice may actually end up derailing everything, of forcing myself down a different path. Perhaps i'd encourage him to carry on making mistakes and not be discouraged by then. 


Oh, i'd definitely steer the guy away from investing in those KRK Rokit 8 monitors...

The Village Opera will Premier MAY 1 at http://www.thevillageopera.com/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

EDGY New Film : Special Needs Revolt! A man with Down syndrome is on a mission to save America from a racist dictatorship

Special Needs Revolt!  Is an action-horror-comedy film. The film's hero, Billy Bates, who will be played by up-and-coming actor Samuel Dyer, is a young man with Down syndrome. Billy wakes up from a two-year coma and discovers that the United States has been turned into a brutal dictatorship thanks to President Kruger, to be played by award-winning veteran actor Bill Weeden ( Sgt. Kabukiman   N.Y.P.D. ). Kruger has put all people with disabilities into institutions. Billy becomes the leader of a diverse group of resistance fighters committed to ending Kruger's reign of terror. "Special Needs Revolt!" is also a satire on our current political situation, done in the style of Troma Entertainment. Lloyd Kaufman of Troma will appear in the film.  CHECK OUT THE INDIEGOGO CAMPAIGN:  https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/special-needs-revolt#/ Adrian’s latest work  Special Needs Revolt!  may seem edgy and even shocking to some. However, it demonstrates that he is grow

Music Secrets: The Music School Survival Guide

Music Secrets: The Music School Survival Guide Don't have any time to balance rehearsals, exams, and a social life? Then read on!  So you find that between playing in orchestra, the school musical, a solo recital or two, joining Sigma Alpha Iota or Phi Mu Alpha , playing in the alternative band at night, pep band, and marching band that you can't keep your eyes open, let alone study for the music history midterm next week or even begin to write your term paper on Debussy? Then read on and learn to balance life in Music School. 1) Musicians DO need to Sleep   Yes, you need to sleep, even if it is only five hours a night plus catnaps. Your brain cannot function if you do not sleep. So sleep, even if that means that you can't play in that awesome alternative band that jams every other night till 5am at the local bar. 2) Eat right and exercise Okay, so I sound like your parents, or Oprah, but I am serious. My biggest mistake as an undergrad (well, one of my bigges

Percussion Instruments 101: How to Play the Concert Triangle

PHOTO"wikimedia.org Percussion Instruments 101: How to Play the Concert Triangle There are literally hundreds of concert percussion instruments in use every day throughout the world. Whether you are playing percussion in a drum circle in Ghana , a jazz band in New Orleans , or a symphony orchestra in Sweden, you are playing an instrument that has traveled and mutated throughout the globe. The percussion instrument the triangle , is a metal rod bent into the shape of a two dimensional geometric triangle with one of the bottom corners disconnected to allow sound waves to escape. The concert triangle often has a slight difference, in that it may have a hole in one corner to loop a piece of nylon to hang the concert triangle. If it is an Alan Abel triangle, it will have a slight difference in the open end. That angle will end in a different thickness, supposedly to help the triangle sound to escape better acoustically. The triangle may be struck near one of the closed an