Dissertation
Dissertation
Dissertation
August 2015
Committee:
Eric Nestler, Major Professor
Don Taylor, Committee Member
Joseph Klein, Committee Member
John Holt, Chair of Instrumental Studies
Benjamin Brand, Director of Graduate Studies
John Scott, Dean of the College of Music
Costas Tsatsoulis, Dean of the Toulouse Graduate School
Roberts, Sarah L. The Avant-Pop Style of Jacob Ter Veldhuis: Annotated Bibliography
of Boombox Pieces with an Analysis of Pimpin for Baritone Saxophone and Boombox.
Doctor of Musical Arts (Performance), August 2015, 191 pp., 77 musical examples, 15 tables, 23
JacobTV has spent over thirty years utilizing his interest in American pop culture as the
muse upon which he creates his works. Sources of popular culture including commercials,
television evangelists, political speeches, interviews, and urban pop songs have earned him the
title of the Andy Warhol of new music. His contributions to classical music are significant and
include works for solo instruments and voice, chamber ensembles, and large ensembles.
This study serves as an annotated bibliography of selected pieces written for saxophone
and boombox written by JacobTV. Chapter 2 provides a brief historical background of electronic
music and chapter 3 describes JacobTVs compositional style and vocabulary. The pieces
included in the bibliography of chapter 4 are Believer (2006) for baritone saxophone and
soundtrack; Billie (2003) for alto saxophone and soundtrack; Buku (2006) for alto saxophone and
soundtrack; Garden of Love (2002) for soprano saxophone and soundtrack; Grab It! (1999) for
tenor saxophone and soundtrack; May This Bliss Never End (1996) for tenor saxophone, piano,
and soundtrack; TaTaTa (1998) for tenor and baritone saxophone and soundtrack; Heartbreakers
(1997-98) for saxophone quartet, soundtrack, and video; Jesus Is Coming (2003) for saxophone
quartet and soundtrack; Pitch Black (1998) for saxophone quartet and soundtrack; and Take A
by
Sarah L. Roberts
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thank you, JacobTV, for your dedication to thought-provoking art and your creative
compositional processes and thoughts throughout the writing of this project. Sincerest gratitude
extended to my committee chair, Dr. Eric Nestler, and committee members, Dr. Don Taylor and
Dr. Joseph Klein, for their patience and expertise throughout the writing and revision process. In
addition, thank you to all of the amazing teachers who have inspired and supported me along this
journey.
A very special thank you to my family for believing in me and pushing me to the finish
line. Your unconditional love and support guided me every step of the way. Finally, thank you to
my loving fianc (soon to be husband!) who has patiently stood by my side waiting for this
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS........................................................................................................... iii
TABLE OF CONTENTS............................................................................................................... iv
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................... 1
Significance........................................................................................................................... 1
State of Research................................................................................................................... 3
Method .................................................................................................................................. 5
Biography.............................................................................................................................. 6
CHAPTER 2
Electro-acoustic Music........................................................................................................ 12
CHAPTER 3
iv
CHAPTER 4
Believer ............................................................................................................................... 37
Billie.................................................................................................................................... 49
Buku .................................................................................................................................... 59
CHAPTER 5
Introduction....................................................................................................................... 138
Analysis-Form................................................................................................................... 141
2. Charisma................................................................................................................... 150
v
5. Like Picasso .............................................................................................................. 173
6. Hahahaha.................................................................................................................. 178
CHAPTER 6
CONCLUSION..................................................................................................................... 185
BIBLIOGRAPHY....................................................................................................................... 187
vi
LIST OF TABLES
7. Solo melodic material for soprano saxophone found in Heartbreakers, part 2.................. 113
vii
LIST OF EXAMPLES
1. Melody in the Baritone Saxophone from Believer mm. 1-5, mm. 6-11, mm. 26-33, and mm.
77-80. ................................................................................................................................... 39
7. Dichotomy of the meaning of the text and the mood created by the melody given to the
11. Dichotomy of roles for the saxophone in Billie, mm. 26-27. .............................................. 52
viii
21. Theme A found in Garden of Love, m. 2............................................................................. 66
25. Syllables "a" and "le" used in Garden of Love, mm. 179-182............................................. 70
27. Large intervallic material found in the saxophone part of Garden of Love, mm. 215-219. 73
29. Glissando effect commonly added in Garden of Love, mm. 11-12. .................................... 75
31. First treatment of text featuring the two structural lines in GRAB IT!,
36. Unison accompaniment in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 8-13. ...................................... 92
37. Pandiatonicim found in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 14-17.......................................... 93
38. Altissimo growl effect in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 57-58. ...................................... 94
39. Highest altissimo passage in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 143-146.............................. 95
ix
43. Melodic material presented by the tenor saxophone and piano found in Heartbreakers,
45. Changes in saxophone timbre found in Jesus Is Coming, mm. 21-22............................... 121
46. Coughing and throat noises utilized in Pitch Black, mm. 139-140. .................................. 126
47. Texture change from voice to saxophone in Pitch Black, mm. 98-101............................. 127
48. My Funny Valentine performed by Chet Baker found in Pitch Black, mm. 272-275........ 128
50. Lack of notation in voice sample in Take A Wild Guess, mm. 117-118............................ 135
51. Syllabic notation found in Take A Wild Guess, mm. 210-211........................................... 136
52. Percussive interjections in the accompaniment in Pimpin', movement 1, mm. 1-5. ......... 143
55. E-bass syncopated rhythm found in Pimpin', movement 1, mm. 17-18............................ 146
59. Legato eighth note baseline in Pimpin', movement 2, mm. 81-90. ................................... 154
61. Comparison of material from mm. 1-2 with mm. 50-51, in Pimpin'. ................................ 157
x
63. Baritone saxophone melodic displacements as compared to f-voice, Pimpin', movement 3,
64. Descending f-voice melody in Pimpin', movement 3, mm.106-107; m. 110, m.119. ... 164
65. Saxophone quartet melody compared with baritone saxophone and e-bass in Pimpin',
67. Altissimo passage in baritone saxophone in Pimpin', movement 4, mm. 165-66. ............ 169
68. Melodic repetition in Pimpin', movement 4, mm.162-164 and mm. 169-172................... 171
69. "Pimpin'" motive from Pimpin', movement 4, mm. 165-166. ........................................... 172
70. Use of mixed meters in Pimpin', movement 5, mm. 215-221. .......................................... 174
74. Two-measure S.B.S melody in Pimpin', movement 6, mm. 244-245. .............................. 180
76. Unison melody in m-voice, B.S., and e-bass in Pimpin', movement 6, mm. 282-288. ..... 183
xi
LIST OF FIGURES
20. Formal analysis of long and short versions of Take A Wild Guess.................................... 137
xii
23. Melodic outline of S.B.S in Pimpin', movement 6, mm. 244-261..................................... 181
xiii
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Significance
JacobTV has spent over thirty years utilizing his interest in American pop culture as the
muse upon which he creates his works. Sources of popular culture including commercials,
television evangelists, political speeches, interviews, and urban pop songs have earned him the
title of the Andy Warhol of new music.1 The sound sources JacobTV employs elicit an
emotional response: when coupled with the digital manipulations and compositional elements,
his music becomes even more complex. With over 1000 yearly performances world wide,
JacobTV is one of the most performed European composers; yet, there is no significant scholarly
In addition to popular culture, his compositions are influenced by various styles of music
including, classical, jazz, rock, rhythm & blues, and hip-hop. Therefore, the level of JacobTVs
music is much different than other compositions written for the saxophone and requires
knowledge of the above stylistic characteristics to appropriately interpret the music. Competency
with various time signatures and rhythmic subdivisions is of extreme importance to align with
1
JacobTV, Biography, www.jacobtv.net/bio/cv.html (accessed April 5, 2014).
1
the prerecorded sounds. Extended techniques such as altissimo2, slap tongue, bisbigliando,
subtone, growling, varied vibrato speeds, and pitch bends are common in his works.3
JacobTVs contributions to classical music are significant and include works for solo
instruments and voice, chamber ensembles, and large ensembles. His boombox compositions
include seven works for solo saxophone (either soprano, alto, tenor, or baritone saxophone) and
boombox; one duet for tenor and baritone saxophone and soundtrack; one duet for tenor
saxophone, piano, and soundtrack; and six works for saxophone quartet or larger saxophone
ensembles and boombox. JacobTV has also composed a saxophone quartet, saxophone quintet,
saxophone ensemble and percussion piece, and four saxophone concertos that do not feature a
soundtrack.4 Prominent saxophone soloists such as Arno Bornkamp (Netherlands), Connie Frigo
(USA), Joan Mart Frasquer (Spain), and Willem van Merwijk (Netherlands) are champions of
JacobTVs solo works for saxophone. To the best of the authors knowledge, however, there has
investigation and analysis of this nature will not only guide saxophonists preparation and
performance of the repertoire, but it will also rectify the absence of scholarship of JacobTVs
works.
2
Altissimo is the extension of the saxophones two and a half octave range. Below are the ranges for the
alto saxophone.
3
See Chapter 3, Glossary of terms for the definitions of slap tongune, bisbigliando, subtone, growling,
vibrato speeds, and pitch bends.
4
JacobTV, Works, www.jacobtv.net/works/sax.html (accessed April 5, 2014).
2
State of Research
The most complete information regarding JacobTVs biography can be found on his
website.5 Three articles are included that evaluate his music and a complete listing of his
compositions including the title, scoring, duration, year, publisher, brief description of the work,
and recordings on which the works can be found. While JacobTV is included on websites such as
Art Related6 and Classical Composers Database,7 there are no significant articles regarding his
music. One radio station, WQXR 105.9 FM, from New York, features sound clips of JacobTV
discussing his works that provides a short introduction through the composers perspective.8
There are several commercial compact disc recordings consisting of, or completely
JacobTVs compositions that are performed by the Aurelia Saxophone Quartet and saxophonist,
Arno Bornkamp. Similarly, Shining City (2007) is a two compact disc and one digital videodisc
compilation of Jacob TVs compositions. The works included are Jesus Is Coming performed by
the Aurelia Saxophone Quartet; Billie featuring saxophonist, Connie Frigo; and Buku recorded
by saxophonist, Arno Bornkamp. Grab It! by Jacob TV is the title track from the album released
by saxophonist Fabien Chouraki in 2003. Pitch Black (2008) recorded by the Prism Saxophone
Quartet and Buku of Horn (2009) by Arno Bornkamp are albums that consist entirely of Jacob
TVs works.
Although there are no dissertations solely pertaining to JacobTV, Michael Ibrahims New
Aesthetics in Contemporary Saxophone Music (2009) mentions the composer when describing
5
Jacob Ter Velduis, www.jacobtv.net (accessed April 5, 2014).
6
Art Related, JacobTV, http://www.artrelated.eu/musicians/jacob-tv.html (accessed April 5, 2014)
7
Classical Composers Database, JacobTV, http://www.classical-composers.org/comp/veldhuis (accessed
April 5, 2014).
8
WQXR, Hi, Im JacobTV, http://www.wqxr.org/#!/story/14906-hi-jacobtv/ (accessed April 14, 2014).
3
Pop-derived music. Ibrahim combines a brief description of JacobTVs life with a short
discussion of Grab It! (1999), Pitch Black (1999), and Tallahatchie Concerto (2001). In
addition, three dissertations from other disciplines focus on the subject of an acoustic instrument
and electronically produced sounds including one composition by JacobTV. Emily K. Madsens
document entitled Selected Music for Oboe and Electronically Produced Sounds (2010) gives
program notes of Garden of Love,9 and Derek Emchs Impersonations: Approaching A Clarinet
Recital from A Semiotic Perspective (2013) provides an in depth analysis of Grab It!10
The document that most resembles this proposed document is that of Thomas Burns Cox,
Two Analyses and An Annotated List of Works for Solo Trombone with Electroacoustic
Accompaniment for Use in the Collegiate Studio (2011).11 The purpose of Coxs research is to
familiarize the reader with literature for solo trombone and pre-recorded electroacoustic
trombone in the United States and Canada. Included in the list of works is Jacob TVs I Was Like
Wow (2004).
Performance Aspects in Compositions for Saxophone and Tape: David Huesers Deep
Blue Spiral, Paul Rudys Geographic Bells, and James Mobberlys Spontaneous
Combustion by Jeremy Bradford Justeson12 is the only dissertation discovered that explores the
music for saxophone and tape. In an effort to understand electroacoustic music, Justeson
9
Emily K. Madsen, Selected Music for Oboe and Electronically Produced Sounds (DMA diss.,
University of Maryland, 2010).
10
Derek Emch, Impersonations: Approaching A Clarinet Recital from A Semiotic Perspective (masters
thesis, Youngstown State University, 2011).
11
Thomas Burns Cox, Two Analysis and An Annotated List of Works for Solo Trombone with
Electroacoustic Accompaniment for Use in the Collegiate Studio (DMA diss, University of Georgia, 2011).
12
Jeremy Bradford Justeson, Performance Aspects in Compositions for Saxophone and Tape: David
Huesers Deep Blue Spiral, Paul Rudys Geographic Bells, and James Mobberlys Spontaneous Combustion
(DMA diss., University of Texas, 2001).
4
provides an in-depth history to aid saxophonists in performance within a historical context.13
Unlike Justesons paper that includes a lengthy exploration of the history of electroacoustic
music including other electronic devices such as synthesizers, processors, and computers the
historical aspects of this document are limited to the technique of voice sampling.
Method
JacobTVs compositions used for this document were obtained from the publisher,
Boombox. The pieces included in the bibliography are Believer for baritone saxophone and
soundtrack; Billie for alto saxophone and soundtrack; Buku for alto saxophone and soundtrack;
Garden of Love for soprano saxophone and soundtrack; Grab It! for tenor saxophone and
soundtrack; May This Bliss Never End for tenor saxophone, piano, and soundtrack; TaTaTa for
tenor and baritone saxophone and soundtrack; Heartbreakers for saxophone quartet, soundtrack,
and video; Jesus Is Coming for saxophone quartet and soundtrack; Pitch Black for saxophone
quartet and soundtrack; and Take A Wild Guess for saxophone quartet and soundtrack.
technique, and extended techniques are examined. Next, the document investigates the source of
the soundtrack and the tape manipulations. Lastly, by comparing the subject and compositional
style with applicable performance practice details, conclusions as to the aesthetic and avant-
pop style utilized by JacobTV are summarized. The identification of these compositional
elements are provided to make the pieces more approachable for the performer and aid in the
understanding of the relationship between formal elements and soundtrack to reinforce the
overall musical idea and aesthetic of each work. In addition, each piece includes the following
13
Ibid, 2.
5
biographical information: title, publisher, year(s) composed, instruments, playing time,
The next section of the document consists of an analysis of the theoretical and structural
form for Pimpin. The more in-depth analysis gives performers an informed approach to
JacobTVs music and understanding of his avant-pop style. Each section is analyzed
individually and with regard to its relationship to the work as a whole. Within each section, the
lyric and voice sampling technique is compared to the composition of the saxophone line. The
examination of the lyric provides insight regarding the structure of the phrasing. In addition, the
extended techniques and techniques borrowed from non-classical genres adds another important
element to the analysis. These contemporary influences are critical to the performers
understanding of JacobTVs compositional style and the overall success of the performance.
Biography
JacobTV (Jacob Ter Veldhuis) was born in 1951, and began his music career as a rock
musician. He studied composition with Willem Frederik Bon and electronic music with Luctor
Ponse at the Conservatory of Groningen.14 In 1980, JacobTV graduated and was awarded the
Composition Prize of the Netherlands.15 Throughout the early 1980s, JacobTV supported himself
by composing film scores and music for the clown of Circus Krone. It was not until 1984 that he
became a full-time composer in search of his own unique voice. A fascination with American
culture and the seamier side of society fuels JacobTVs music, especially his boombox works.
The basis for these pieces draws upon samples from political speeches, commercials,
14
Biography, JacobTV A Portrait (Amsterdam: Music Center The Netherlands) 3.
15
JacobTV, Biography, www.jacobtv.net/works/sax.html (accessed April 5, 2014)
6
CHAPTER 2
Throughout its history, electronic music has been shaped by changes in composition,
technology, and culture. Due to the extensive research that has already been completed on this
topic, only significant compositions, composers, and technologies relating to the style of
Electronic music refers to any music produced by electronic means. In its early stage, the
term electronic music was used to distinguish synthesized electronic sounds from the everyday
sounds utilized in Musique concrte; however, the term electronic music now refers to both.16
The development of electronic music progressed with the development of technology throughout
the 20th centure: such devices as the telephone, loudspeaker, microphone, tape, film sound track,
oscillator, gramophone recording, etc. influenced the progression of instruments being used to
With the turn of the twentieth century, the invention of the Telharmonium spawned the
primitive beginnings of electronic music. Invented by Thaddeus Cahill, the telharmonium was
controlled by a keyboard. This 200-ton device consisted of tone wheels that produced sounds
using additive synthesis of sine waves, which were transmitted through telephone lines. Listeners
would subscribe to the concert series and amplify the received signal through a primitive
16
Electronic Music, The Oxford Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. rev.. Oxford Music Online, Oxford
University Press, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t2371e3341 (accessed February 23,
2015).
17
Ibid.
7
loudspeaker.18 By the late 1920s other unique electronic instruments such as the Theremin and
Prior to World War II, live performances on the aforementioned instruments were the
only instances of electronic music. In 1935, the German equivalent to the American company
machine that would create and play back recordings on a magnetic tape. During the 1940s,
magnetic tape recording technology became readily available to musicians worldwide.19 With the
invention of magnetic tape, manipulation of, saving, and erasing sounds became much easier
than the turntables and disc recordings. In 1948, Pierre Schaeffer, began manipulating
everyday sounds (i.e. trains, wind, birds, footsteps, or voice) for his musical creations.
Through the use of turntables and disc recordings, aspects of the sounds including their speed,
Bonn University was home to electronic music experimentation in 1949-50 that led to a
public performance at Darmstadt in 1951. Also in 1951, the first electronic music studio was
founded under the direction of German composer Herbert Eimert and influenced others.21 By the
1950s, two approaches dominated the prerecorded electronic music world: the German
18
Peter Manning, Electronic and Computer Music (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013), 3-4
19
Manning, Electronic and Computer Music, 13
20
David Ernst, The Evolution of Electronic Music (New York: Schirmer Books, 1977), 3.
21
Electronic Music, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t2371e3341 (accessed
February 23, 2015).
8
Established in 1951 with the founding of the Cologne Electronic Music Studio,
Robert Beyer and Herbert Eimert completed the first compositions in this style in 1953. In
France, the Musique concrte style featured compositions of sounds derived from musical
instruments or from nonmusical objects and everyday actions.23 In both cases, sounds were
manipulated by adjusting speed, playback, cutting, or slicing. It is important to note that although
composers were experimenting with new sounds that could easily be recognizable and relatable
to audiences, they had not yet attached deeper meanings to the works. In a sense, this music was
Throughout the 1950s, the genre of electronic tape music spread across Europe and
throughout the United States with studios in Paris, Italy, Cologne, Toronto, and New York.24 The
first American electronic music was created at Columbia University and used a combination of
Elektronische Musik and Musique concrte techniques.25 The compositional process for
electronic music throughout the 1950s was slow and tedious as composers compiled hundreds
of separately recorded sounds. A piece only a few minutes in length would take weeks to
generators, white sound generators, square wave generators, filters, ring modulators, variable
22
Thomas Holmes, Electronic and Experimental Music (New York: Routledge, 2002), 100-104.
23
Ibid., 90-91.
24
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 3.
25
Herbert Deutsch, Synthesis, (Port Washington, NY: Alfred, 1976), 27.
26
Electronic Music, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t2371e3341 (accessed
February 23, 2015).
27
Sine-Tone Generator: sine tones possess no harmonics and are a single frequency and dynamic.
White Sound Generator: sound consisting of all audible frequencies sounding together.
Square Wave Generator: square waves consist of many harmonics and produce a dichotomy to sine-tones.
9
It was also during the 1950s that electronic tape music began to be combined with
performers. Dserts by Edgard Varse is one of the first compositions in this medium. However,
throughout Varses composition, the electronic tape and the live performers are never
In 1952, two composers set the stage for electro-acoustic repertoire. Henk Badings, who
later worked with Varse in the Philips Research Laboratories in Eindhoven, the Netherlands,
composed the first piece to integrate live performance with tape. Badings composition,
Capriccio for Violin and Two Sound Tracks, created the model for other electronic music
composers who wanted to incorporate elements that could only be created with live performers.
In Milan, Italy, Burno combined electronic music with live solo performance as well in his
composition entitled Musica su due dimensioni I for flute, cymbals, and tape.29
During the year 1960 the invention of voltage-controlled sound synthesizers changed the
options available to composers. In particular, the model developed by Robert A. Moog in 1964,
was extremely important. With the synthesizers, composers had a complete spectrum of sounds
at their disposal and could be programmed to play it. Furthermore, with the assistance of a
sequencer, a synthesizer could be used to store an extremely long section of music and perform it
Filters: devices that have the ability to extract a single sine-tone from white sound. They are classified by
frequency-response characteristics, i.e. low-pass, high-pass, band-pass, and band-stop.
Ring Modulator: combines several sound signals so the output all of the input-frequency components.
Variable speed tape recorders: used to speed up or slow down tapes.
Dynamic Suppressor: allows signals to be omitted below a certain dynamic level, utilizing and element of
chance. Electronic Music, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t2371e3341 (accessed
February 23, 2015).
28
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 107.
29
Elliot Antokoletz, Twentieth-Century Music (New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1992), 457.
10
live. In addition, the inclusion of digital computer synthesis throughout the 1960s improved the
Classical music was not the only genre influenced; jazz and rock music were
electronically transformed as well. Bob James, jazz pianist and composer, prepared prerecorded
tapes to perform with his jazz trio in the early 1960s.31 Other jazz musicians such as George
Russell, Charles Mingus and Gunther Schuller utilized techniques similar to those in classical
electronic music genre. Furthermore, Ran Blake aided in the evolution of free jazz with
electronics. In 1957, electronic and tape manipulations were first used by the rock band David
Seville and the Chipmunks to transpose vocal parts to sound like cartoon characters. Bands such
as the Beach Boys, the Beatles, the Grateful Dead, and Pink Floyd initiated an era of electronic
rock.32
During the 1960s and 1970s, the major centers for electronic music mentioned previously
remained connected to the production of taped works; however, there was an ever-growing
interest in live electronics.33 Thus, the branches of the electronic music tree continued to stretch
in not only classical genres, but also jazz, rock, and eventually sub-genres of these broad
categories including electronic rock, synth-pop, electronic dance music, and by the turn of the
twenty-first century computer technology performances that are unlike traditional performance
practices.
30
Electronic Music, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t2371e3341 (accessed
February 23, 2015).
31
Ibid., 131.
32
Ibid., 132.
33
Manning, Electronic and Computer Music, 135.
11
Electro-acoustic Music
compositions there are two genres: acousmatic and live electronic music. Acousmatic
compositions are only in recorded form (i.e. tape, compact disc, computer storage) and are
intended to be listened to on loud speakers, while live electronic music utilizes technology to
create, transform, or cue sounds during the act of performance. Live electronic music could
include sounds with voices and traditional instruments, electro-acoustic instruments, or other
During the 1950s, electro-acoustic music evolved from the combination of compositional
techniques and aesthetics from composers in Europe, Japan, and the Americas. With the
invention of the magnetic tape, composers were able to create high-quality recordings that
allowed for even greater experimentation and manipulation of recorded sounds. The
experimentation reached far beyond the sounds of traditional instruments and voices and created
new shapes and timbres. Furthermore, compositions that were once confined to fixed pitch and
solely based on metrical approaches to rhythm gave way to experimentation and freedom. Not
only could short-lived and infrequent sounds be captured for later use, but also environmental
experimentation in not only the sounds produced from those mediums, but manipulations to the
34
Simon Emmerson and Denis Smalley, Electro-Acoustic Music, Grove Music Online, Oxford Music
Online, Oxford University Press, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/08695
(accessed February 23, 2015).
35
Ibid.
12
sounds being transmitted.36 Electro-acoustic music featured the interaction that was lacking from
the passive performances of pure tape music.37 Although composers continued to create pure
electronic music, a cohort of composers developed unique views. For example, Steve Reich
deemed Musique concrte in a disappointing light as it typically featured sounds that were
unrecognizable. In his opinion, tape music, therefore, must have the capacity to illicit the
emotional power and intensity through its melody and meaning in addition to repetition and
rhythm.38
Prior to 1952, tape music incorporated basic sounds found in everyday life, such as trains,
wind, birds, footsteps, etcetera. French composer, Pierre Henry, breathed new life into electronic
music and joined the RTF Musique concrte studio. Utilizing experimentation of sounds by
diverse objects, Henry began to compile a sound herbal. Any sound deemed useful from a
musical standpoint was catalogued. Henry felt the wealth of sounds he collected and altered with
editing techniques and speed variations were superior to the conventional instrumentation in
traditional composition.39 The experimentation and creativity of Henrys works were fueled by
his training at the Paris Conservatoire and his former teachers Nadia Boulanger, Flix Passerone,
and Messiaen to name a few.40 In fact, Henry was the first formally educated musician to be
active in electronic techniques. Symphonie pour un Homme Seul, a 12-movement work that was
co-written with Schaeffer based on sounds of the human body, represents a prominent piece from
this period. In 1951, Henry composed a solo piece, Le Microphone Bien Tempere, which was the
36
Emerson, Electro-acoustic music,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/08695 (accessed February 23, 2015).
37
Elliot Schwarts, Electronic Music (New York: Praeger, 1973), 188.
38
Steve Reich, Writings on Music 1965-2000, ed. Paul Hiller (New York: Oxford University Press), 20.
39
Jason Ankeny, Biography of Pierre Henry, All Music, http://www.allmusic.com/artist/pierre-henry-
mn0000344330/biography (accessed February 23, 2015).
40
Emerson, Electro-acoustic music,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/08695 (accessed February 23, 2015).
13
first attempt at notating musique concrte. By combining live piano with recorded and distorted
piano sounds, Henrey composed Musique Sans Titre and Concerto des Ambiguites.41 In addition,
Henry composed the first piece based solely on manipulations of the human voice. By
manipulating the syllable ah, Henry created a soundscape without attaching any sort of
association or meaning.42
John Cage pioneered the use of electronic devices on the concert platform with his
Imaginary Landscapes series (1939-52). The series featured the earliest use of live performance
of electric sound devices and recordings and often combined with amplified small sounds
which otherwise would have been inaudible.43 Throughout the next fifteen years, composers used
two ways to combine electronics with live performers. One method was to feature live
instruments with pre-recorded electronics, while the second was to utilize real-time manipulation
of either the electronic or acoustic sounds or a combination of both.44 The term mixed music
was given to pieces combining live instrumental or vocal performers with pre-recorded tape.
Schaeffer and Henrys Orphe 53 (1953) for soprano and tape and Madernas Musica sudue
dimensioni I (1952) for flute, cymbal and tape are two pieces from the mixed genre.45
By the mid-1950s, electronic music moved from a somewhat niche genre, to an artform
reaching a wider audience through more public performances and composers such as John Cage,
Toru Takemitsu, and Vladimir Ussachevsky joining fellow electronic music practitioners.46 With
each new composition the distinction between tape and acoustic instrument became even more
41
Ankeny, Biography, http://www.allmusic.com/artist/pierre-henry-mn0000344330/biography (accessed
February 23, 2015).
42
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 3.
43
Emerson, Electro-acoustic music,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/08695 (accessed February 23, 2015).
44
Ibid.
45
Ibid.
46
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 108.
14
blurred. In 1958-9, Luciano Berio composed Diffrences, scored for flute, clarinet, viola, cello,
and harp. Throughout the work Berio manipulated recorded sounds of the live instruments that
obstructed the differentiation between the acoustic and electronic sounds.47 In Berios words, in
Diffrences the original model of the five instruments coexists alongside an image of itself that is
continually modified, until the different phases of transformation deliver up a completely altered
Before 1960, most composers of electronic music scored for a large ensemble. It was
believed that there were a greater variety of sounds possible with a large group.49 However, after
1960, the unification of electronic music with acoustic instruments became more important. As a
With each passing decade, composers expanded the tonal palette and slowly began to
attach meaning and symbolism to their works. One such piece is Milton Babbitts Vision and
Prayer (1961). The text is based on a poem by Dylan Thomas and is clear and intelligible
multitude of genres to take what began as simple everyday sounds and create new expectations
and directions within their compositions. In Antiphony IV (1967) by Kenneth Gaburo, live and
taped voices are combined with prerecorded electronic sounds and live instruments - the piccolo,
bass trombone, and string bass. A composition that closely resembles those of JacobTV in the
treatment of the spoken prerecorded taped material is An Avalanche (1968) by Lejaren Hiller.
47
Octavia Brandenburg, Aspects of Performance in Three Works for Piano and Tape, (D.M.A. diss.,
University of North Texas, 1993), 15.
48
Rossana Dalmonte, Luciano Berio: Two Interviews, trans. and ed. David Osmond-Smith (New York:
Marion Boyars, 1985), 126.
49
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 126
50
Paul Griffiths, A Guide to Electronic Music (London: Thames and Hudson, 1979).
51
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 109.
15
Based on a text by Frank Parman, An Avalanche includes a pitchman (speaker), prima donna,
player piano, percussionist and a prerecorded tape of quotations from Henry Miller, Frank Lloyd
Based on text from James Joyces Ulysses, Berios Thema (1958) subtitled Omaggio a
Joyce is an electro-acoustic composition scored for voice and tape. By treating the words
individually and not in terms of their literary context, Berio was able to create new structures
throughout the work. Each word is treated independently as a sound system. Much like
Henrys soundscape previously mentioned, this was the first time an intelligible text was broken
into pieces creating various sounds not based on their literary meaning, but on the texture, color,
and definition of each particular word.53 Specifically, Berio makes use of onomatopoetic words
such as smack, chips, and bloom.54 In addition, alliterative words like blew, blue,
bloom; jingle, jaunted, jingling; and clock and clacked were used independent of their
literary context.55
Assisted with tape technology by Richard Maxfield, Terry Riley combined instrumental
and tape material by using a cheap mono reel-to-reel. He recorded piano, speech, laughter, and
several sounds to assemble Mescaline Mix or MMix, named after the psychedelic drug and was
created over a two-year period of 1960-62.56 The piece was composed using an echoplex that
repeated the sound in a continuous counterpoint against itself and is the strangest piece of
52
Ibid., 116.
53
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 4.
54
Onomatopoetic: 1. The naming of a thing or action by a vocal imitation of the sound associated with it, 2.
The use of words whose sound suggests the sense. Onomatopoetic, Merriam-Webster.com, 2015,
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/onomatopoetic (accessed February 10, 2015).
55
Ernst, Evolution of Electronic Music, 4.
56
Keith Potter, Four Musical Minimalists: La Monte Young, Terry Riley, Steve Reich, and Philip Glass
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2000) 98.
16
music he has ever created.57 Throughout the work, the sound is incredibly distorted due to the
many manipulations made to the sound. The result was that the piece, sounded just like an acid
trip.58 Mescaline Mix was Rileys only tape piece composed before 1963 that survived. In
addition, the piece was used by choreographer Ann Halprin in Three-Legged Stool.59
technology serves as a source of musical organization. It is no surprise, therefore, that the same
technique would carry over in Rileys works without tape.60 In the 1960s, Riley was in Europe.
He had been composing using repetition for a decade when, the idea of the [tape] loops, the
repetition and the different cycles all came together, staying in my mind.61 Riley accessed
ORTF radio studios in Paris, explained the type of looping he could produce with the echoplex in
San Francisco, and a French technician created a tape-delay comprised of two Ampex tape
recorders. Thus, the time-lag accumulator was born. The time-lag accumulator pitted speech
and sound against each other to produce an increasingly blurred textural wash.62 She Moves She
(1963) was composed with the device and it paired words by actor, John Graham, against
percussive sounds. In addition, sound samples of Chet Baker and his band were utilized as the
music for The Gift (1963). The work articulates the importance of tape manipulations and was
performed over the French radio. The Gift marks Rileys true understanding of repetition and
how it affects musical form, and is perhaps the most significant of his pre- In C compositions.63
57
echoplex primitive electronic contraption: Potter, Four Musical Minimalists, 98.
58
Potter, Four Musical Minimalists, 99.
59
Ibid., 99.
60
Ibid., 99.
61
Ibid., 105.
62
Ibid., 105.
63
Ibid., 107.
17
Rileys most famous composition, In C (1964) is scored for any number or kind of
instruments and consists of a single page score with 53 modules.64 Most aspects of the piece vary
typically played in octaves on the highest two Cs of the piano, which resonates throughout the
piece. Performances are typically 45-90 minutes in length and work to deconstruct the European
classical music tradition. The influence for In C originates from Rileys study of both gamelan
Of musical and historical importance, Rileys tape compositions provide a direct lineage
into the compositions of Steve Reich. According to Riley, [I] never wrote any more music after
[In C]; I started improvising.66 Central to his compositional approach, improvisation was a way
that they incorporate techniques, such as rhythmic grooves and tonality based on modality, from
other genres including popular music and jazz. Similarly, his pieces have had an impact outside
After helping Riley with his first performance of In C in 1964, Reichs compositions
were influenced by the constant repetitions created by composing with tape loops. In addition, he
experimented with poems and speech rhythms. His attempts utilized a fixed meter with the
American speech, which ultimately led to his unsuccessful experiments.68 Reichs goal was to
find a new way of utilizing the repetitive musical technique that was started by Riley. While
64
Ibid., 109.
65
Potter, Four Musical Minimalists, 111.
66
Ibid., 120.
67
Ibid., 149.
68
Reich, Writings on Music, 19.
18
working to align tapes, Reich let them slowly shift out of phase. What began as an accident led to
Interested in speech melodies, Reich saw the humanistic elements of using the voice.
Each person creates a cadence and rhythmic structure that is unique to them.70 In fact, Reichs
interest in electronic music originally spawned from working with speech.71 He was definitely
not the first to be influenced by speech melodies. Many others have investigated the study of
speech as it relates to melody and intonation. One such composer is Leo Janek, who will be
In 1964, Reich heard a black Pentecostal preacher at Union Square in San Francisco. On
this particular day, Brother Walter was preaching about an eminent apocalypse. As Reich
listened to the preacher, the tone of his voice, and the shape and contour of the sentences, Reich
heard a melody. Thus, he recorded the preacher and in 1965, Its Gonna Rain was composed. At
the beginning of the piece, Reich played back the same sample of text on two tape machines.
Although the samples begin together, they start to go out of phase due to the tape machines
running at slightly different speeds; however the two samples move back to unison at the end.72
As the electronic manipulations resulted in repetition of the text, Reich felt the meanings of the
preachers words were only intensified and stated, The speech-melody and meaning is
Reichs composition Come Out (1966) is derived from the phrase come out to show
them. Much like Its Gonna Rain, the literal meaning of the text is an important aspect of the
69
Ibid., 20.
70
Ibid., 21.
71
Reich, Writings on Music, 19.
72
Eric Prieto, Speech Melody and the Evolution of the Minimalist Aesthetic in Steve Reichs The Cave,
Circuit: musiques contemporaines 12, no. 2 (2002), http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01411890490884454 (accessed April
12, 2015) 23.
73
Reich, Writings on Music, 19.
19
piece and therefore, the statement appears three times in succession during the opening twenty
seconds of the piece. A civil rights activist, Truman Nelson provided Reich with a collection of
tapes with recorded voices of six boys who were arrested for committing a murder in Harlem
during the summer of 1964. Reich chose the voice of Daniel Hamm, a boy involved in the riots
associated with the incident but not responsible for the murder. At the beginning of the piece
Hamm said, I had to, like, open the bruise up and let the bruise blood come out to show them.
Since Hamm did not appear wounded, the police did not take his injuries seriously until he
punctured himself in an effort to convince them. It was Reichs intention not only to present the
emotion of the text, but also emphasize it though repetition that does not alter the pitch.74
Melodica, also composed in 1966, has the same rhythmic structure as Come Out. In this
ten-minute work, Reich utilizes one rhythmic process that is realized in different sounds. Reich
dreamed the melodic pattern and when he awoke on May 22, 1966, he realized his dream with
melodica and tape loops. Melodica was the final pure tape piece he composed. The initial canon
featuring a combination of repeated pitches then acts as the basic unit for a progression through
four phased relationships, the last held for more than 2 minutes to permit the listener to
While Reich explored other electronic processes in his body of repertoire, the next
composed in 1988. The basis of the piece came from his travels on the train between his
mothers home in Los Angelos and fathers home in New York. From 1939-1942, his governess
accompanied Reich on the journeys. The piece was composed for string quartet and tape and
74
Ernst, The Evolution of Electronic Music, 9.
75
Ross Cole, Sound Effects (O.K. Music) Steve Reich and the Visual Arts in New York City, 1966-
1968, Twentieth-Century Music 11, no. 2 (September 2014),
http://journals.cambridge.org/abstruct_S1478572214000085, (accessed April 12, 2015) 223.
20
featured a new way of composing that was based on the foundations he set up twenty years prior
in Its Gonna Rain and Come Out.76 In addition, it was Reichs intention to compose a piece that
reflected these influences: 1. His governess, Virgina; 2. A retired Pullman porter, Lawrence
Davis, who rode the lines between New York and Los Angeles; 3. Recordings of Holocaust
survivors Rachella, Paul, and Rachel; and 4. American and European train sounds of the 1930s
and 1940s.77
Within the three movements of the piece that was commissioned by Betty Freeman for
the Kronos Quartet, Reich selected small speech samples that were clearly pitched. He
transcribed them and composed music for the strings that imitated the speech melody he had
transcribed. Next, Reich transferred speech and train sounds to tape with the use of sampling
is important to note there have been many others important to the creation and sustainability of
the genre. Composers such as John Cage, Lars Gunnar Bodin, Pamela Z, Trevor Wisehart, Cathy
Lane, and Nye Perry have all specifically utilized text and manipulated sound samples in their
compositions.79 As stated earlier, the goal of this chapter is to not cover the extensive history that
already exists regarding the many twentieth-century composers, but merely to provide a brief
context for the genre of saxophone electro-acoustic music and highlight the uniqueness of
76
Reich, Writings on Music, 151.
77
Ibid., 151.
78
Ibid., 152.
79
Cathy Lane, Voices from the Past: compositional approaches to using recorded speech, Organised
Sound 11, no. 1 (April 2006), htt://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S1355771806000021 (accessed April 12, 2015).
21
Electro-acoustic Music and the Saxophone
Claude Delangle and Jean-Denis Michat describe the saxophone in The Cambridge
Companion to the Saxophone as an instrument featuring a, harmonic-rich sound that lends itself
well to endless transformations.80 This statement validated by surveying the body of repertoire
for the saxophone and the many ways composers score the instrument. There is no other
instrument that is able to play in as many varying ensembles in the extreme amount of styles that
the saxophone does. Thus, even the repertoire is varied for the genre of saxophone and tape.
Repertoire: 1844-2003, William Street describes the growth of the body of repertoire throughout
the instruments history. With fewer than 300 solo works for the saxophone at the end of
Adolphe Saxs life in 1894, the repertoire has grown to the over 18,000 published pieces
documented in this tome. Street claims that todays composers write more frequently for
saxophone than even the violoncello, and in fact, the body of repertoire for the lower members of
the saxophone family has grown largely due to the attractiveness of the lower tessitura.81
In the saxophone with tape or electronics category, the earliest piece listed is Steve
Reichs Reed Phase (1966) for soprano saxophone and tape or saxophone quartet (soprano, alto,
tenor, and baritone saxophones) and tape.82 Reed Phase, initially titled Saxophone Phase, is
Reichs first attempt at live phasing and pairs the soloist with the tape; however, the work has
often been disregarded and only receives a brief mention in Reichs book, Writings on Music:
80
Claude Delangle and Jean-Denic Michat, The Saxophone Today: The Contemporary Saxophone in The
Cambridge Companion to the Saxophone, ed. Richard Ingram, trans. Peter Nichols (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge
University Press, 1998) 171.
81
Jean-Marie Londeix, ed. Bruce Ronkin, A Comprehensive Guide to the Saxophone Repertoire, 1844-
2003 (Cherry Hill, NJ: Roncorp, 2003), v-vi.
82
Ibid., 618.
22
1965-2000.83 Reich described the year he composed the piece 1966, as being depressing, and
therefore, he distanced himself from all of the works composed during that year. Although Reed
Phase and Melodica, also from 1966, fell out of favor, they served as building blocks to Reichs
ensemble repertoire and worked to establish his identity as a composer.84 Carman Moore, writer
for the Village Voice, reviewed the concert featuring Reed Phase that was titled Four Pianos:
Three Evenings of Music by Steve Reich. The review described the piece as, shrill, exact, and
rich and his, favorite experiencedone with a phenomenal breathing trick and first rate
musicianship by Jon Gibson.85 In addition, Moore added, when tape is put aside and emulated
Other important pieces for saxophone and tape discussed in chapter 10 of The Cambridge
Companion to the Saxophone are Images (1979) for alto, soprano, and sopranino saxophones and
tape by Milton Babbit. Babbit composed numerous works for pure electronics or instrument and
tape and is often considered the father of electronic music.87 Voilements and Saxatile
composed by Jean Claude Risset, are two works that combine recorded sounds of the saxophone
with the live saxophone. The combination of live and recorded saxophone challenges the
listners ability to distinguish between the two. Composed in the French studio, the Groupe
world, atoms, particles and infinitely small domains.88 Further substantial works listed include
Burton Beermans Concerto One for saxophone and tape; Bernard Cavannas Goutte dOr Blues;
83
Cole, Sound Effects, 226.
84
Ibid., 222-223.
85
Ibid., 226.
86
Ibid., 226.
87
Delangle and Michat, The Saxophone Today, 171.
88
Ibid., p. 171.
23
Costin Miereanu, Do-, Mi-, Si-, La-, Do-, R-, and Variants-Invariants; Reichs Vermont
Londeixs tome includes an extensive list of electronic works for the saxophone, and
therefore, it is no surprise JacobTVs works are included. Pitchblack,90 Billie, Grab It!, and a
piece not listed on JacobTVs website, War Face (2003) for alto saxophone and tape are all
categorized.91 The current edition has catalogued pieces from 1844-2003, and in the twelve years
since its copyright, JacobTV has added to his catalogue. With JacobTVs popularity especially
among saxophonists, there is no doubt more of his pieces will be included in the next edition.
The possibilities created with electro-acoustic music cannot be ignored in todays concert
hall; however, electro-acoustic works are not always common on recital programs. The
reluctancy to include these pieces can stem from many factors: lack of equipment knowledge,
limited access to equipment, and fear of audience alienation. Tackling an electro-acoustic piece
is an incredible responsibility for the performer. Not only is the performer responsible for the
acoustic sounds, but also the electronic sounds, and therefore, must learn how to effectively
acoustic recital, the audience receives three-dimensional signals from the performers, the stage,
and the concert hall. However, with the addition of some type of loudspeaker, the auditory
perspective changes to a contrived device. Unless controlled and utilized in an effective manner,
89
Delangle and Michat, The Saxophone Today, 172.
90
Londeix, A Comprehensive Guide, 491.
91
Ibid., 619.
92
Mari Kimur, Performance Practice in Computer Music, Computer Music Journal 19:1 (1995): 65.
24
this can distract listeners and ultimately alienate them from electro-acoustic performances.93 In
addition, many electro-acoustic compositions require the audience to not be aware of where the
electronic sound is emanating; however, this does not apply to JacobTVs compositions. This
chamber group. By definition, the electronics can be considered as another instrument adding to
the small group collectively performing. Within any chamber music ensemble, specific cues and
gestures are to be communicated. When one member of the group is of a fixed media,
communication is made difficult. Furthermore, pieces like JacobTVs that include a performance
track to be amplified employ more unwavering tempi than with live performances without a
fixed media. While tempo changes do occur, they are much more difficult to execute and require
the performer to learn to perform with the tape as opposed to making the tempo decisions
independently.94 Chapter four discusses how JacobTVs compositions prepare the performer for
Because electro-acoustic pieces for saxophone are works that have been composed within
the later part of the 20th century, the performance demands of compositional elements vary
greatly compared to acoustic works previously written. Many electronic pieces involve
challenging passages that are more difficult than those in the standard repertoire. In addition,
composers require performers to vary timbre and tonal elements much like the many
93
Bruce Pennycook, Live Electroacoustic Music: Old Problems, New Solutions, Journal of New Music
Research 26 (1997): 74.
94
Samuel Pellman, An Introduction to The Creation of Electroacoustic Music (Belmont, California:
Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1994), 363.
25
manipulations produced by an electronic device. Therefore, learning and performing these works
95
Pennycook, Live Electroacoustic Music, 73.
26
CHAPTER 3
JacobTV began as a rock musician, but was interested in composition and electronic
music. In 1980, he was awarded the Composition Prize of the Netherlands, which initiated his
fulltime composition career. In describing his music, JacobTV says, I pepper my music with
sugar.96 With over 1000 performances annually of his works world wide, JacobTV is one of the
most performed European composers. His music is performed by such groups as The Royal
Academy as well as soloists such as Branford Marsalis, James Galway, Evelyn Glennie, and
Arno Bornkamp and ensembles such as Het Netherlands Kamerkoor, the Aurelia, Prism, and
Referred to as the Andy Warhol of new music, JacobTV has spent over thirty years
utilizing the music he has found in spoken word to create an extensive catalog of repertoire.
Unlike his predecessors in tape music, JacobTV utilizes his interest in American pop culture as
the muse for which he creates his pieces. Sources of popular culture inspiration include
commercials, television evangelists, political speeches, interviews, and urban pop songs.98 The
JacobTVs compositions for saxophone include the following: solo works for soprano,
alto, tenor, and baritone saxophones; saxophone quartet; saxophone and big band; saxophone and
96
Jacob Ter Veldhuis, Biography, www.jacobtv.net/bio/cv.html (accessed April 5, 2014).
97
Ibid.
98
Michael Ibrahim, New Aesthetics in Contemporary Saxophone Music (N.p.: Ibrahim, 2009), 165.
99
Ibid., 165.
27
chamber orchestra; and saxophone quartet and orchestra.100 The level necessary for performers to
achieve successful performances of JacobTVs music is much different than other compositions
written for the instrument. In the early repertoire for the saxophone, composers such as Joseph
Arban, Jules Demersseman, Hyacinthe Klos, and Jean-Baptiste Singele composed primarily
for the alto saxophone. The repertoire was harmonically conservative and was composed in the
style of fantasies, theme and variations, and solos de concours pieces that were used by the
Paris Conservatoire for their annual examinations.101 As the body of repertoire for the instrument
began to grow throughout the end of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth century,
composers discovered the rich tone of the instrument and ever-increasing technical achievements
of performers. These new discoveries gave way to transformations in repertoire from the
traditionalist beginnings to more explorative pieces combining elements indicative of the era in
which they were composed. In fact, the Greek word phone relates to vocal sounds, and
therefore, it is no surprise that the saxophone has been described as a singing instrument.102 In
the fifty years since World War II, the repertoire for the saxophone has followed compositional
trends that have been spearheaded by serialism and experimental electronic music. Without a
history of repertoire that spans centuries, saxophonists have developed a ferocious appetite for
new works and feel a responsibility to seek fresh pieces.103 It is no surprise, then, that one such
describes his initiation into composition by saying, I was 15 and I improvised in a blues band. I
100
Jacob Ter Veldhuis, Works, www.jacobtv.net/works/html (accessed April 5, 2014).
101
Thomas Liley, The Repertoire Heritage, in The Cambridge Companion to the Saxophone, ed. Richard
Ingham (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 52.
102
Thomas Liley, Invention and Development, in The Cambridge Companion to the Saxophone, ed.
Richard Ingham (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 1.
103
Delangle and Michat, The Saxophone Today, 161.
28
was so thrilled that I wanted to capture my improv. I used a tape recorder, but then I started to
write down what I heard on the tape recorder. And this was the beginning of my composing
life.104 Furthermore, his list of influential composers is extremely varied. He credits Bach,
Beethoven, Bartk, Reich, Zappa, Prt, and Dylan to shaping him as a musician.105 It was not
until age 40, however, that JacobTV felt he had found his compositional style. As he describes,
Musical history is so overwhelming. As a young artist, you have to deal with it. It
took me years to develop myself. I am a late bloomer. Besides, I was told what
was muically correct and what was not done. Rock, pop, jazz, etc. for instance
was something vulgar and not taken seriously by the academic world. But
growing older I got this never mind attitude. I wanna write the music I
likeAfter 40, I had the feeling I found my style.106
One of the defining characteristics of JacobTVs compositions is his use of speech and
text as a melody. This technique was described in chapter two by composers such as Riley and
Reich. In addition, Czech composer, Leo Janek regarded each instance of speech melody as a
unique expression of that person at a specific location and surrounding aesthetic. By maintaining
notebooks of written records of speech that included examples ranging from childrens
nonsensical utterances to dialects from various regions of his home country, Janek was truly
interested in the musicality of speech.107 Furthermore, he recorded the age and sex of the speaker
in addition to the time, place, and overall mood of the atmosphere in the notebooks. It was
Janeks conjecture that the environment had a determinative effect on the way in which
sentences and phrases are spoken. After analyzing his notebooks, Janek wrote about the
104
JacobTV, interview by author, February 26, 2015.
105
Ibid.
106
Ibid.
107
Paul Christiansen, The Meaning of Speech Melody for Leos Janek, Journal of Musicological
Research 23 (2004) 241.
29
When someone spoke to me, sometimes I did not understand the words, but I did
understand the intonation! I immediately knew what was inside the speaker. I
could tell what he felt, whether he lied, whether he was excited, and while the
person spoke to me I could feel, I could hear that perhaps the man was weeping
inside! The pitches, the intonation of human speech, of any creatures speech,
contained the deepest truth for me. And you see, that was my vital need.108
While it has been used by other composers, the speech-melody technique is central to
JacobTVs works to which he has developed his own style and compositional sound. He
describes finding the beauty of authentic speech from every day life as a ready-made object,
the way Warhol or Marcel Ducamp discovered it in [the] visual arts.109 Speech became an
important compositional element due to not only the emotions and feelings it contains, but also,
the melody, expression, and meaning. He describes, so by using speech I become also a poet, a
JacobTV has branded his speech-based compositions with the label boombox. Not only
are his works scored for an instrument/ensemble and boombox, but also his publishing
acoustic music, combining live instruments with speech grooves, reproduced by a boombox aka
ghettoblaster. Boombox scores are based on the melody and rhythm of speech. The subjects can
be anything from trivialities to world events.111 Initially, the use of boombox was a statement
against the academic world as an attempt to bridge the gap between high art and low culture.112
To quote JacobTV, The boombox is such a simple device, that one associates with street
108
Ibid., 242.
109
Ibid.
110
Ibid.
111
http://www.boomboxshop.net/index.html
112
JacobTV interview, February 26, 2015.
30
culture. But that is now a thing of the past. Its just a simple means of performing along with.
The sound sources selected by JacobTV are examples that intuitively appear to him. He
mesometimes to tears, sometimes to laughterand then I get inspired, and the music bubbles
up, writes itself.114 By utilizing melodic creativity, his knowledge of harmonic structure, and his
emotional intelligence, JacobTV is able to create his sound scapes. After finding the sound
sources, he then selects words, syllables, or sentences and begins the compositional process
using a digital audio workstation. Specifically, JacobTV uses Logic Pro with an ESX24 plug-in
to patch the manipulated text from words, syllables, or short phrases into the keys of his midi
keyboard. Through trial and error, he then is able to create musical patterns that serve as the
Until 1998, JacobTV had never composed for the saxophone. He had originally thought
the sole purpose of the instrument was for improvisation, jazz, and rock; but eventually he fell in
love with the many timbres of the saxophone. As he describes, Traditional woodwinds are so
limited, I cannot listen very long to a bassoon or flute, but I can listen for hours to saxophone.116
JacobTV characterizes the saxophone in comparison to the human voice, with a harsh kind of
sound.
113
Ibid.
114
Ibid.
115
Ibid.
116
JacobTV interview, February 26, 2015.
31
But I grew up in post war Europe, and the music of the 60s shaped my world.
Societies were changing, authorities were disappearing, I was a hippie dreaming
of a new world. I felt like an anarchist at the time. I was an idealist dreaming of a
world without suffering. Now I know better, but I am still very inspired by the
human condition, by mans struggle for a better world. I could have been a social
worker instead of an artist. I feel related to American minimal music and
American rock/pop/jazz music, also in a way to eastern European spiritual styles,
like Prt, etc.117
To JacobTV, the term avant-pop comes close to describing his style, however, he does not
With the many various inspirations for pieces, there is surely a message JacobTV is
sending to his audience. When asked what performers and listeners are to gain from his music,
JacobTV states:
Buddhists regard art as a gift to the world. I like that. I hope to move people, to
share with them the awe feeling that I have when I look at a flower, or hear a
bird singThe beauty of sound, the abstract aspect of music, which can express
the unspeakable.119
provided. Not every term found in JacobTVs scores is included in the glossary. The words and
definitions included, however, detail those techniques that need clarification as either JacobTV is
utilizing them in a unique way or they are not common. The following glossary lists and defines
117
Ibid.
118
Ibid.
119
Ibid.
32
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Bisbigliando type of timbral trill. Opening and closing the appropriate keys will produce the
Chromatic gliss. a sliding effect from two pitches by way of the chromatic scale.
Crossfade via subtone move from one pitch to the next by fading in and out, utilizing a subtone
Doit a jazz glissando typically notated with a curved line facing up to the top of the staff and
Fall a jazz glissando notated with a descending symbol indicating the falling at the end of the
False Fingerings implies a non-standard fingering initially used for technically difficult
passages. Due to the timbre change, sometimes out of tune, jazz players utilize the nuance for
color and variety. The term is also used in reference to pitches that lie above the normal range of
the saxophone.
Flutter tongue tremolo produced by rapidly rolling the tongue. The technique can also be
120
Jean-Marie Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax or Parameters of the Saxophone (Paris: Leduc, 1989), 46.
121
Barry Kernfeld. Fall. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., vol. 1. (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2007) 737.
122
Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax., 45.
33
Glissando to glide either ascending or descending from one pitch to the next. Range, speed,
and direction depend on notation of the gliss. On saxophone, by tightening and loosening the
Growl produce a rough, gritty tone either by using the throat to produce a gutteral rasp, or by
flutter tonguing, or by a combination of both. A similar effect is produced when the player sings
Jazz Glissando Distinguished by direction and speed, the symbols used are not standardized
amongst composer. A straight, curved, wavy, saw-toothed lines, arrows, or even the word gliss.
Laid back intentionally placing notes just after the beat, which gives the music a relaxed nature
Mouth ram much like slap tongue and open mouth slap, a mouth ram is an extremely harsh
articulation involving an extremely aggressive approach to the reed utilizing not only the tongue,
123
Barry Kernfeld. Glissando. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., vol. 2. (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2007) 47.
124
Barry Kernfeld. "Growl." The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed.. Oxford Music
Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/J179400 (accessed April 15, 2015) .
125
Berry Kernfeld. Jazz Glissando. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., vol. 2. (New York:
Oxford University Press, 2007) 47.
126
Berry Kernfeld. "Lay back." The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed.. Grove Music Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/J261500 (accessed April 15, 2015).
34
Open slap the same process as the slap tongue, although when the player pulls their tongue
away from the reed they open their mouth in the process. The harsh articulation becomes more of
a smack.
Overtones freak out JacobTV is referring to the technique of overblowing which means
producing the octave, 12th, 15th, and more partials in the overtone series. In jazz, overblowing is a
technique usually combined with false fingerings to reach pitches outside of the normal range of
the instrument and use unconventional timbres. Important jazz saxophonists who were known for
their overblowing techniques were Coleman Hawkins, Illinois Jacquet, John Coltrane, Albert
Ayler, John Gilmore, Pharoah Sanders, Richie Cole, Joseph Jarman, Roscoe Mitchell, and
Anthony Braxton.127
Rough upbeat glissando an agressive glissando occurring on the upbeat of the measure.
Scoop a glissando occurring at the beginning of the note. The pitch performer begins lower
Slap tongue type of articulation with roots in jazz, slap tongue is a sound reminiscent of
pizzicato for strings. Creating suction between the tongue and the reed and quickly pulling the
tongue away from the reed produces the effect. It is a very sharp articulation.129
127
Berry Kernfeld. Overblowing. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., vol. 3. Oxford Music
Online.Oxford University Press, 210.
128
Berry Kernfeld. Scoop. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., vol. 3 (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2007) 533.
129
Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax, 97.
35
Subtones Webster Style an extremely soft sound accompanied by a less brilliant tone color. The
timbre is full of air and breathy. Opening the embouchure and covering the tip of the reed with a
Tr-rall trill (vigorously moving between the notated pitch and the next pitch above) in
Vibrato pulsations within a pitch. JacobTV utilizes various techniques of vibrato including
narrow (barely audible), wide (clearly pronounced, utilized in intense or powerful sections), or
Webster Whisper term created by JacobTV influenced by tenor saxophonist, Ben Webster
130
Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax, 84.
131
Berry Kernfeld. Ben Webster. The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2nd ed., vol. 3. (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2007) 901-902.
132
JacobTV, interview by author, April 23, 2015.
36
CHAPTER 4
ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Believer
Composed in October 2006, and revised in March 2008, for Willhem van Merwijk with
financial support form the Dutch Fund for the Creation of Music, Believer was initially scored
for baritone saxophone and soundtrack. Merwijk premiered the work on October 25, 2008, at the
Theater Kikker Utrecht in Holland. In addition to the original, Believer is the first movement of
the suite, White Flag, about the 2004 war in Iraq. The suite was composed for Electric
Kompany133 and was premiered at the JacobTV Festival at the Whitney in New York, New
Believer is based on a 2004, Fox News Christmas interview done by Bill OReilly with
President George W. Bush. Figure 1 is the transcript of the interview utilized in the piece. In
addition to the voices of OReilly and President Bush, the accompaniment features saxophone,
cello, and electric guitar sounds that have been distorted through an overdrive guitar amplifier.135
133
Electric Kompany is an American band formed by Kevin R. Gallagher, guitarist. The group is
comprised of guitar, keyboard, drums, and bass; and mixes classical and rock music to create a genre of modern
music performed on modern instruments.
134
JacobTV, Believer, (Holland: Boombox, 2006).
135
Ibid.
37
Figure 1. Text found in Believer
OReilly: So you are indeed a true believer?
Bush: Im a believer in the power of liberty to transform societies
Im a believer
And I believer we have a duty!
etc.
Believer begins with a solo baritone saxophone melody that the performer is instructed to
perform with a bleeding soaring sound. In addition, JacobTV describes the baritone saxophone
as blending with the sound track in a bleeding way throughout the piece.136 The use of a
colloquial wording such as bleeding conjures many images to the performer that may not be
achieved with traditional musical terminology. In this respect, JacobTV is able to directly relate
to subject of the Iraq War with the performer in a new, pop-culture manner.
The opening legato melody recurs four times, each either with or without accompaniment
and never with the text. Although the rhythm is changed, each reiteration of the melody begins
on the baritone saxophone written pitch G4137 and moves to Bb5 (the interval of a minor third
136
Ibid.
137
The pitch labeling system is according to the American Acoustical Society notational system,
specifically
38
displaced by an octave).138 The five-note melody ends with a descending major sixth from D5 to
F4, the inversion of the opening minor third. Example 1 compares the four instances of the
melody found in the saxophone. While the rhythms and directions of notes change with each
Example 1. Melody in the Baritone Saxophone from Believer mm. 1-5, mm. 6-11, mm. 26-33,
and mm. 77-80.
mm. 1-5
mm. 6-11
mm. 26-33
mm. 77-80
138
Baritone saxophone is in the concert key of Eb. Its written pitches occur in trouble clef, and sounding
pitches are a major 13th below.
39
During the interview samples, the saxophone is scored as accompaniment in pairing with
the electronic instrumental track and is almost indistinguishable from the electronic
accompaniment. While the majority of music for the saxophone is legato, there are two instances
in which the music is not only fast and rhythmic, but also utilizes a very heavy slap tongue.
In addition to slap tonguing, the saxophonist is asked to perform several other extended
techniques. The first technique occurs in measure 5, and it repeats eight times throughout the
piece. As Example 2 illustrates, the bisbigliando continues until the abbreviation ord. which
opening and closing the appropriate keys.139 Although there can be many combinations of
fingerings that can produce the desired result, the fingerings marked in Example 2 are
139
Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax, p. 46.
40
As demonstrated in example 2, to produce the bisbigliando for the written baritone saxophone F4
(sounding G#2) it is recommended to open and close the low c key. In addition to this being the
only recommended fingering, it is labeled peu perceptible or barely perceptible. The written
E5 (sounding G3), however, has four options to create the effect. The first three fingering
choices include the regular fingering for the written E5 and opening and closing either the D#
key, low B key, or the low C key. The fourth option for the bisbigliando effect is produced by
opening the C5140 key and opening and closing the C1141 key.
Two other changes in timbre notated throughout this piece are flutter tonguing and
growling. In measure 10, the saxophonist is instructed to flutter-tongue and in measure 104 to
growl. While the two techniques are not produced the same way, they serve the same purpose in
the musical line. One justification for the use of the two different techniques at the same melodic
placement could be the aggressiveness of sound. Flutter tonguing is a lighter sound compared to
the timbre of a growl. Therefore, as the piece continues, the intensity builds and a growl is more
effective. Some experimentation needs to be done to effectively execute the growl in order to
produce the correct combination of playing and singing. Example 3 illustrates both flutter
tonguing and growling notations found within Believer. The inclusion of both techniques
demonstrates the infusion of classical performance techniques with those characteristics of jazz
and popular styles. Flutter tonguing is an extended technique frequently found in classical music
while growling relates to the unrefined sound of many jazz and blues saxophonists. This fusion
speaks to the nature of JacobTVs avant-pop style as fusing performance practice elements from
140
C5 is the 5th side key used for high F#. Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax, p. 46.
141
C1 is the 1st side key used for high D. Londeix, Hello! Mr. Sax, p. 46.
41
Example 3. Flutter tonguing and growling Believer, m. 10 and mm. 104-109.
Measures 12 and 13 are labeled with the text, crossfade via subtones etc. Based on the
definitions provided in the glossary found in chapter 3, it is the authors interpretation that the
text should read crossfade via overtones/overblowing etc. As Example 4 illustrates, the
melody spans two octaves and the term crossfade implies that the sound transitions from soft
to loud to soft dynamics. Via subtone is a questionable instruction based on the tessitura of the
melody, as subtone is an effect typically utilized in the saxophones lower register. Therefore, it
is the assumed intention that the technique required overblowing (described in chapter 3). By
utilizing the technique of overblowing, the performer is able to crossfade not only dynamically,
but also harmonically. The first pitch is overblown to the connecting overtones and smoothly
42
Another important technique present throughout Believer is the utilization of the
altissimo range of the saxophone. There are many passages above the standard142 range of the
saxophone and Example 5 illustrates the passage highest in range that reaches Eb7. Throughout
the piece there are ten altissimo passages ranging from G6 to Eb7.143
Found within the score are expressive and descriptive terms that have been labeled by the
composer, such as the aforementioned bleeding sound. These terms articulate the manner in
which some lines should be performed. Text found in the score includes: bleeding soaring
sound, espressivo, dolce dolorosa, crying like a dying animal, imitate voice and play
along with voice, sentimental, and molto espressivo. The descriptions create a dichotomy
between instances of sweet, expressive lyricism versus harsh distortion that articulte the
Example 6 illustrates the first instance of slap tongue that occurs in measure 60. The two
harshly articulated notes in the baritone saxophone are reacting to the word duty from the
142
Standard are the notes of the saxophones range that are either fundamentals or first overtones. Notes
in the altissimo are either second or third overtones.
143
Range of the baritone saxophone. Altissimo range in Believer.
43
interview occurring in measure 59. The text in the voice sample states, and I believe we have a
duty. As opposed to prior statements, this line is a call to action and describes something more
than a feeling. The word duty indicates a responsibility and the saxophone articulates a
musical response that is starkly contrasting from all other material thus far to highlight that
Beginning in measure 72, the text states, I believe that peace is coming. This world is
getting better. The saxophone is instructed to perform dolce dolorosa, or sweetly and
sorrowfully, in a dying manner. This is further illustrated by the descending melody in the
saxophone line. The dichotomy of the text and saxophone melody is illustrated in Example 7.
While the text is that of a hopeful nature, every indication to the saxophonist relays the feeling of
44
Example 7. Dichotomy of the meaning of the text and the mood created by the melody given to
the saxophone in Believer, mm.72-76.
The first instance of the instruction imitate the voice and play along with the voice
occurs in measures 110-114 shown Example 8. Prior to this moment, the saxophone and voice
have not performed in unison; therefore, this instance is significant in the scheme of the piece.
Even more important, is the event takes place at the golden section.144
144
The golden section is based on the division of a piece into two unequal sections (a and b) where a
(a=2/3) is twice as long as b (b=1/3). The music builds to climax of the piece known as the golden section, which
occurs roughly two-thirds of the way throughout.
45
Example 8. Saxophone and voice unison in Believer mm. 110-114.
After the shared unison passage, the text continues, Im a believer in the power of liberty to
transform societies. Just as in measures 59-60, the text once again discusses an action and is
answered with the slap tongue passage found in measures 117-112 (Example 9). This passage is
not only the loudest passage of the piece, but it also displays the fastest rhythms required of the
46
As shown in the example 9, the baritone slap tongue material can be described
intervallically as two descending 3-note groups consisting of either a major 6th followed by a
perfect 5th or a major 6th followed by a minor 7th. It is interesting to note the interval relationships
between this example and example 1. The exact pattern of intervals can be found in measures
130-134 and measures 142-145. Each statement of the melody utilizes slap tongue, however, the
end of the piece features the most aggressive articulation and is labeled, a mouth ram. While
there is no standard in place for this exact articulation, performers can interpret this to be even
harsher than the slap tongue utilized previously. The chart (Figure 2) below describes the formal
structures in Believer.
47
Figure 2. Formal structures in Believer.
B. Sax = Baritone Saxophone; E.V. = electronic voice; E.I.A. = electronic instrumental accompaniment
=84
A B A1
1 16 26
B A B
A1 B B
61 68 72
A1 B A1
76 81 83
B A1 C
=48
88 93 109
A1 B A1 A
B. Sax Solo
Solo B. Sax Melody E.V. melody Fast, harsh B. Sax
Fast, harsh slap tongue B. Sax and E.I.A. accompany Slap tongue Smooth, legato
E.I.A. accompany E.I.A accomp.
117 121 130 139
48
Billie
Composed: 2003
Instrumentation: originally alto saxophone and soundtrack; 2013 added piano part
Duration: 11:10
Publisher: Boombox Holland www.boomboxshop.net
Dedication/Commission: Connie Frigo
Premier: July 2003 at the 13th World Saxophone Congress in Minneapolis,
Minnesota
Recordings: 2006 by Connie Frigo on JacobTV-Shining City Basta 3091742
Also recorded by: Taimur Sullivan, Ties Mellema, and other eminent saxophonists
Alto Saxophone Range:
Composed in the spring of 2003, Billie was commissioned by and dedicated to the
American saxophonist Connie Frigo. In July 2003, Frigo premiered the work at the 13th World
Saxophone Congress held in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The project was supported in part by the
cultural diversity in both the United States and the Netherlands.145 In 2006, Frigo recorded
Billie for the 2CD+DVD box JacobTV-Shining City Basta 3091742. Included in the package is a
piano score that was written in 2013, at the request of Frigo. Both Frigo and jazz pianist, Greg
Hankins, influenced the piano score. The work is labeled for alto sax & soundtrack, with piano
ad libitum. The marking ad libitum refers to the performers choice to play with or without live
piano. In addition, Chris Barrick created a video to accompany the soundtrack and can be
throughout her career, a transcript of which is found below (Figure 3), and synthesized sounds.
The accompanying track features electronic piano, saxophone, strings, bass, and percussion.
145
JacobTV, Billie (Holland: Boombox, 2003).
49
Figure 3. Interview transcript for Billie.
I was scared to death I made about a 40 dollars in tips and I
ne no a hum, ne no a hum etc. got the job!
I was scared to death they make me cry, they made me happy
at that time you know
Im always scared You are? a little, a little a little too much
Im always scared so I walk so I talk
and my voice is too loud when Im out
I was in the wings haha in the crowd
and I couldnt control my knees so that people are apt to stare - I cant
Im always scared You are? hear the band at all!
Well, you can call it that know know know do they know do
I waited until the last minute they care?
and said I wasnt gonna go one that its only that Im lonely and low as
I had every chance I got and still can be
gettin and the tunes are not always the best I
request
dare to sing !? Im always scared and my voice is too loud I cant hear
but anyway, I went back and I did 16 the band at all!
songs! but what else can you do, but what else
and I like to do a little tune can you do at the end of a love affair
they make me cry, they make me happy so I smoke and I joke uh hh a litt- a litt-
I walked out you know and then a little too much
bend this note bend that note and I laugh, and the smile on my face
two kinds of blues: isnt really a smile at all!
theres happy blues and theres sad and the smile on my face, on my face
blues face face face adadadada for the
Ive been very happy, been very happy trees
the blues to me is like being very sad, face face face for the sun to rot.
very sick, going to the church. and now a little tune specially written
they was talkin jazz, hihi, at that time for me:
you know cook! strange fruit, strange fruit
dare to sing Im always scared
they was talkin jazz, hihi, at that time I never had brothers or sisters, cousins
you know or uncles; all I had was my mom
bend this note bend that note boot my mom and I had a pretty rough time
dare to sing, dare to sing hahaha, when I when we were in Baltimore
got through it all we had was one preacher, he used to
come every Sunday.
can you sing and I said sure I sing all Jesus Christ no! Jesus Christ, they want
the time me out of Chicago or Foxton
I always knew I could sing cause I Oh man it took me 10 years!
always did sing, but uh And I said: I cant go out there, theres
so I sang, and everybody loved me and too many people
Billie begins with the electronic piano and acoustic saxophone. The electronic piano
features a repetitive pattern based on two note cells in which three cells are grouped together to
outline an F minor triad. Similarly, the saxophone features descending diatonic two-note cells in
which three of them are linked together. Example 10 illustrates the two-note groupings found in
50
the introduction. While the accompaniment figure changes to establish larger intervals and
eventually create a longer phrase, the two-note cells return throughout this section and in other
sections later in the piece. The electronic bass enters in measure 6 and the three performing
Example 10. Two-note groupings found in the introduction of Billie, mm. 1-7.
With the entrance of the text in measure 16, the saxophone functions in two roles: first, as a duet
partner with the voice and second, as an accompanist. In addition to performing melodies that are
rhythmically consistent with the track as shown in example 11, the saxophone also performs
51
Example 11. Dichotomy of roles for the saxophone in Billie, mm. 26-27.
Measure 40 features a change in texture with the addition of the electronic percussion.
The percussive rolls lead into a slow, funk groove found in measures 44-50. In addition to the
percussion, each element (saxophone, voice, piano, bass) features a repetitive continuous figure
that complements the groove. After a short interlude of small motives in measures 53-59, the
next rhythmic pattern is established. The text describes two types of blues; therefore, the
accompaniment follows suit and establishes a slow swing to match the subject. In addition, while
not notated, the established performance practice of adding scoops and bends is also appropriate
in this section.
After a seven-measure interlude (measures 72-78) in which the text repeats dare to
sing while the accompaniment gradually crescendos, a new style is featured in measure 79. In
addition to the sustained music found in the strings, the bass and percussion provide a rhythmic
framework that articulates each beat while the melody is reminiscent of fast lines created by be-
bop saxophonists. The melody is created by scalar lines composed with a rhythm of sixty-fourth
52
notes found in measures 81 through 86. Example 12 is taken from the score showing each of
these parts.
Different from any other section of the piece, the sustained chord in the electronic strings
and long tones in the saxophone begin in measure 88. The fragility and simplicity ends with a
faint four-note motive of Holiday scat singing, which is shown in example 13. This is the only
146
Scat singing is a technique in which nonsense syllables are used in a rhythmic way to imitate the
stylistic characteristics of instruments performing jazz. Neil Powell, The Language of Jazz (Great Britain: Carcanet
Press Limited, 1997), 113.
53
Example 13. Billie Holiday scat singing in Billie, mm. 97-98.
In measures 99-153, the saxophone is paired with the voice sample. Much like the
compositional technique of phasing discussed in chapter two, JacobTV samples two tracks of
Holiday and displaces the second by one eighth note. Although it would be extremely easy for
the meaning of the text to become lost in the arrangement, the meaning of the text remains clear
54
Example 14. Phasing technique utilized in Billie, mm. 99-101.
In addition, there are more key changes throughout this section than the entire piece. Table 1
Key Measures
F# minor mm. 99-101
55
Beginning in measure 157, each electronic instrument is added to the texture until the end
of the piece when all elements are combined. Beginning with the sustained chords in the
electronic strings and a repetitive bass line in the electronic bass, the electronic drums are added
in measure 159. The music in measure 167 consists of the same phasing technique as previously
discussed. During this instance, however, the acoustic saxophone and an electronic saxophone
share the phrase. Just as before, the melodies are displaced by an eighth note as shown in
example 15. In addition, this is the first time the electronic saxophone timbre has been
introduced.
Measures 174-177 are the thickest scored in the entire piece. In other words, the music in
those four measures includes the acoustic and electronic saxophone, electronic voice, electronic
piano, electronic strings, electronic bass, and electronic drums. Furthermore, the text found in the
electronic voice is syllabic, and therefore not convoluted due to the thick scoring. The two-note
56
groupings found in the introduction make a return in measure 178, and the texture returns to that
of acoustic saxophone, electronic piano, electronic bass, electronic drums, and electronic voice.
While this final section is indicative of the beginning of the piece, there are sharp accents
punctuating the lines unlike earlier. In addition, the saxophonist is freer to add growls and other
effects creating greater intensity. The piece ends with electronic voice and the line, and I said
I cant go out there theres too many people. Figure 4 outlines the formal structures found
57
Figure 4. Formal Structures in Billie.
A.S. = alto saxophone; E.V.= electronic voice; E.Sax. = electronic saxophone; E.S.= electronic strings;
E.P.= electronic piano; E.B. = electronic bass; E.D.= electronic drums
=92 Section 1
m. 1 mm. 2-5 mm. 6-15 mm. 16-20 mm. 21-25 mm. 26-29 mm. 30-31 mm. 32-38 mm. 39-43 mm. 44-50
E.V./A.S.
E.V./A.S. E.V./A.S./E.P. in unison
melody Transition
Melody with E.D. rolls
E.V. with E.B. 2-note groups E.V./E.P./
Swing stops E.S./A.S./E.Sax
build chords
mm. 51-52 mm. 53-59 mm. 60-63 mm. 64-71 mm. 72-78
Section 2 Section 3
A.S. plays fast bebop lines that can be improvised E.V. Melody
E.V. repeats same phrase A.S./E.S. legato, sustained chords
E.S./E.D./E.B. accompany m. 92 A.S. plays legato countermelody
Section 4
mm. 99-150 mm. 151-156 mm. 157-162 mm. 163-166 mm. 167-173 mm. 174-177 mm. 178-189 mm. 190-201
58
Buku
Composed: 2006
Instrumentation: alto saxophone and soundtrack
Duration: 8:15
Publisher: Boombox Holland www.boomboxshop.net
Dedication/Commission: Arno Bornkamp Financial support from the Dutch FPR
Premier: July 2006 at the World Saxophone Congress in Llubliana, Slovenia
Recordings: Recorded by Arno Bornkamp and released on two albums: Shining
City, Basta 3091742 and Arno Bornkamp Plays JacobTV, Basta
3091962
Alto Saxophone Range:
Buku was composed in the spring of 2006, for Arno Bornkamp with financial support
from the Dutch FPR. Bornkamp premiered the work at the World Saxophone Congress held in
Llubliana, Slovenia, during July 2006. The title refers to a comment made by Charlie Parker
during an interview by Paul Desmond. Figure 4 outlines the transcript of the interview.
PARKER: Well, the first time, our official meeting I PARKER: You know, just like all of the horns
might say, was on the bandstand of the Savoy packed up in one, you know.
Ballroom in New York City in 1939. McShanns
band first camp to New YorkId been in New York DESMOND: Right.
previously, but I went back West and rejoined the
band and he sat in on the band and I was quite PARKER: And we used to go around different places
fascinated by the fellow, and we became very good and jam together, and we had quite a bit of fun in
friends and until this day we are, you know. And that those days, and shortly after the McShann band went
was the first time I ever had the pleasure to meet out West again, in the old Hines organization in
Dizzy Gillespie. 1941, and I joined the band with him. I was in New
York I, we, both stayed on the band about a year. It
DESMOND: Was he playing the same way then, was Earl Hines, and Dizzy
before he played with you? Gillespie, Sarah Vaughan, Billy Eckstine, Gail
Brockman, Thomas Crump, Shadow Wilson quite
PARKER: I dont remember precisely. I just know a few names that youd recognize in the music world
he was playing, what you might call, in the today, you know, were in that band.
59
While it is not known what Parker meant by buku, the assumption is that the intended
reference of Dizzy Gillespies playing was the French word beaucoup.147 The mystery of
Parkers reference intrigued JacobTV and served as the inspiration for this piece.
Composed for alto saxophone and boombox, Buku is a tribute to jazz alto saxophonists
Charlie Parker, Cannonball Adderley, and Art Pepper. While all three were influential jazz alto
saxophonists, each possessed a specific individual style of playing and tonal concept. Prior to
Buku, all of JacobTVs compositions were speech-based. The uniqueness of Buku, is created by
tape material being comprised of short, musical sound bytes. These sound bytes could be, a
hit, a roll or a lick, from numerous jazz performances: moments of great intensity, energy and
beauty.148 In JacobTVs words, Buku is about the soul of the alto saxophone and is also a
JacobTV is able to capture trademarks of each saxophonist with the directions labeled in
the score. For example, the beginning of the piece, shown in example 16, is labeled with the term
laid back. As described in the glossary found in chapter 3, the notation of the melody is not the
accurate representation of the performance practice of the melody. While the notes are notated
with specific rhythms, the execution of the melody labeled laid back implies the rhythms fall
behind the pulse. This behind-the-beat approach to melody is a common characteristic in the jazz
idiom and frequently not notated, but implied based the specific style or emulated performer.
147
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language defines beaucoup as an abundance; a lot.
It is assumed Parker was referring to Gillespie playing an abundance, or a lot. Beaucoup, The American
Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Eds. The Editors of the American Heritage Dictionaries, Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 2011
https://libprox.library.unt.edu/login?url=http://libprox.library.unt.edu:2468/content/entry/hmdictenglang/beaucoup/0
(accessed May 5, 2015).
148
JacobTV, Buku, (Holland: Boombox, 2006).
149
Ibid.
60
Thus, it is no surprise JacobTV utilizes this performance characteristic in a piece heavily
JacobTV utilizes effects to change the timbre of the saxophone as well. Growling and
flutter tonguing are two effects previously mentioned in other pieces by JacobTV.150 The impure
timbre, full of grit and angst lends itself to the association of jazz performers, and therefore, are
extremely important in a piece that is a tribute to jazz these famous alto saxophonists. Example
In addition to text such as growl, there are instances in which JacobTV has labeled the
notes with what resembles an upside down slur to the left of the note head such as those found in
example 18.
150
See page 27 under the discussion of Believer.
61
Example 18. Scoop found in Buku, mm. 223-227.
The marking is extremely common in jazz notation and refers to a scoop. A scoop is a jazz
inflection by which the performer slides into the desired pitch by approaching it from below. The
technique of scooping is produced by dropping the bottom lip from the initial sound production,
creating a pitch almost a quartertone flat, and then raising the lip and tightening the embouchure
A second pitch inflection found in the score is a fall, shown in example 19. Notated on
the right side of the note, a fall connects two definite pitches by filling the space between them
When performing the saxophone, the effect can be created in two ways. First, if the interval
between the two definite pitches is large, depressing the keys in a descending pattern can create
the slide. The second way a fall can be produced involves the embouchure and changing the
pressure around the mouthpiece. By dropping the bottom lip and loosening the pressure on the
62
mouthpiece, the first definite pitch will descend, or fall, to the second pitch. The latter of the
The final marking in the score does not have a specific notation and requires the
performer to be familiar with the style of Ben Webster, jazz tenor saxophonist. A member of
several important early jazz big bands,151 Webster had a unique sound, raspy tone that
incorporated is own scoops, falls, and growls. At softer dynamics the tone was fuzzy and impure.
As the dynamic gets softer and the alto saxophone moves into more of an accompaniment role,
JacobTV notates the music with Webster whisper to allow the performer to make a more
the technique from a jazz tenor player could be confusing. The particular sound of Websters
subtone sound to which JacobTV has labeled the Webster whisper in many of his pieces, is
truly unique to Webster. Thus, JacobTVs usage of the word is less him paying homage to the
tenor saxophonist and more him requesting a specific effect just like he labels growls and other
techniques.
151
Ben Webster was a member of several important big bands including Fletcher Henderson, Cab
Calloway, Teddy Wilson, and Duke Ellington. Jeroen de Valk, Ben Webster: his life and music (Berkeley: Berkeley
Hills Books, 2001), ix-x.
63
Although Buku is based on a spoken interview between Desmond and Parker, the
majority of the boombox track is comprised of many short, musical sound bytes. The sounds
included are originally found in any number of jazz performances and range from a drum hit to a
saxophone lick. Throughout the piece, the layering of sound bytes in accordance with the
saxophone solo create a cacophony of sound that mimics high energy, hard swinging jazz
performances. Due to its integral role as a melodic and rhythmic element of the overall piece, the
soundtrack should be viewed as a duet with the saxophone and both forces should be equally
balanced.
The formal structure of Buku can be analyzed in five large sections based on the rhythmic
and melodic material. Table 2 outlines these five sections as they are labeled in the score.
64
Garden of Love
JacobTV utilizes a poem by William Blake, found in figure 6, as the inspiration for
Garden of Love, which was composed for oboist Bart Schneemann in March 2002. The
following year, the oboe part was arranged for soprano saxophone and in 2008, Margaret
Lancaster proposed to perform the work on flute. The melody and rhythm of the spoken word
was analyzed by JacobTV and exploited in the composition of the soundtrack. The solo
instrument is in conversation with the soundtrack and as such, performs the same musical lines.
Samples from an oboe, a harpsichord, a variety of birds, electronic string sounds, and percussion
152
JacobTV, Garden of Love (Holland: Boombox, 2002).
65
Figure 6. The Garden of Love by William Blake.
I went to the Garden of Love. That so many sweet flowers bore.
And saw what I never had seen:
A chapel was built in the midst, And I saw it was filled with graves,
Where I used to play on the green. And tomb-stones where flowers
should be:
And the gates of this chapel were And priests in black gowns, were
shut, walking their rounds,
And Thou shalt not writ over the And binding with briars, my joys
door; and desires.
So I turnd to the Garden of Love,
There are two themes found in the introduction that reocur throughout the work. Theme
A, found in example 21, is based on a G major triad. Starting on the third of the chord, the five-
note cell moves to the fifth, then jumps to the fifth an octave above, moves down a perfect fifth
to the root of the triad, and ends on scale degree two or nine. The arpeggio could be labeled
Gmaj9.
melody featuring accidentals that correspond to the key signature of A major, the electronic oboe
accompaniment is rhythmically driving consistent perfect fourths outlining the tonic and
66
dominant of A major. The electronic birds and harpsichord match the rhythms found in the
soprano saxophone and electronic oboe. Example 22 illustrates the first instance of theme B.
With material linking the two themes, the following table describes how theme A and B are
67
Table 3. Theme A and B found in introduction of Garden of Love, mm. 1-46.
Measures Description
m. 1 Electronic bird noises
m. 14-19 Theme A
m. 20-24 Theme B
m. 25-27 Interlude
m. 28-31 Theme A
m. 32-26 Interlude using phasing between soprano saxophone and electronic oboe
m. 37-40 Theme A
m. 41-45 Theme B
The text enters with a sixteenth-note anacrusis on beat five of measure 46 and is found
throughout the rest of the piece until measure 245. There are three ways in which the text is
utilized. First, JacobTV selects small segments of the poem, creates a rhythm to follow the text
syllabically, and repeats the phrases. For instance, the opening segment, I went to the Garden of
Love, is repeated six times as shown in example 22. For much of the piece, the text is
68
Example 23. Rhythmic setting of text in Garden of Love, mm. 47-52.
features the creation of an underlying rhythmic texture from a single syllable. The syllables such
as a, s, le, ta, se, bo, and tim, are used repetitively to create fast, driving rhythms.
Example 24 shows the syllable a treated rhythmically in duet with the text of the poem in
addition to the rest of the electronic instruments track and the soprano saxophone. In contrast, the
69
syllables a and le are used with the electronic birds, strings, and percussion and the soprano
Example 25. Syllables "a" and "le" used in Garden of Love, mm. 179-182.
70
The final treatment of text is a stark contrast from the first two rhythmic ideas. JacobTV
has selected certain words to elongate and create flowing melodies that are a departure from the
driving rhythmic melodies. Example 26 is taken from the first sustained passage found in
Garden of Love. Throughout this passage, not only is the electronic voice sustaining pitch, but all
The words selected from the poem and employed in an expressive manner by creating long,
sustained pitches are: love, midst, green, sweet flowers, gowns, rounds, and
desires. While the length of each word is different, it can be deduced that these are important
71
Much of the piece is fast, driving, and articulate. The intervals close to and outside of the
octave are significant throughout the work, and the combination of the large intervallic
relationships combined with the tempo make this piece challenging. Example 27 is found
towards the end of the piece where the saxophonist is performing intervals of a seventh, ninth,
72
Example 27. Large intervallic material found in the saxophone part of Garden of Love, mm. 215-
219.
73
Similar to the challenging technique required, the range of the piece poses difficulties as
well. Example 28 is taken from the highest passage of the piece. The passage ascends from F#6,
G#6, to A6 (concert E6, F#6, G#6). To complicate the passage, the altissimo notes descend either
a major sixth or perfect fifth and create a disjunct melodic line. The leaps would be difficult
within the standard range of the saxophone; however, because the large intervallic range utilizes
After analyzing recordings by Arno Bornkamp and Timothy McAllister, there are some
discrepancies between the score and the performance practice. First, in measure 11 and 12, it is
common for saxophonists glissando into the E5 when approaching it from B4. Example 29
74
Example 29. Glissando effect commonly added in Garden of Love, mm. 11-12.
Furthermore, the saxophone part is labeled with slap tongue or duck sound from measures
133-138 and measures 179-183 (shown in example 30); however, many recordings ignore this
marking and continue articulating in a manner that matches the rest of the piece.
75
Figure 7. Formal structures in Garden of Love.
S.S. = soprano saxophone; E.V. = electronic voice; E.O. = electronic oboe; E.P. = electronic percussion;
E.H. = electronic harpsichord; E.S. = electronic strings; E.B. = electronic birds
=100 A B C
E.V.1/E.V.2
S.S./E.H./E.B. Add E.V.
S.S./E.H./E.B. Sustained words combined
Fast, rhythmic melody with few with repeated syllables and phrases
Sustained pitches m. 46 is transition measure
Fast, rhythmic melody S.S./E.P./E.B.
m. 1 m. 46 m. 63
A1 D A2
E.V. E.V.
lines from poem and lines from poem and
rhythmic syllables
S.S./E.V./E.S./E.H. rhythmic syllables
S.S./E.O./E.B./E.H./E.S./E.P. Sustained pitches in all parts.
S.S./E.O./E.B./E.H./E.S./E.P.
m. 71 m. 101 m. 112
E F G
S.S./E.B./E.S.
E.V./S.S./E.S. S.S./E.O./E.V./E.H./E.S.
E.P./E.B./E.O.
Sustained melody, marked dolcissimo Fast, rhythmic melody mixed with
All parts rhythmic/melodic unison undetermined rhythms m. 166; 174
m. 134-137
H I J
E.V.1/E.V.2
lines from poem and S.S./E.B. m. 215 E.V.
rhythmic syllables transition
Paired with fast, rhythmic lines
S.S./E.B./E.S./E.P. E.S. S.S./E.H./E.S./E.P.
Sustained chords Fast, rhythmic
Transition Transition K
S.S. E.V./E.H.
Fast, rhythmic S.S./E.V./E.P./E.S. Melody
Coda
S.S./E.B.
Fast, rhythmic
E.S.
Sustained to the end
m. 234
76
Grab It!
Originally composed for Arno Bornkamp and scored for tenor saxophone and boombox,
GRAB IT! has received much success and has been transformed from its initial version. In
addition to the original, there are versions for bass clarinet, electric guitar, violin, percussion and
even large ensembles such as big band and string orchestra, large ensemble, and saxophone
ensemble.
77
Growing up in the sixties with blues, jazz and rock, American music had a strong
impact on my work. In GRAB IT! I tried to explore the no-mans-land between
language and music. I believe that language is one of the origins of music. So in
my opinon, the roots of a lot of Afro-American music can be found in the spoken
word. The musical quality of speech increases by the power of emotion, which is
one of the reasons I use audio from people in extremely emotional situations.153
Recorded from a 1978 American documentary entitled Scared Straight, GRAB IT! portrays the
seamy side of life, on the fringe of society.154 The audio samples are inspired by speech from
the life-sentenced prisoners. The goal of the documentary is to scare straight repeat juvenile
offenders by taking them into a New Jersey prison and putting them face to face with lifers.155
While the language of the documentary is harsh and crude, JacobTV describes the connection of
Their world, on the fringe of society, with its heartbreaking verbal assaults moved
and inspired me. The rough vitality of these shouting men formed a perfect unity
with the harsh and powerful sound of the tenor saxophone. GRAB IT! is a kind of
duet, a dual if you like, for tenor and soundtrack. The tenor competes in unison
with a perpetual range of syllables, words and sentences, which demands intense
endurance from the performer.156
Many of the lifers describe the threat of prison rape when talking to the teens; however,
JacobTV chooses to omit that subject from his sound samples. This is easily achieved, as there is
obviously no visual aid to assist with the audio. One specific instance when a prisoner describes
to another who was continuously raped, after a year of the abuse, the prisoner committed suicide
by hanging himself and left the prison, with a tag on his toe.157 While JacobTV utilizes this
text, the meaning is far different than that of the documentary due to the omission of the
discussion of rape. In this instance, JacobTV is choosing to utilize the sound samples in a way
153
JacobTV, Grab It! (Holland: Boombox, 1999).
154
Ibid.
155
Term refers to inmates serving life sentences. Arnold Shapiro, Scared Straight!, DVD (New York:
Docurama Films, 1978).
156
JacobTV, Grab It!
157
Shapiro, Scared Straight!.
78
that furthers his own meaning and agenda. Specifically, he achieves meaning through the use of
the phrase grab it. Throughout the documentary the speaker is commanding the listener to
grab it, in reference to his belt buckle, however, due to the lack of visual aids the phrase grab
it is able to infer a much different connotation. JacobTV takes what would be a sad, depressing
topic and reminds us to live life. Life is worth living: Grab it!158
Knowing the text is important to understanding the piece. Figure 7 is a transcript of the
158
JacobTV, Grab It!
79
REPRISE: GRAB IT! MOTHER I SAID (ETC.)
WHATS YOUR NUMBER?!
JUST REMEMBER THIS:
I PERSONALLY DONT GIVE A FAT RAT ASS
WHAT YOU DO WHEN YOU LEAVE HERE TODAY;
YOU LOSE EVERYTHING
HE WENT OUT THE BACKDOOR RAPPED UP IN A GREEN SHEET
WITH A TAG ON HIS TOE
TIED ONE END AROUND THE PIPE
AND HE HUNG HIMSELF
AND WHEN THEY STUCK HIS DUMB ASS IN THE GROUND
TO GIVE HIM THAT LITTLE WOODEN GRAVYARD MARKER
SO HE WAS PROBABLY THE ONE THAT KEEPS THE PARTY GOIN
JUST STANDING ON THE CORNER, PUT LIPSTICK ON YOUR LIPS
SMOKE A LITTLE REEFER, DRINK A LITTLE WINE
I GOT A VERY SERIOUS PROBLEM, IVE SEEN IT A THOUSAND TIMES
YOU GONNA WALK AROUND THIS JOINT OR ANY JOINT YOU MIGHT BE IN
YOU LOSE EVERYTHING..AND FOR YOU TOUGH MOTHERFUCKERS LIKE YOU
TIE ONE END AROUND THE PIPE
I WILL TELL I
EVERY MAN YOU SEE BEHIND ME IS DOING OVER 25 YEARS OR LIFE
EVERY MAN YOU SEE BEHIND ME, HES GOT ALL THE RESPECT IN THE WORLD
WHATS YOUR NUMBER?
IT STOPS RIGHT HERE MY LIFE STOPS THIS IS IT
NEVER NEVER NEVER, ALRIGHT, YOU SHOULD STAY COOL, YOU TOO!
TIE ONE END AROUND THE PIPE
AND FOR YOU TOUGH MOTHERFUCKERS LIKE YOU: YOU LOSE EVERYTHING!
GRAB IT MOTHERFUCKER GRAB IT!
54 9 3 6 LIFE WHATS YOUR NUMBER
I SAID : SIT UP!!159
The audio samples found within GRAB IT! are treated in five different ways. First, a
word, phrase, or sentence is heard in its entirety. The second effect utilizes only a portion of the
phrase of sentence. Cutting and pasting unrelated syllables invent new beat patterns in the third
type of audio sample. Next, by combining multiple treatments of the same or different types a
sort of counterpoint is created. Finally, the voice can become heavily distorted.
The unaltered audio described as the first treatment of audio samples emphasizes emotion
and structure within the piece. Lines of text such as, Grab it motherfucker, grab it!, Whats
your number, 54936 life and for motherfucking now on, How motherfucking tough could I
have been, and His motherfucking manhood might just been tested, are all expressed in their
159
JacobTV, Grab It!
80
entirety without alteration. In addition, beginning in measure 280 through the end of the piece,
the lyrics are unaltered with the exception of measures 304-310, I will tellIdru is mel us
druI wh wh dru I in wu druis Iwu wu wu.160 The clarity of these unaltered lines allow
the listener to interpret the meaning of the text not only within the context of the piece, but also
on a personal level. How has the listener been tested? How can the listener grab it? What is
it? The clarity of the lyrics allow for interpretation and reflection by the audience.
Through this first treatment of audio, not only is the title of the piece, GRAB IT! clearly
heard, but a new meaning is easily associated by the way in which the two lines: whats your
number and 54936 life and from motherfucking now on are both repeated clearly throughout.
Both lines appear in measures 87 and 95 and are shown in example 31. By using the texts
together, each signifies the other. 54936 life from motherfucking now on returns in measures
241-242 with no other accompaniment or the saxophone. In this instance the line is being used
structurally to indicate a new section. Whats your number is rearticulated in measure 278 with
160
JacobTV, Grab It!
81
Example 31. First treatment of text featuring the two structural lines in GRAB IT!, mm. 87-89
and mm. 95-97.
mm. 87-89
mm. 95-97
These two lines of text are not only defining structural elements within the piece, but they
are setting up the meaning of the piece. 54936 life from motherfucking now on and whats
your number are the questions that the listener must answer in order to know the meaning of the
question, what to grab? The first line, 54936 life from motherfucking now on, is a reference
to the inmates new number in prison. That is his life and existence moving forward. When the
question is asked, whats your number, the listener is challenged, much like the youth in the
82
documentary, to take a step back and look at his or her life. Again, as JacobTV writes, life is
The second treatment of the voice sample can be seen in measures 17-22 when the word
how is inserted into an unrelated phrase as shown in example 32. Prior to measure 17, the text
has been a rhythmic treatment of the phrase, grab it mother fucker, I said grab it. The word
how is not found in that statement, but later shows up in a full sentence which is found in
measure 117, How motherfucking tough could I have been. When the word how is added to
the rhythmic sampling, it is not only alluding to impending question to be found in measure 117,
but it disassociates the voice sample with the full sentence context previously used. The sound
sample becomes a bit skewed and takes a more timbral role than melodic. The continued usage
of how serves to unify differing sections throughout the piece. Gradually complete samples of
the text are unveiled until the entire line of text is exposed.
In measures 27-31, shown in example 33, unrelated syllables are linked to form new beat
patterns. This third approach to the voice sample is able to generate a sort of drumbeat created by
syllables, shortened to such a degree, that only articulation and a small amount of pitch remain.
161
JacobTV, Grab It!
83
The original meaning is lost from the text, but the beats result in a new electronic instrument that
The fourth treatment of text can be labeled as a counterpoint. From measures 194-209,
multiple independent lines of text featuring various rhythms and text are layered. Example 34
outlines the simplicity of the saxophone part in reference to the complexity of the electronic
counterpoint. In addition to the polyrhythmic nature of the music in this section, the counterpoint
becomes thicker by the addition of new layers of text. At its most complex point, measure 209,
there are five syllable-based rhythms in conjunction with the melody in the tenor saxophone part.
84
Example 34. Fourth treatment of text in GRAB IT!, mm. 202-209.
The previous section continues to develop to measure 210, the most aggressive and
loudest point in the entire piece, that features the fifth treatment of text. The voice samples
consist of sustained, distorted pitches as shown in example 35. The extreme distorted aggression
found in all parts and the electronic tape now utilizing the title of the piece marks the golden
section of the work. The intensity persists until measure 231 where a complete sentence is heard
in the voice sampling, Get the fuck out--get up and get off the stage stage while. A much
85
simpler texture featuring one voice sample and the tenor saxophone follows as the piece winds
Similarly to other works for saxophone by JacobTV, the techniques of growling, slap
tongue, scoops and falls, and overtones are used in a consistent manner. One technique that is
different from some of his other works is the labeling of sections after specific performers.
JacobTV has labeled the saxophone part with five specific jazz/blues saxophonists and described
what their sound should be like during the corresponding section. The saxophonists, their tonal
descriptions, and the measures in which they are labeled are listed in table 4.
86
Table 4. Jazz/Blues saxophonists utilized in GRAB IT.
the idiosyncrasies of each saxophonist so that an audible change is heard throughout each
section. Figure 9 describes the formal structures found within the piece.
87
Figure 9. Formal structures in GRAB IT!
E.V. = electronic voice; T.S. = tenor saxophone; E.D. = electronic drums; E.G. = electronic guitar
=120 Section 1
Introduction A B C
m. 1 m. 3 m. 7 m. 27
A C B C
m. 32 m. 46 m. 47 m. 60
D E Transition
E.V./T.S.
E.V./T.S. E.V./T.S.
Eighth-note vs. sixteenth note
Rhythmic repetition melodic/rhythmic repetition Melodic/rhythmic unison
m. 62 m. 66 m. 76
Section 2
F G H Interlude
m. 80 m. 98 m. 103 m. 108
H1 I Transition
Section 3
J K L
1
E.V. /T.S. E.V. melody E.V. 3-4 lines of text
Melodic/rhythmic unison T.S. accompaniment T.S. rhythmic slap tongue
E.V.2 1 measure interludes With 1 measure E.V./T.S. unison m. 208-209 school bell
Section 4
M N Transition
E.V./T.S. E.V./T.S.
Sustained pitches Rhythmic and melodic E.V. only
Delay effect used unison
88
Section 5
O A2 C D
m. 271 m. 279
Section 6
P P1 P2 Transition
Coda
E.V./T.S./E.D.
Heavy unison rhythm
m. 340
89
May This Bliss Never End
Composed in 1996, for the Duo Berman Wieringa, May This Bliss Never End was
originally written for boombox, cello and piano. At the request of saxophonist, Matthew
Sintchak and pianist, Brook Cuden, the piece was arranged for tenor saxophone and piano in
2005. As one of the first real boombox pieces, the sound bytes are taken from one of jazz
trumpeter Chet Bakers final interviews in Amsterdam prior to his untimely tragic death in 1988.
Described in the score, the interview serves as a leitmotif for the composition. The melody,
rhythm, and harmony are literally based on Chets words.162 Prior to recording on his album
Buku of Horn in December 2008, Arno Bornkamp assisted JacobTV in the revision of the score.
162
JacobTV, May This Bliss Never End, (Holland: Boombox, 1996 rev. 2005).
90
Figure 10. Transcript of May This Bliss Never End.
Try to be quiet Somebody put that down there
Its that kind of tune you know There was a bright blue color
Those chords are in the first measure ! When I say blue, I mean blue
A lot of fucking attitudes going on here He almost died that day
Getting the shock treatment
And at the same time It was a dream you know
Kind of put myself in a trance and a Things like that dont happen
Dadada dadada dada Theres pain in my heart
So it was kind of tricky business Every memory Ill keep
Do my business
I didnt know that would be possible Theres pain in my heart
Oh ssz bwh I guess they call it a speed bowl ! Devastating feeling
Man that was rude awakening let me tell you
There was a bright blue color May this bliss never end
The rhythm and melody of the text not only serves to influence the music in the tenor
saxophone and piano parts, but it also delineates new sections within in the piece. From the
beginning, it is evident that the text is of extreme importance, as the acoustic instruments do not
enter until beat three of measure 3 providing ample opportunity for the composer to establish the
dominance of the text over the instrumental element. Once the tenor saxophone and piano are
added, their melodic content is reactionary to the voice and it is not until measure 12 that all
three performing forces homorhythmic unison. In addition, there is no point at which the acoustic
instruments perform independent melodic material or are featured without the sound bytes.
Much of the fast rhythmic material is found throughout the first half of the piece.
Articulated triplet and sixteenth note figures find little reprieve until measure 87. With the
exception of measures 132-146, the piece slowly transitions to a lyrically sustained state from
measure 87 to the end. The tenor saxophone and piano melodies are slow and repetitive without
heavy articulation or accent. The dichotomy between the first and second halves of the piece
seem to reflect the trouble and turmoil of Bakers life and the resolution of his troubles upon his
death.
91
Harmonically, the piece is not complex and is diatonic with few exceptions. Example 36
is measures 8 through 13 and it illustrates the melodic and rhythmic reactions to the given sound
bytes. The tenor saxophone and piano are reacting to the sound bytes. Although the two voices
Example 36. Unison accompaniment in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 8-13.
92
In contrast with the sections of the piece that feature unison writing, JacobTV utilizes
pandiatonicism163 to create melodies from all notes of the diatonic scale. Measures 14-18 can be
analyzed in the tonality of Eb dorian. The left hand of the piano creates a pedal point on Eb1
while the right hand of the piano features diatonic chords triads in second inversion and quartal
harmonies. The tenor saxophone highlights the pedal note, concert Eb, as well as the top note in
each of the chords. Example 37 demonstrates the pandiatonicism found in measures 14-17.
Example 37. Pandiatonicim found in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 14-17.
163
Nicolas Slonimsky defines chords build on perfect fifths, augemented fourths, perfect fourths,
sevenths, and also major and minor thirds as pandiatonic. Example 37 illustrates chords built on perfect fourths and
major thirds, perfect fourths, and perfect fourths and minor thirds. Nicholas Slonimsky, Writings on Music vol. 3
Music of the Modern Era (New York: Routledge, 2005), 101.
93
Due to the lack of independent material in the solo part, it is extremely important for the
tenor saxophonist to study the score and the manner in which the music in the saxophone part
corresponds with the music piano. Like many of JacobTVs pieces, in addition to ensemble
challenges, this piece employs timbral effects such as growling and subtones in the low register
of the instrument. Also expected is control of the altissimo register. A difference in this piece as
compared with other works by JacobTV, is the expectation of timbral effects in the extreme
register. Many of the instances of growling take place in the altissimo register, such as the one
shown in example 38. The ability to produce the effect in extreme registers is important in the
Example 38. Altissimo growl effect in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 57-58.
In addition, one of the most difficult lines for the tenor saxophonist is found in measures
143-146, shown in example 39. The melody begins in measure 132 and rises step-wise each
measure through the tenor saxophones F dorian scale. Throughout the fifteen measures, the
melody spans an octave and a fourth. Just as the line reaches Bb4, the line leaps to C6 for two
94
beats, down to B5, and then ascends to Db6 to finish the scale on F6. Not only is this the highest
Example 39. Highest altissimo passage in May This Bliss Never End, mm. 143-146.
95
Figure 11. Formal structures in May This Bliss Never End.
m. 1 m. 11 m. 12 m. 21
=104 C D Transition E1
E.V./T.S./P. E.V./T.S./P.
E.V./T.S./P. E.V./T.S./P.
Rhythmic/melodic unison Rhythmic/melodic unison Rhythms correspond,
mixed with E.V. melody Mixed with E.V. melody T.S./P.
accompaniment Taken from C1 T.S. + P loud hits on beat 4
T.S./P. ostinato
m. 22 m. 36 m. 42 m. 44
E2 E3 Interlude E1
m. 47 m. 51 m. 53 m. 56
E2 E3 Interlude F
m. 59 m. 63 m. 67 m. 70
C1 Transition G Transition
E.V./T.S./P. =120
E.V./T.S./P. E.V. melody
E.V. melody
T.S./P. ostinato E.V. spoken, no rhythm
T.S./P. ostinato Rhythmic/melodic unison T.S./P. sustained
m. 76 m. 84 m. 87 m. 93
H I J Coda
=100 E.V. melody E.V. melody E.V. spoken E.V. same phrase
T.S./P. repetitive repeated
T.S./P. ostinato T.S./P. ostinato quarter notes building intensity T.S./P. ostinato
96
Tatatata Duo
Tatatata Duo for tenor and baritone saxophone is transcribed from the original Tatatata
for cello and boombox that was composed for Ren Berman in 1998. Thomas van Gelder and
JacobTV arranged the duo seven years later. In the program notes found in the score, JacobTV
In the early 90s I discovered a sound recording of an old man who remembered
how he met the French poet Guillaume Apollinaire just after the First World War.
Apollinaire took the little boy on his knee and sang a military tune. According to
the old man it went like ta ta ta ta. This recording, a sample lasting just 5
seconds, is the leitmotiv for the piece that I wrote in February 1998 for cellist
Ren Berman. The sound fragment was expanded and compressed in an Akai
sampler by means of time stretching, which was a new technique at the time. In
the apotheosis one hears the original voice of Guillaume Apollinaire from a
creaking old phonograph, reciting one of his most famous lines: vienne la nuit,
sonne lheure.164
164
JacobTV, Tatatata Duo (Holland: Boombox, 1998 rev. 2006).
97
Tatatata Duo is a theme and variations based on the manipulations of the voice samples.
The melody is created from cells created from four notes from the F# pentatonic scale. Example
40 outlines the F# major pentatonic scale and the 4-note cell utilized in the piece.
The same 4-note cell influences the melodies in the saxophone lines. There are, however,
instances to which chromatic tones are added. In these instances, such as in measures 96 and 97,
where the chromaticism adds a bluesy element to the melody. Example 41 illustrates the point
in the piece where the blues element begins. Both saxophones add concert D natural into their
melodic lines. The addition of the D natural, or the flat sixth scale degree in the key of F# major,
could be viewed as a passing tone; however, a strong case could be made for the line tonicizing
the dominant of F# major which would be C# dominant. In that instance, the D natural would be
labeled as the lowered ninth scale degree, the dominant flat ninth. This sound is ubiquitous in
jazz and blues music and takes what would normally be a passing tone and highlights a focal
98
Example 41. Jazz/Blues influenced chromaticism in Tatatata, mm. 96-97.
from blues and jazz, is the use of the lowered third and seventh scale degrees. Starting in
measure 107, there are many instances of concert E natural and concert A natural throughout the
voice and two saxophone parts. By lowing these two pitches, the third and seventh scales degrees
essentially become blue notes. Although its origin is unknown, the technique became common
in the 1920s and by 1925, these notes were labeled as blues notes. Popular first with blues
singers, the technique of deviating from the diatonic framework by a half step began to influence
instrumental music in the same way. Not just reserved for jazz and blues, the use of the blue
note has influenced many art pieces such as Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin.165
Therefore, it is no surprise that JacobTV, a composer heavily influenced by popular music would
165
Gerhard Kubik. Blue note. Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/A2234425 (accessed May 6, 2015).
99
Timbral effects in Tatatata are consistent with those found in other pieces by JacobTV.
For example, the saxophonists are required to utilized slap tonguing, a slow Webster attack,166
fall, and subtone.167 The most unique timbre effect is found in measure 123. Both saxophone
parts are marked with the words overtone gliss., combined with a line pointing upwards. As
both the tenor and baritone saxophonists produce the concert G#2 and C#2 respectively, the
intention is for the sound to ascend through the overtone series without focusing on a specific
pitch. This technique must be completed quickly as both instruments are expected to continue the
phrase with a soft subtone in the lower tessitura in measure 124 (example 42).
166
As discussed in chapter 3, the Webster attack is a subtone with much noise in the sound.
167
To create a subtone, the saxophonist should loosen the embouchure and use the bottom lip to cover the
tip of the reed. This will create a fuzzy, unclear tone.
100
Figure 12. Formal structure in Tatatata Duo.
m. 1 m. 22 m. 40 m. 44
Interlude Variation 3 Variation 4 Interlude
E.V. 8th and E.V. 32nd-note
E.V./T.S./B.S. th
16 -note melody melody E.V./T.S./B.S.
Two-note grouping T.S./B.S. alternating T.S./B.S. alternating
Unison rhythms 16th-note accompaniment 32nd note accompaniment Unison melody and rhythm
m. 56 m. 66 m. 79 m. 87
Variation 5 Variation 6 Variation 7 Variation 8
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
th nd th
16 /32 - note melody 16 -note melody th
16 -note chordal melody
16th/32nd- note melody
T.S./B.S. unison T.S./B.S. alternating T.S./B.S. trading 32nd-note
T.S./B.S. alternating th nd every 8th-note; mm. 115-116
32nd note accompaniment measures 8 falls with 32 line
32nd note accompaniment unison rhythm
101
Heartbreakers
Composed: 1997-1998
Instrumentation: saxophone quartet, audio and video (piano, bass, and drums found
on soundtrack)
trumpet, alto and tenor saxophone, piano, bass, drums, audio
and video
alto and tenor saxophone, trombone, piano, bass, drums, audio and
video
saxophone quartet, piano, bass, drums, audio and video
Duration: 17:00-24:00 depending on the improvisation sections
Publisher: Boombox Holland www.boomboxshop.net
Dedication/Commission: financial support by FPK
Premiere: By Houdinis at the JacobTV Festival in 2001 in Rotterdam
Recordings: Houdinis on JacobTV Shining City, Basta 3091742
New Century Quartet, On Track, Alanna Records ACD60006
Saxophone Ranges:
The two-movement suite, Heartbreakers, was originally composed for a jazz sextet
featuring Bb trumpet, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, piano, bass, drums, and soundtrack.
With financial support from the Dutch Fund for the Performing Arts, the first iteration of the
piece was composed for the Dutch band Houdinis. In 2006, New Century Saxophone Quartet
The voice samples were taken from confrontations between featured guests on American
talk shows such as the Jerry Springer Show from the 1990s. The sound bytes were chosen
because they consist of a wide array of emotions.169 These one-line phrases and interplay of
dialogues between show host and guest served as the basis for the melody and rhythm of the
168
JacobTV, Heartbreakers (Holland: Boombox, 1997).
169
Ibid.
102
piece. In combination with JacobTVs jazz, rock, and blues background the interludes
throughout the piece are typical clichs from those pop-culture idioms. In addition, the musical
interludes resemble those that would typically be heard throughout the interludes of the talk
shows. The piece is divided into two parts, or movements. When performed, the composer
requests a break between each part. Figure 13 is a transcript of the sound bytes.
103
Look at you! Cracked it up, shot it up, drank it up,
I think I helped you off the pits of hell You dont have any money
Your husband was with an other woman O its an off and on situation here
And he comes home to beat you up! One day youre gonna be a grandmother
Look at you! And you were dead! Its just like one morning,
Youre so damned suicidal huh? about four oclock in the morning,
Im so sick of my life its cold and its raining you know
Part 1
As with all of JacobTVs pieces, the voice samples serve as the inspiration for and
structures of the composition. There are several ways in which the textual materials are
manipulated. First, phrases from the sound bytes are used in a melodic manner and give the
listener insight into the talk show guests stories. In addition to providing the melodic material,
the rhythmic treatment of single syllables adds another layer of texture that create the particular
grooves. Throughout part 1, JacobTV frequently combines multiple layers of textual material. As
the combination of layers grow, a sort of pandemonium ensues creating a sense of anxiety much
like what an audience member would feel during a dramatic talk show with the host, guests, and
audience interacting simultaneously. Amidst the chaos, JacobTV intersperses complete breaks in
In its original form, the piece was composed for a jazz sextet; when rewritten for
saxophone quartet, JacobTV modified the melodic material resulting in a new conception of the
work. Much like the trumpet and alto saxophone from the original version, the material given to
the soprano and alto saxophone in the quartet version is reactionary to the soundtrack and
consists of hits and melodic backgrounds. This material resembles that of jazz and pop idioms
and is derived from the pentatonic scale. The tenor saxophones role varies from that of the other
three saxophones. While it sometimes consists of the same material, there are instances to which
the melodic ideas are a combination of the material from the piano part (example 43). Of all the
saxophones in the quartet, the tenor saxophone has the least presence. Because the baritone
104
saxophone was not in the original score, the part was created after the fact, and the music is
derived from a combination of the music given to the top three saxophones and the bass line.
Example 43. Melodic material presented by the tenor saxophone and piano found in
Heartbreakers, mm. 6-7.
From funk, to rock, to fast swing, JacobTV covers the gamut of rhythmic intricacies from
various genres in part 1. In an effort to outline the rhythmic structure, table 5 identifies the
105
location of each groove with the corresponding measures and rhythms found in the piano, bass,
and drum parts. Throughout most of the movement, the energy is high and the rhythms are fast
and driving; however, from measure 183 to the end of the movement, the intensity subsides to a
slow bluesy section. At this point in the piece, the text mimcs the intensity change with the
portrayal of a talk-show guest hopelessly crying about her daughter. The genre of a blues is
associated with topics of personal struggle and pain, and therefore, it is no surprise that JacobTV
chooses that genre to accompany the sound file. The host of the talk show continually tells the
guest to simply, let her go. Much like the meaning conveyed by those words, the movement
mm. 40-45
Funk2
mm. 61-65
mm. 69-73
overpopulated
mm. 99-103
106
Funk4 mm. 77-89
mm. 118-124
Funk6
mm. 164-172
107
Fast swing mm. 125-151
108
Part 2
Although Part 2 begins by featuring new voice samples from different talk shows, guests,
and a new subject matter, the emotional state is consistent with the end of Part 1; however, a
significant difference occurs in the accompaniment. Instead of a slow blues, the underlying
texture accompanying the sound bytes features legato, descending melodies that provide the
appropriate framework for the emotion. As the piece continues, the rhythmic structures build to
faster grooves; however, those are brief and yield a similar ending as Part 1. Table 6 outlines the
mm.1-19
mm. 26-31 (w/hits)
Slow and Legato
mm. 36-39 (w/hits)
mm. 39-83
109
Quarter note-based groove in
mm.84-101
3/4
110
Hints of groove building to
mm. 154-167
double-time rock groove with
mm. 172-179
heavy backbeat
mm. 168-171
mm. 188-197
Rock groove with no backbeat
mm. 203-233
111
mm. 267-277
Fast, driving unisons
mm. 286-294
112
The roles of the saxophones in the newly conceived version remain similar to those found
in Part 1: the baritone saxophone resembles the bass; the tenor saxophone resembles the piano;
and the soprano and alto saxophones simultaneously perform the melodic material. A distinction
of Part 2 is the instance of solo material performed by the soprano saxophone. Table 7 contains
the measures in which the soprano saxophone is scored in a unique, soloistic manner set apart
Table 7. Solo melodic material for soprano saxophone found in Heartbreakers, part 2.
Measures Example
mm. 154-155
mm. 168-171
mm. 180-183
113
mm. 188-192
mm. 198-214
mm. 282-287
Example 44 shows another unique moment in the trumpet/soprano saxophone part. For two
rhythmic pattern by alternating the fingering of the pitch. To produce timbre changes to the F4
the saxophonist could alternate adding finger three on the right hand, the low C, low B, or low
Bb keys. This two-measure fragment is the only instance a timbre change is notated in the score.
114
Example 44. Timbre variations in Heartbreakers Part 2, mm.196-197.
In addition to the previously mentioned style changes found in both Part 1 and Part 2 of
Heartbreakers, there are other aspects that could create difficulty for the performers. First, there
are frequent key changes throughout both sections. Part 1 is comprised of eleven key changes
and Part 2 has eight. Not only are the key changes frequent, they also consist of multiple flats
and sharps for the performers adding a level of technical difficulty. Table 8 shows the key
115
Table 8. Key centers in Heartbreakers.
Part 1 Part 2
Key Measures Key Measures
F minor mm. 1-45 Bb minor mm. 1-101
Bb minor mm. 46-54 F minor mm. 102-153
F minor mm. 55-beat 3 of 76 D minor mm. 154-167
D major mm. 76 beat 4 98 F minor mm. 168-171
F minor mm. 99-103 F major mm. 172-187
E major m. 104-124 F minor mm. 188-206
B minor mm. 125-146 Db major mm. 207-294
E major mm. 147-149 F minor mm. 295-305
A major mm. 150-151
E major mm. 152-173
F# major mm. 174-182
F# minor mm. 183-202
syncopated sixteenth rhythms lend themselves to funk grooves that are a synthesis of Latin
rhythms combined with blues and rock & roll harmonic progressions. The music becomes even
more complex as the melodies of the saxophones are layered with those found in the rhythm
section. Rhythmic accuracy is imperative as the material given to the saxophone frequently
enters on weaker beats. Figure 14 presents a formal analysis of both Parts 1 and 2 of
Heartbreakers.
116
Figure 14. Formal analysis of Heartbreakers.
E.V. = electronic voice; S.Q. = saxophone quartet; S.S. = soprano saxophone; A.S. = alto saxophone; T.S. = tenor
saxophone; B.S. = baritone saxophone; E.P. = electronic piano; E.B. = electronic bass; E.D. = electronic drums
Part 1 Section 1
A Transition
E.V. E.V.
=96 1-4 melodic lines 1 melodic line
E.V. S.Q. hits/accompaniment S.Q./E.P./E.B./E.D.
E.P./E.B./E.D. funk1 Unison rhythm
only
m. 1 m. 3 m. 36
Section 2
B C B1 C1
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 1 -3 melodic lines 1 melodic line 1-3 melodic lines
S.Q. S.S./A.S./T.S. unison S.Q./E.P./E.B./E.D. S.Q. S.S./A.S./T.S. unison S.S./A.S./T.S. double-
B.S. unison w/E.B. 3
unison Rhythm funk B.S. unison w/E.B. Time accompaniment
E.P./E.B./E.D. funk2 with some solo lines E.P./E.B./E.D. funk2 B.S./E.P./E.B./E.D. funk3
m. 40 m. 46 m. 61 m. 66
1
B Transition D
E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 2 melodic lines
S.Q. S.S./A.S./T.S. unison S.Q. S.S./A.S./T.S. unison
B.S. unison w/E.B. Each part repeated B.S. unison w/E.B.
E.P./E.B./E.D. funk2 each measure E.P./E.B./E.D. funk4
m. 69 m. 74 m. 77
Section 3
E B2 F Transition
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 1 melodic line 2 melodic lines
1 melodic line
S.Q. S.S./A.S./T.S. unison S.Q. unison accomp. S.Q. unison accomp.
S.Q. swing figure accomp. Open improvisation
B.S. unison w/E.B. staggered entrances staggered entrances
E.P./E.B./E.D. swing Solo E.P./E.B./E.D. funk2 E.P./E.B./E.D. funk5/funk6 E.P./E.B./E.D. funk6
m. 93 m. 98 m. 99 m. 104 m. 122
Section 4
G G1 Transition
E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 1 melodic line 1 melodic line
S.Q. hits mixed with S.Q. hits mixed with S.Q. unison rhythm and
Double-time figures
Open improvisation Double-time figures ascending figure
E.P./E.B./E.D. fast swing Solo E.P./E.B./E.D. fast swing E.P./E.B./E.D. unison w/S.Q.
Section 5
H F1 I Coda
E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 1-2 melodic lines 2-4 melodic lines E.V.
S.Q. hits w/descending S.Q. unison accomp. S.Q. S.S./A.S./B.S. hits 1-2 melodic lines
line staggered entrances T.S. w/piano S.Q. A.S. bluesy solo
E.P./E.B./E.D. pop shuffle E.P./E.B./E.D. funk6 E.P./E.B./E.D. driving 8th-note E.P./E.B./E.D. slow blues
117
Part 2 Section 1
=120 A Interlude A1 Interlude
E.V. E.V.
E.V. 1-2 melodic lines E.V. 1-2 melodic lines
1 melodic line S.Q. quarter-note based 1 melodic line S.Q. quarter-note based
S.Q./E.P./E.B w/E.D. S.Q./E.P./E.B w/E.D.
Sustained, legato E.B./E.P. sustained Sustained, legato E.B./E.P. sustained
m. 1 m. 20 m. 26 m. 32
B C C1 D
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 1 melodic line 1 melodic line 3-5 melodic lines
A.S. legato 8th-notes S.Q./E.P. 8th and triplet S.Q. unison accompaniment
S.Q. sustained, legato 8ths Rhythm E.P./E.B./E.D. quarter-note
S.S/T.S./B.S./E.P. rhythmic
accompaniment E.P./E.B./E.D. hits E.D. sustained downbeats groove
m. 36 m. 45 m. 78 m. 84
Section 2
E Transition
E.V.
E.V. 1-5 melodic lines 1 melodic line
S.Q./E.P./E.B./E.D. mixture of A, D, and S.Q./E.P./E.D./E.B.
fast,16th-note interlude 16th-note interlude
m. 102 m. 151
Section 3
F G H G1
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
1-3 melodic lines 1-3 melodic lines 1 melodic line 1-3 melodic lines
S.Q. S.S. solo melody S.Q. in pairs S.Q. S.S. solo melody S.Q. in pairs
Rest of S.Q./E.P./E.B./E.D. E.P./E.B./E.D. Double-time Rest of S.Q./E.P./E.B./E.D. E.P./E.B./E.D. Double-time
Slow, groove Rock groove with heavy backbeat Slow, groove Rock groove with heavy backbeat
Section 4
Interlude J1 J2
E.V. E.V. E.V.
2 melodic lines 1 melodic line Open 1-3 melodic lines
T.S. solo w/E.D. S.Q. descending 16th-note Improvisation S.Q. unison background
S.S./A.S./B.S./E.P./E.B. hits E.P./E.B./E.D. rock groove E.P./E.B./E.D. rock groove
Section 5
K Transition L K1 Coda
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melodic line 1 melodic line 1 melodic line 1 melodic line 2 melodic lines
S.Q. fast, driving unison S.Q. sustained, legato S.Q. S.S./B.S. pared S.Q. fast, driving unison A.S. blues solo
E.P. w/S.Q. E.P./E.B./E.D. half-note half-note melody E.P. w/S.Q. E.P./E.B. half notes
E.B./E.D. hits rhythm A.S./T.S. 16th-note accomp. E.B./E.D. hits E.D. swing/blues rhythm
118
Jesus Is Coming
Composed: 2003
Instrumentation: Saxophone quartet (2004)
Original Version: recorder quartet
Other Versions: trombone quartet
guitar quartet
cello quartet
viola quartet (Altijd Kwartet)
flute orchestra (Netherlands Flute Orchestra)
rock band (Electric Kompany)
2 trumpets, trombone, and tuba
violin, viola, cello, Bb clarinet, and trombone
Duration: 9:22
Publisher: Boombox Holland www.boomboxshop.net
Dedication/Commission: commissioned by the Dutch Fund for the Creation of Music
Recorded by: Aurelia Saxophone Quartet, Shining City
Prism Quartet, Pitch Black, Innova 693
Nieuw Trombone Collectief Etcetera KTC 1355
Saxophone Ranges:
In the words of the composer, Jesus is Coming was inspired by the aftermath of 9-11 in
conjunction with the role religion has played in the history of mankind.170 Originally scored for
recorder quartet, the saxophone quartet adaptation was created in 2004, and since that time there
have been numerous instrumentations requested. The 9-11 attack has served as an impetus to
which much art has been created. Therefore, with JacobTVs great awareness of American
culture and current events, it is no surprise that he, too, would utilize this event in one of his
pieces. In the wake of any serious trauma, questions of faith arise. Two particular questions
mentioned by JacobTV that serve as the underlying theme of the piece are: Is Jesus really
170
JacobTV, Jesus Is Coming (Holland: Boombox, 2003).
119
The sound bytes can be broken into two groups. First, the groove of the piece is generated
from speech of two Dutch girls: 18-month-old Welmoed and 2-year-old Amber. Their baby talk
creates the underlying rhythmic structure on which the piece is built. The second layer of sound
is taken from scenes found on the streets of New York. Speech from an angry street Evangelist
on Times Square and a small Salvation Army Choir form the melodic layer of sound. Figure 15
The layers of sound bytes also form the basis of the melodic material found in the
saxophone parts. As the texture becomes thicker the saxophones incorporate music from both the
electronic instruments and the groove from the Evangelist sound sample. In an effort to create a
distinction between the two sound samples, JacobTV marks growl with an accent over the
120
saxophone melodies that match the Evangelist lines. Example 45 shows one instance of this
frequent switch. It is important for the saxophonists to create a distinction between the two
characters in order to match the intensity of sound found in the two voice samples.
Example 45. Changes in saxophone timbre found in Jesus Is Coming, mm. 21-22.
Throughout much of the piece, the top three saxophones (soprano, alto, and tenor)
consistently have the same melodic and rhythmic material; however, there are instances the
quartet is grouped into pairs that perform together rhythmically and melodically. Table 9 lists the
121
Table 9. Saxophone pairings found in Jesus Is Coming.
Measures Pairing
mm. 4-8 soprano/baritone; alto/tenor
mm. 39-40 soprano/tenor
mm. 60-64 soprano/baritone; alto/tenor
mm. 71-72 soprano/baritone; alto/tenor
mm. 75-76 soprano/baritone; alto/tenor
mm. 136-141 soprano/alto; tenor/baritone
mm. 150-151 soprano/baritone; alto/tenor
While performing with the other three saxophones, the baritone saxophonist has the added
responsibility of acting as the bass requiring him to perform with the drum track. It is important
for the baritone saxophonist to become aware of those instances in which the instrument is a
textured and diverse track, concurrently stretching the speech of the Evangelist. With this new
vocal timbre, the saxophones add sustained chordal harmony that is indicative of which is found
in traditional Western music. Not only do the sustained chords offer a reprieve from the loud,
accented rhythmic material, but also they create a more contemplative nature to allow the listener
to focus on the questions being asked by the Evangelist. Figure 16 describes the formal analysis
of Jesus Is Coming.
122
Figure 16. Formal analysis of Jesus Is Coming.
E.V. = electronic voice; S.Q. = saxophone quartet; E.D. = electronic drums; S.S. = soprano saxophone, A.S. = alto
saxophone; T.S. = tenor saxophone; B.S. = baritone saxophone
Section 1
=61 A Interlude A1 A2
E.V. melody E.V. melody E.V. melody
S.Q. rhythmic S.Q. rhythmic S.Q. rhythmic
accompaniment
Silence accompaniment with outbursts accompaniment with outbursts
Triple subdivision Triple subdivision duple/triple add E.D.
m. 1 m. 18 m. 19 m. 27
A3 Interlude B Coda
E.V. melody E.V. combines
S.Q. rhythmic phrases and syllables
Brief combination
accompaniment with outbursts Silence of A and B
add 16th-note figures S.Q. accompaniment
m. 101-106 no E.D.
m. 38 m. 59 m. 60 m. 98
C D Section 2 E F
E.V.
=92 E.V./S.Q. Syllables combined E.V./S.Q./E.D. E.V. melody
Rhythmic and melodic w/choir S.Q. accompaniment in
Unison S.Q. cantabile, legato Rhythmic unison in 2 groups; rhythmic unison
Add E.D. m. 110 accompaniment E.V./T.S./B.S. and S.S./A.S./E.D.
123
Pitch Black
Composed: 1998
Instrumentation: saxophone quartet and soundtrack
Other Versions: brass quintet and sountrack
Duration: 11:14
Publisher: Boombox Holland www.boomboxshop.net
Dedication/Commission: Aurelia Quartet commissioned by Almelo Chamber Music Society
and the Dutch Fund for the Creation of Music
Recorded by: Aurelia Saxophone Quartet, Heartbreakers, Emergo Classics (out
of print)
Prism Quartet, Pitch Black, Innova 693
Saxophone Ranges:
Composed in the summer of 1998 for the Aurelia Saxophone Quartet as a commission by
the Almelo Chamber Music Society and the Dutch Fund for the Creation of Music, Pitch Black
is inspired by one of Chet Bakers last interviews before his tragic death falling from an
Amersterdam hotel room window in 1988. There are three speech melodies created from the
interview that JacobTV utilizes as leitmotifs throughout the piece. First, Baker discusses his past
drug addiction that led to some time in prison. The corresponding text for this motive is, it was
pitch black in there you know. Among 40 other trumpet players or were there 60? is the
second motive in which Baker is discussing his first audition with saxophonist, Charlie Parker.
Finally, Baker describes playing without drums as more cool.171 These three musical ideas and
171
JacobTV, Pitch Black (Holland: Boombox, 1998).
124
Figure 17. Transcript of Pitch Black.
Yeah I was locked up in 62 People are
It was pitch black in there you know Hhh but
And you couldnt see anything comin out of the I got through it
sunlight I have the feeling here that uuh
My eyes got used to the darkness s much more freedom
I looked around Uuhh
And then I saw People are not so uptight
I saw about petty things
Ooh I saw
Forty trumpet players! A permanent 24 hour party going on all year
in there!
Yeah nono Without drums
Yeah nono Without drums
All the trumpet players in LA you know And really without drums
I saw Dizzy & Miles & Oh I guess I would call that more cool, without drums
Lee Morgan and all those guys you know
Forty! Well that was it!
forty trumpet players Pitch Black
nono I mean sixty Yeah I was locked up in 62
It was pitch black in there you know
I managed to survive And you couldnt see anything
and really thats a comin out of the sunlight
Yeah I was locked up My eyes got used to the darkness
It was pitch black in there you know I looked around
People are and then I saw
The use of voice sampling in Pitch Black is very similar to other compositions by
JacobTV. In addition to utilizing text from an interview, he also breaks down the sound bytes
into syllables to create a rhythm highlighted by single syllables. A new component found in this
piece is the use of coughing and throat noises as a generator of sound upon which to create a
rhythmic base. Example 46 shows the layer of rhythmic syllables, mixed with uuuh and hhh
which indicate Baker coughing or clearing his throat. This track is combined with all four
saxophones performing specific staccato rhythms that are notated with special white, square note
heads indicating slap tonguing. Throughout this section, the saxophones alternate articulations
between slap tongue and ordinary staccato. The standard articulation is utilized when Baker
speaks a line of text while the slap tongue corresponds to the rhythmic coughing. All the while,
125
Example 46. Coughing and throat noises utilized in Pitch Black, mm. 139-140.
For much of the piece, the instrumental music is as important and active as the music
created by the sound bytes. In measure 98, however, the texture changes allowing the
saxophones to become more prominent than the voice for four measures. As one can observe in
example 47, the voice is simply repeating eighth note E4 from measures 98-101. The
saxophones, while not as rhythmically complex, are building in dynamic as the harmony
126
Example 47. Texture change from voice to saxophone in Pitch Black, mm. 98-101.
Another unique aspect of the saxophone music found in Pitch Black is the solo sections
and saxophone pairings found throughout the movement. While many of JacobTVs pieces rely
on homo-rhythmic and unison melodic patterns throughout the instrumental parts, Pitch Black
features several instances that highlight a particular saxophone. Table 10 demonstrates the solos
and duets found in the saxophone parts. In addition, because there is no rhythm section on the
audio track, the baritone saxophone functions in two roles. For much of the time, the baritone
saxophone performs melodic and rhythmic material consistent with that of the other three
saxophones. There are, however, instances where the baritone saxophone is treated much like a
bass and JacobTV created scalar lines to provide an underlying framework upon which the
127
Table 10. Solos and duets found in Pitch Black.
The formal structure is provided in figure 18. One important aspect to notice is the
repetition of sections. JacobTV ends the piece much like he begins - the material found in
measures 3-23 returns in measures 236-257. In addition, measures 51-54 are repeated in
measures 257-260 and measures 44-54 are found in measures 261-271. The sound sample
actually ends the piece with something that has not been heard throughout the entire piece.
JacobTV has extracted a six-note motive from a performance Baker did of My Funny Valentine,
and looped the motive seven times. Example 48 is taken from measures 272-275.
Example 48. My Funny Valentine performed by Chet Baker found in Pitch Black, mm. 272-275.
128
Figure 18. Formal structure of Pitch Black.
E.V. = electronic voice; S.Q. = saxophone quartet; S.S. soprano saxophone; A.S. = alto saxophone; T.S. = tenor
saxophone; B.S. = baritone saxophone
=96 Section 1
Introduction A B C
E.V. E.V. E.V.
2 melodies: 1 melody: phrases 1 melody: phrases
E.V. only 1. Phrases, 2. Syllabic
S.Q. fast, 16th-note S.Q. hits with mixed with S.Q. unison rhythmic
nd
accompaniment 32 -note scalar passages accompaniment
m. 1 m. 3 m. 25 m. 31
D Transition
E.V. mm. 55-62
2-measure phrase
Syllabic/phrase
repeated
alternating each measure mm. 63-64 unison triplets
S.Q. unison mixed with in all parts
Pointillistic accompaniment mm. 65 E.V. only
m. 35 m. 55
Section 2
E F G H
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
=80 2 melodic lines =66 1 melodic line: =72 1 melody: phrases 1 rhythmic melody
Rhythm based on single rhythm based on single
words words
w/ or w/out rhythm S.Q. unison hits with
S.Q. 8th-note accompaniment S.Q. unison rhythm S.Q. unison rhythm short, individual 16th notes
m. 66 m. 72 m. 76 m. 90
I Transition
E.V. E.V.
2. melodic lines: Single syllable
rhythms based on single
words S.Q. legato, layered
S.Q. in pairs entrances
m. 93 m. 98
Section 3
J K L M
E.V. E.V. E.V. E.V.
1 melody: phrases 1 melody: phrases 1 melody: phrases 1 melody: rhythmic
S.Q. sustained half note S.Q. S.S. solo melody S.Q. sustained words and noises
accompaniment Other 3 saxophones accompany accompaniment S.Q. T.S./B.S. only
m. 121 m. 128
Section 4
O1 O2 O3 P
E.V. E.V. E.V.
2 melodic lines: 2 melodic lines: Mixture of 2 melodic lines;
Rhythmic syllables rhythmic words/syllables rhythmic words/syllables
O1 and O2 S.Q. legato quarter-note
S.Q. percussive blowing S.Q. regular tone rhythmic
Rhythmic accompaniment accompaniment accompaniment
129
Section 5
Q =72 R S
E.V. E.V. E.V.
2 melodic lines: words 1 melodic line: words 2 melodic lines: noises
and noises and short phrase
and phrases
S.Q. hits on downbeats first 4 S.Q. S.S. solo accompaniment
measures; quartet accomp. in pairs S.Q. accompaniment in pairs
Other three saxophones unison
m. 224 m. 232
Section 6
=96 A1 D1 Coda
Same as Same as
mm. 3-24 mm. 40-54 E.V. only
My Funny Valentine
130
Take A Wild Guess
Short version
Take A Wild Guess, composed in 2007 and 2008 for string or saxophone quartet and
soundtrack with ad libitum bass and drums, is a continuation of the story found in GRAB IT!
(1999). Both compositions feature sound bytes of life-sentenced prisoners in the 1978
documentary Scared Straight. In addition, Take A Wild Guess is part of JacobTVs first speech
melody video opera, Cities Change the Songs of Birds.172 There are several choices performers
must make upon performance of the piece. First, performers need to select either the long version
(9:30) or the short version (5:10) of the piece. In addition, they have the option of performing
with or without the bass and drums found on the background track. Figure 18 is a transcript of
172
JacobTV, Take A Wild Guess (Holland: Boombox, 2007 rev. 2009).
131
Figure 19. Transcript of Take A Wild Guess.
see that wall over there? you see that white guy? that black guy?
see that wall over there? and you come back with the cop
when your mind is drifting over them 30 foot walls see these 3 guys that ripped you off?
when youre thinkin about who is with your girl yeah they gonna go to the hole for 40 or 60 days
when 3 guys will slide in your cell and then theyll be back in population
wrap your ass up in that blanket so what do you do:
and I dont care how tough u think you are one: you go to the cop, you say:
or how strong u might be officer, 3 guys just ripped me off
theyre gonna kick your ass on the side of that bed and you come back with the cop
and do bodily harm to your asshole by stickin a dick one day youre layin on your blanket
in when your mind is drifting over them 30 foot walls
see that wall over there? when 3 guys will slide in your cell
and I know you like it spittin in your motha fuckin wrap your ass up in that blanket
face and I dont care how tough u think you are
my motha fuckin way or how strong u might be
theyre gonna kick your ass on the side of that bed
somethings funny? and do bodily harm to your asshole by stickin a dick
huh? yeah, yeah, cant hear ya in
somethings funny with you?
but this is what you clowns want and if they wanna give me these 3 bitches right here
and then a person a day to day living in one of these well I tell ya: I will leap over like a kangaroo
stinkin joints and Im gonna die in this stinkin joint
ah man, I aint about that bull shit you tough guy: take a wild guess
Im in this stinkin cess pool 10 years clown get out her! get off that fuckin bed
yeah huh? cant hear ya you think you can? Keep tryin me man
you, tough guy: take a wild guess, huh? but this youre about troublin them off
aint somebodys tryin to give you something
hurry up! thats the trouble with you clowns
3 guys just ripped me off in the 10 years Ive been asking a 1000 guys come to
and you come back with the cop this what?
and when you stick em you kill em any one of youse wanna impress them how tough you
not that they care about that guy you killed are?
when you get there you get ripped off you got a problem man?
how much money did you get?
what did you get the first time you got busted? huh? will cut you ass from a to z
how did you feel? they killem
nobody bothers him
you cant talk huh? I said: how did you feel? time took time took time
cry the people that cry the people that motha fucka smoke drink smoke just ham young ham
living he had a homocide to go with him
because you motha fucka come back from you s so he went out to snatch a pocket
fuck motha I stay fuck motha I stay so he was adjusted ladies a ciga
now thats how they should go you probably all read about it?
I know you like it spittin in your motha fuckin face it was in all the papers
My motha fuckin way and now youre switching your ass up and down and
what? cause if I tell you get on I break your fuckin hussling cigarettes for your man
now pick them up look at them right youre gonna wash his drawers and socks
what did I say motha fucka? and if he wants some head:
what? Hurry up! what? what? do sit! you will give it to him
God damn what did I say m f? my motherfuckin way!
132
Take a Wild Guess begins with slow, sustained material in the voice and the saxophone
parts. The top three saxophone voices either move in ascending or descending scalar fashions
while the baritone saxophone follows the root movement of the bass. At the end of the lyrical
introduction the first groove, labeled section A at measure 37, is preceded by the two measures
scored for voice alone. Throughout the rest of the piece, JacobTV has labeled each new section,
A-H.173 With each new section, the rhythmic patterns and groove change. Not only do
performers have to be aware of each specific change in style, but also there are instances in
which the rhythms that create each style are challenging. Example 49 is one such instance where
the performers must move from a duple subdivision, to triple subdivision, and return to duple
with each beat. The rhythmic subdivisions mixed with the constantly changing meters add to the
173
In the score, the section that should be labeled H at mm. 288 is mislabeled G.
133
Example 49. Rhythmic challenges in Take A Wild Guess, mm. 95-96.
Many of JacobTVs pieces that have been analyzed thus far display the correlation of the
sound bytes to the notated music for the performers. As discussed, the music found in both the
voice and instruments is homo-rhythmic; however, the music throughout section C and the
beginning measures of section D, as shown in example 50, displays one occurrence in which the
instrumentalists are performing in unison and the voice samples are superimposed without a
134
Example 50. Lack of notation in voice sample in Take A Wild Guess, mm. 117-118.
Another difference found in the score of Take A Wild Guess as compared with others
rhythmically notated in the score, the specific syllable to be pronounced was notated along with
the rhythm in standard notation. As shown in example 48, the syllabic material is not notated and
135
Example 51. Syllabic notation found in Take A Wild Guess, mm. 210-211.
One specific detail of which performers need to be aware is the range for the soprano
saxophone found in both the long and short versions. While the range of the soprano saxophone
extends only to a written Bb3 (sounding Ab3), there are instances to which the part is written to
A3 (sounding G3). The oversight in range of the soprano saxophone requires the performer to
adjust the musical line; however, when performing the piece as a string quartet the sounding G3
does not require accommodations from the first violinst as the melody falls within normal range
of the instrument. Figure 20 provides a formal analysis of both the long version and the short
136
Figure 20. Formal analysis of long and short versions of Take A Wild Guess.
E.V. = electronic voice; S.Q. = saxophone quartet; S.S. = soprano saxophone; A.S. = alto saxophone; T.S. = tenor
saxophone; B.S. = baritone saxophone; E.B. = electronic bass; E.D. = electronic drums
=124
Introduction
E.V. rhythmic E.V./S.Q./E.B. E.V. rhythmic
E.V. continues melody melody
Add S.Q. and E.B. S.Q./E.B. same as mm. 3-5 S.Q./E.B. E.V. only
E.V. only Sustained, chordal accompaniment Sustained Transition to next
accompaniment continues accompaniment section
mm. 1-2 mm. 3-6 mm. 7-26 mm. 27-29 m. 32-34 mm. 35-36
Section A Section B
E.V. Repeat of E.V. based on
E.V. rhythmic melody E.V. melody from section A complete sentences E.V./
Text combines
based on individual words not
Section A S.Q./E.B./
complete sentences
with complete sentences S.Q./E.B./E.D. S.Q. accompaniment E.D.
Based on similar to melody Similar as previous
S.Q. rhythmic/melodic unison accomp. accompaniment from section with the addition
E.D./E.B. rhythmic hits on beats 1 & 3 S.Q./E.B./E.D. similie section A E.B./E.D. continue of one measure breaks
featuring only E.V.
mm. 37-73 mm. 48-60 mm. 61-68 mm. 69-78 mm. 77-116
Section C Section D
E.V. simile
E.V. melody from
S.Q. cantabile E.V. E.V. m. 176 repeated E.V./S.Q.
E.V. accompaniment; each Notation mixed
Short phrases/no saxophone moves at
Short phrases/no with no notation E.B./E.D.
notated rhythm different times notated rhythm S.Q. accompaniment S.Q. accompaniment Continue as before
S.Q. Rhythmic unison S.Q. Rhythmic S.S./A.S. paired; Pairs mixed with unison
Accompaniment
E.B./E.D. hits on Unison accomp. T.S./B.S. paired m.205 triplets
beat 1 of each measure E.D./E.B. continue E.D./E.B. continue E.D./E.B. continue transition to section E
E.D./E.B. continue
mm. 117-127 mm. 128-131 mm. 132-166 mm. 167-175 mm. 176-187 mm. 188-209
Section E Section F
E.V. E.V. melody
rhythmic, syllabic melody consists of short phrase E.V. melody repeated from the end
S.Q. rhythmic/melodic unison of section E
S.Q. unison/paired accomp. accompaniment
S.Q. rhythmic/melodic unison
E.B./E.D. harsh quarter-note E.B./E.D. mixture between all four
rhythm pulsing each beat. beats and hits on beats 1 and 3 E.B./E.D. mixture between constant puls and hits
Section G Section H
E.V. melody continues to be repeated E.V. repeated syllabic melody
from previous sections mixed with new notated words. In addition, phrases
with no notated rhythm.
S.Q. accompaniment is either four indepent lines or unison
Independent: mm. 269-273; mm. 277-280
S.Q. four independent lines mixed with unison
Unison: mm. 274-276; mm. 281-287
E.B./E.D. mixture between constant pulse and hits E.B./E.D. mixture between constant pulse and hits
137
CHAPTER 5
Introduction
JacobTVs compositional avant-pop style is a fusion of classical and modern music set
to critical commentary inspired by present-day topics. Pimpin for baritone saxophone and
soundtrack exemplifies this avant-pop style. The piece was written for Connie Frigo (USA) and
William van Merji (Netherlands) and can be performed in several ways and in a variety of
musical idioms. It can feature baritone saxophone and soundtrack, saxophone quartet and
soundtrack featuring the baritone saxophone, and also as a sextet, with double bass and drums ad
libitum. In addition, a big band arrangement was made for the Amsterdam Clazz Ensemble and
recorded on Adventures Live at Bimhuis released in March 2009.174 Composed between August
2007 and February 2008, the voice sample is comprised of original speech by American pimps
and prostitutes. For performance, there are two tracks from which the performer can choose.
Both tracks feature male and female voices, double-bass and drums. Track A adds the three
accompanying horn parts on the tape and track B omits the horns.175
The sound samples feature spoken and rapped lyrics in a slang vernacular. By keeping
the integrity of the sources, the audience is able to be part of a world that is not commonplace.
As shown throughout the document, JacobTV chooses current-day subjects as the muse of his
art. With Pimpin, he is not only bringing awareness to this side of society, but also shares a bit
of the internal structure within the pimp culture. The lyrics of Pimpin are found in figure 21.
174
Clazz Ensemble, Home, http://www.clazzmusic.nl/clazzensemble/homeenglish.html (accessed
11/5/2014).
175
Jacob Ter Veldhuis, Pimpin (Holland: Boombox, 2008).
138
Figure 21. Lyrics of Pimpin'.
1 And then you have these thoughts in the back of your
Man! Like my mouth My mouth is like an uzi mind,
Armed and dangerous with a double clip Like: you know why am I doing this?
You know what Im sayin? My mouth is like an uzi, The thought of getting killed by a trick has come
Armed and dangerous with a double clip. across my mind
Im sure a lot of whores minds
2 Recently I had a friend, her name was Lisa
You gotta have charisma, you gotta have charm And she had been dating a person, uh
Artistry man! Its a real talent man, but: And he killed herThey found her bones
You gotta have finesse, you know what Im sayin? And they found another whore, her throat was
Charm is keyword thats my name. Whats up man? slashed
I got four, five bitches that Im breakin
for this shit shit every day right? Man! 4
God and stand on it I mean it takes the full on hundred motherfuckin
You faggot motherfucka, Im a bitch. Whats really percent
goin on? A bitch gonna stay in your motherfuckin corner, go
If you caught her dancing, how youre gonna keep stand up like
her? The Statue of Liberty, you know what Im sayin?
What you gotta do to keep the bitch? I know its about going on, Im her babe
Im cuttin her head back to the fat meat! you know what Im sayin, young girls and
God and stand on it and everything
He was on Twenty-Twenty you understand me? Hahahaha, shee uh
Got damn nothing and get down The more that you keep on tryin keep on come get
Stand on it like a rock and fat meat! her
Whats really goin on? The farther away that shes gonna be from you, you
They killed her motherfuckin ass man, know what Im sayin?
Shes dead too that was Sandy-Babe Hell tryin to stay down like four flat tires, with two
Tell her Im coming over to bust that thing out spare inner tubes!
Stand on it and get down Hell no I love for my daughter to sell it
Than to be givin it away, you know what Im sayin?
See, and if I would have seen that Id be the damned I love for my daughter to be called a whore
pimp Than for my daughter to be called a tramp
And man is this dried, he got peeled so, Time when a bitch fucks more than one man
Next day they come back, they wanna uzi the whole That makes her attractive anyway
block! Now, as they say: manipulatin, I had whores on and
Hahaha! And I got my first ring on the waiste! off
When theyre on the track: aint no drugs, period. you know what Im sayin?
Bitch aint on the track if I catch a bitch on the track But at the same timebitch
that smoke some weed or drank on the track: Manipulatin the bitch, see:
Im kickin her ass, period. The bitch was manipulatin ah ho I had whores
And he teaches you the stuff about, you know, As a matter of fact: I went through a problem with
What you should do, what you shouldnt do, you that shit before
know. You know what Im sayin?
Its up to, its really up to the girls she wanna obey He said: Will I aint no pimp
about what he I said: I already know that now I see in this day and
But she dont know the ins and outs age
and the ins and outs, the outs and the ins Pimpin! Thats what it takes, baby!
Love dont mix with this pimpin! Pimpin, you know? Whats there what else to take
The hell are you talking about? you know
I shit I mean God
3 But then I turn around pimpin a few months later
You believe youre gonna be something with that And see him pimpin
person, And the bitch on the motherfuckin
And uh and live with that person forever
139
5 Theres no worst thing!
And I had some of them whores right? Love dont mix with this pimpin
Man thyere motherfuckin right The hell you are talking about?
He suited and jerked from ear to ear right? Instead of concentrating on getting some God
you know what Im sayin? damned money
Its a whole bunch Im sayin Cause thats what she needs to do
Like Picasso playin a painting Thats our profession
Anyboday cant paint like Picasso God damned motherfuckin money
you know what Im sayin? Artistry man! God damned motherfuckin money
And it was popular back then to go to school with Love dont mix with this pimpin
duffle bag full of candy! The bitch gotta fuck with me!
And I was doin that so I always thought I was a Baby! Pimpin, you know?
natural right? Whats up man? Cause f a whore dont get no instruction,
But: you know many called upon but theres only a She gonna be headin for self destruction!
chosen few
Man theyre motherfuckin right! 6
He suited and jerked from ear to ear right? Hahahahahahahahahaha Hihihihihihihihi
I figured out what he was doing Hahahahahahahahahaha Well it sucks
Im cutting her head back to the fat meat!
Thats about the worst motherfuckin thing about this You know does he truly love me?
pimpin Or is this a figment of my imagination?
That a motherfucker ever gonna know Im cuttin her head back to the fat meat!
Damn you cant tell him shit!
The clarity of the lyric is an integral part to the performance. As the score states, the
performer and audience should feel engulfed in sound.176 Therefore, time must be taken to
ensure the proper balance between electronics and live instruments. In addition, a copy of the
lyrics should be provided to the audience to allow for appropriate interpretation and meaning of
176
JacobTV, Pimpin.
140
Analysis-Form
Pimpin consists of six movements that are performed attaca. The movements are
entitled: 1. Mouth like an uzi; 2. Charisma; 3. Why am I doing this?; 4. The full 100%; 5. Like
Picasso; and 6. Hahahaha. Each section features lyrics that are sung, rapped, and spoken in
pimps slang. The text is combined with original music composed for the baritone saxophone
and accompaniment.177 While some sections feature the baritone saxophone in harmonic and
rhythmic unison with the voice, other sections treat the baritone saxophone as either a soloist or
accompaniment. JacobTV is able to add specific style and character to each section by changing
keys, articulations, rhythmic values, dynamics, and by making the accompaniment on the track
more or less active. Although the piece is through-composed, certain motives are repeated to
Figure 22 offers a schemata for each of the six sections found in Pimpin upon which the
organization of the analysis is based. The ensuing analysis focuses on the compositional
techniques as they relate to each movement with discussion of pitch material, rhythmic
intricacies, and influential material borrowed from jazz and rock genres. In addition, the musical
and textual relationship is discussed. While there are many versions of this piece, the analysis
refers to the version for solo baritone saxophone, saxophone quartet, and boombox with double
bass and drums. A glossary of terms used for the analysis can be found in
Table 11.
141
Figure 22. Formal scheme of Pimpin'.
Electronic Sounds
142
1. Mouth like an uzi
The first measure of movement one of Pimpin is a 3/8 measure that consists of the voice
sample on the pitch Ab3 stating, Man! The sp-text m-voice serves as an anacrusis to the
downbeat of measure 2 at which point all performing elements occur in rhythmic unison for the
first beat. Movement one features M.B.S. with m-voice performing sp-text. Example 52 outlines
the interjections in correlation to the melody. The rhythmic interjections continue throughout the
Example 52. Percussive interjections in the accompaniment in Pimpin', movement 1, mm. 1-5.
143
The I.S.Q. accompaniment highlights a small number of beats in each measure with the
exception of measures 17 and 18 as shown in example 53. For these two measures the
Tonally, movement one begins in the key of Ab major, however, the melodic material in
the voice sample and the solo baritone saxophone outline the mixolydian mode of Ab major,
which would be Eb mixolydian. The mixolydian mode, also known as the dominant, is an
144
extremely common sound in jazz and popular music. Consisting of a lowered seventh scale
degree as shown in example 54, the mixolydian mode resembles the major scale minus a leading
tone; in this case a concert Db is the seventh note of the Eb dominant scale, as opposed to a D
natural in Eb major.
There is, however, one instance of the D natural, found in measure 12, as the harmonies
transition to the key of Db major in measure 14. JacobTVs choice to utilize the mixolydian
mode reflects not only the influence of jazz and rock music on his compositional style, but also
lends itself to the colloquial nature of the subject matter. Often the mixolydian scale, referred to
as the dominant scale in jazz and popular music, functions in relationship to the tonic of the
particular key of the piece. In this role, the dominant progresses to the tonic. However, in many
popular genres such as jazz, rock, blues, r&b, etcetera, the dominant scale stands alone and does
not correspond to the tonic, but rather functions as the tonic without a leading tone. In his
compositions, JacobTV recreates the expectations of traditional harmonic rules and redefines
As previously mentioned, the key moves to Db major in measure 14. At this point, the e-
bass begins a walking bass line. The change not only highlights the new tonality, but also
145
provides a metric shift from what has been a halftime groove178 to a pattern outlining each beat
unaccented parts of each beat. In addition, the accents correspond to the upper notes of the sp-
text at the beginning of the word double. Example 55 highlights the syncopated e-bass line as
Example 55. E-bass syncopated rhythm found in Pimpin', movement 1, mm. 17-18.
178
In a halftime groove the rhythmic pulse shifts from every beat in the measure, to every other beat. While
the tempo is moving at the same speed, the rhythm feels as if it is twice as slow.
146
Movement one, measure 1 of the baritone saxophone score is labeled funky. The term
refers to not only the corresponding rhythmic groove created by the e-bass and e-drums, but
refers to the attitude and approach to the sound. From its onset, movement one demands the
baritone saxophonist perform with aggression that can lend itself to an unrefined sound. In
addition, the range of the M.B.S. material highlights the lower register of the instrument,
As with the numerous notated articulations, JacobTV borrows two effects commonly
found in jazz and popular music. The first is a fall179 found on measure 174 and the second is a
doit180 in following measure, also on beat four. Example 56 shows the markings found in
measures 17 and 18. These two musical effects in the S.B.S highlight the baritone saxophone.
Not only does the S.B.S feature a quarter note while all other instruments have an eighth note, but
the descending and ascending melodic effects of the fall and doit bridge the ends of each
179
See Glossary in Chapter 3.
180
See Glossary in Chapter 3.
147
Example 56. Jazz effects found in Pimpin', movement 1, mm. 17-18.
Throughout movement one, the m-voice primarily utilizes sp-text in a repetitive and
highly rhythmic way. Table 12 describes the specific layers of sp-text found throughout
movement one. It is important to note that there is one instance of fs-text found measures 10-12.
For these two measures, the listener is able to hear the sentence; my mouth is like an uzi
armed and dangerous with a double clip. You know what Im sayin? This instance of fs-text
serves as a transition into not only a new key, but also a new section of sp-text.
148
Table 12. Textual analysis in Pimpin', movement 1, mm. 1-29.
Label Measures Text
sp-text mm. 1 Man!
1-word utilized rhythmically mm. 2 and
mm. 17-18 double clip
mm. 19-21 armed& dangerous
sp-text
mm. 22-24 double clip
2-words utilized rhythmically
mm. 25-26 my like
mm. 27-28 double clip
mm. 3-9 like my mouth
sp-text
mm. 13 like my mouth like an uzi
3-words utilized rhythmically
mm. 14-16 armed and dangerous
my mouth is like an uzi armed and
fs-text mm. 10-12 dangerous with a double clip You
know what Im sayin?
149
2. Charisma
Movement two begins much like movement one with the M.B.S. matching the text, the
I.S.Q. accompaniment, and the fs-text combining various m-voice sound samples; however, three
measures later the texture begins to change more variations ensue and the section entitled
Charisma begins to differentiate itself from Mouth like an uzi. Harmonically, the movement
begins in Bb minor and features many quartal harmonies in the saxophone quartet
accompaniment. In addition, while the key centers can be labeled as Bb minor, Ab major, C
minor, F major, and D major, much of the melodic content derived from on the mixolydian
mode.
staccato notes to one that is legato and can be, therefore, labeled with S.S.Q. The S.S.Q. is short
lived, as the saxophone quartet material transitions back to I.S.Q. in measure 38. The interplay
between S.S.Q. and I.S.Q. textures remains consistent throughout the entirety of movement 2
with the exception of measures 84-86. Example 57 illustrates the two-note rhythmic groupings
found in these three measures. A combination of the legato eighth-note material found in the e-
bass and A.B.S., the R.S.Q. bridges the melodic material from all three sources. Furthermore,
these three measures feature the most activity found in the saxophone quartet music throughout
the movement.
150
Example 57. R.S.Q. found in Pimpin', movement 2, mm. 84-86.
The solo baritone saxophone utilizes two compositional techniques both separately and
simultaneously throughout the movement. Beginning with the lyrical M.B.S similar to that found
in movement one, the melodic content changes to the A.B.S. texture in measure 39 with a
funky groove that is also found in the e-bass. Example 58A depicts the first instance of the
bass line and compared to that of a basic funk drum pattern in example 58B. While there are
more intricate grooves that involve eighth and sixteenth notes on the hi-hat and ride cymbal,
151
example 58B is simply a sketch of the basic combination of two downbeats echoed by two
upbeats found in the bass drum and snare drum. JacobTV has scored the baritone saxophone
much like the range of the drum set. In the case of the Pimpin groove, the first two beats are low
in the baritone saxophone range and descend, with the third beat what would be the snare drum
hit jumping an octave and a half in range. Furthermore, the fast moving sixteenth subdivisions
152
Both upbeats from the 4/4 pattern are not always found in the 5/4 baritone saxophone
funky bass line, however, the first upbeat is consistently added in order to create a four-note
bass line groove. Throughout the movement, the groove is frequently added to the M.B.S.,
establishing an important duality in the baritone saxophone role during the movement. A second
important pairing between the baritone saxophone and e-bass begins in measure 81, which is
shown in example 59. For ten measures the baritone saxophone and e-bass create a unison bass
line consisting of constant eighth notes. An exception occurs in measures 85 and 90 where the
line is broken with a measure of quarter notes. The eighth-note line is legato and the saxophone
153
Example 59. Legato eighth note baseline in Pimpin', movement 2, mm. 81-90.
154
PIMPIN Copyright 2008
by Jacob ter Veldhuis (Boombox Holland)
All rights reserved by the copyright holders.
Although the majority of the movement features new text, there is a return of the text
from measures 1 and 2 in movement one. In measure 38, the initial Man! transitions from the
fs-text found in the opening of movement 2 to the funky groove that begins in measure 38.
This time, rather than Ab3, Man! connects Ab3 to Db3 with a descending chromatic scale that
155
Example 60. "Man!" transition in Pimpin', movement 2, m. 38.
Similarly, the motives from measures 1 and 2 are utilized transitionally in measures 39-49.
Example 61 diagrams the repetition of the motivic text Man! andand and the underlying
I.S.Q. accompaniment. One important difference in the reiteration is the addition of the S.B.S.
chromatic scale from A4-E5. With this new melodic interject, the baritone saxophone is brought
to the forefront of the text for beats two and three. Although the time signature and note values
156
Example 61. Comparison of material from mm. 1-2 with mm. 50-51, in Pimpin'.
mm. 1-2 mm. 50-51
In addition to a combination of sp-text and fs-text, movement two also utilized f-voice for
the first time. While brief, four measures, the timbral effect is important to notice not only in its
combination with melodic material, but also in the technique with which it is presented. Table 13
outlines the various manipulations of the sound sample as compared with measure it is found and
specific text. Similarly to movement one, there are many instances of sp-text; however, in
movement two, those instances are influenced by longer phrases. For many of the sections the
word and is used to separate ideas and thoughts. There are more instances of fs-text, however,
in movement two, these tend to be complete, coherent ideas that lack the formal structure of a
complete sentence rather than full sentences. JacobTVs incorporation of the streams of ideas
157
representing complete sentences speaks to the direct source of the sound samples. In colloquial
street speak it is common, and even acceptable practice, to find incomplete sentences
158
3. Why Am I Doing This?
Labeled as lyrical, movement three is a departure from the previous two movements.
Although the tempo has not changed, JacobTV alludes to a slower tempo in the rhythmic choices
of the accompaniment and bass. By performing primarily sustained passages, the driving
intensity of the previous rhythm is removed and the listener is left with pads of sound.
Furthermore, the drums have been removed for this movement and without the rhythmic
pulsations, the elongated note values have a floating quality providing foundation not in
The melody in the M.B.S. can be similarly compared to the f-voice. The rhythms of the
two melodic lines correspond, however, are not as exact as those in the previous two movements.
JacobTV uses the baritone saxophone to stress the ends of phrases by writing longer phrases than
the f-voice as shown in example 62. In this way, the baritone saxophone becomes more of a
Example 62. Baritone saxophone phrase endings in Pimpin', movement 3, mm. 103-105; mm.
108-109.
159
PIMPIN Copyright 2008
by Jacob ter Veldhuis (Boombox Holland)
All rights reserved by the copyright holders.
There are five instances in which the melody in the baritone saxophone mimics the f-voice,
however, the rhythm is displaced by either an eighth or sixteenth note. Example 63 illustrates
each instance. While there is no exact model followed by JacobTV, the use of the displacement
draws specific attention to the baritone saxophone and takes what would be a M.B.S., or a
melody similar to the accompaniment, and highlights the line in a soloistic manner, or the
category of S.B.S.
160
Example 63. Baritone saxophone melodic displacements as compared to f-voice, Pimpin',
movement 3, mm. 106-107; mm. 110-111; m. 116; mm. 128-129.
mm. 106-107
mm. 110-111
161
m. 115
m. 116
162
mm. 128-129
Movement three is comprised of three smaller sections that can be labeled A, B, and A1.
The first section, A, measures 103-111, is partially repeated at the end of the movement. Due to
an absence of the final four measures of A, measures 125-129 are labeled A1. Both the A and A1
sections utilizes M.B.S. with the small exceptions previously discussed. The accompaniment is
S.S.Q. with the e-bass following suit. Finally, the f-voice utilizes fs-text. The textures found in
measures 112-124 differ from A and A1. First, the B portion consists of S.B.S. and employs
I.S.Q. from measures 112-115. Throughout those four measures the e-bass continues sustained
pitches. At measure 116, the accompaniment transitions to S.S.Q., however, the S.B.S. still
sounds.
163
Throughout the entirety of movement three, the f-voice employs fs-text. While the
sentences are incomplete, the phrases are coherent thoughts and the story can easily be
interpreted by the nature of the rhythmic values found in the voice sample, the lack of multi-
voice layering, and the light underscoring of the other performance elements.
Another distinction of this movement is its nod to the females perspective. Movements
one and two have been from the male pimps perspective. Throughout those movements, there
has been a driving rhythm and aggression that seemingly resembles the nature of the role of a
pimp. While those men have been in control of the business, it is the women prostitutes who
have endured and carried out the actions of the business. Not only does the scoring utilized by
JacobTV demonstrate the delicate nature of the emotions and feelings of the prostitutes, but the
descending nature of such words and phrases as forever, why am I doin this? and he killed
her, that are found in example 64, impart upon listener an added dimension of sadness and
despair.
Example 64. Descending f-voice melody in Pimpin', movement 3, mm.106-107; m. 110, m.119.
164
4. The Full 100%
Movement four is an immediate departure from the mood of movement three. Labeled
funky, the movement begins with a driving, walking bass line that is imitated three beats
later in the baritone saxophone. In addition, the e-drums return with a groove that compliments
the funky bass line. While it only lasts two measures, the change in rhythm, harmony, and
The saxophone quartet primarily utilizes I.S.Q., however; there are instances of S.S.Q. A
closer look at the saxophone quartet accompaniment reveals a difference compared with the prior
uses of those two classifications. One such deviation can be found in measures 137-138, which is
shown in example 65. Throughout these two measures, the soprano and tenor saxophone melody
is very similar to the baritone saxophone and e-bass melody. Not only does the saxophone
quartet highlight important points in the measure, it also brings the group to the forefront of the
texture.
165
Example 65. Saxophone quartet melody compared with baritone saxophone and e-bass in
Pimpin', movement 4, mm. 137-138.
177-184. This section can be labeled as I.S.Q. due to the eighth note hits found throughout.
JacobTV introduces a sustained and flowing interjection that is outlined in example 66. The
legato, two-note phrase begins on beat three and descends to beat three, giving the allusion of a
sigh. The short, rhythmic punches now alternate between the sighing phrases.
Example 66. Two-note sighing phrase found in saxophone quartet accompaniment in Pimpin',
movement 4, mm. 175-185.
166
167
PIMPIN Copyright 2008
by Jacob ter Veldhuis (Boombox Holland)
All rights reserved by the copyright holders.
The baritone saxophone and e-bass consist of the same melodic material through measure
162. From measure 162 to the end, the baritone saxophone continues with M.B.S. and the e-bass
functions much like a bass would in a jazz combo setting by providing a harmonic and rhythmic
foundation without disrupting the energy of the movement. Moreover, movement four is the first
instance where JacobTV writes altissimo in the baritone saxophone part. Example 67 shows the
two measures containing altissimo. The altissimo passage is also in unison with the voice sample
creating not only the highest moment in tessitura, but unifying the two melodic lines.
168
Example 67. Altissimo passage in baritone saxophone in Pimpin', movement 4, mm. 165-66.
Movement four can be broken into smaller sections derived from the text and melody.
Table 14 diagrams the specific sections with a brief description of their relationship to the
169
Table 14. Sections within Pimpin', movement four.
Measures Section Label Description
Funky groove begins with e-bass, e-drums, baritone
mm. 130-131 Introduction
saxophone and rhythmic and repetitive nature of m-voice.
mm. 132-136 Section A M.B.S. and e-bass; I.S.Q.; m-voice s.p.-text
mm. 137-138 Interlude M.B.S and e-bass; R.S.Q.; m-voice s.p.-text utilizing ha
mm. 139-143 Section B M.B.S. and e-bass; S.S.Q.; m-voice f.s.-text
mm. 144-147 Section C.1 M.B.S. and e-bass; I.S.Q.; m-voice f.s.-text
mm. 148-149 Section C.2 M.B.S. and e-bass; I.S.Q.; m-voice f.s. text
mm. 150-153 Section C.1 M.B.S. and e-bass; I.S.Q.; m-voice f.s. text (repetition of 3.A)
mm. 154-162 Section D M.B.S. and e-bass; I.S.Q.; m-voice s.p. text
mm. 163-164 Section E.1 M.B.S.; I.S.Q., R.S.Q. and S.S.Q.; m-voice f.s. text
mm. 165-168 Section E.2 M.B.S.; I.S.Q.; m-voice s.p. text utilizes pimpin motive
M.B.S; I.S.Q.; m-voice s.p. text - repetition of 5.A with added
mm. 169-173 Section E.1a
two measures
mm. 174-185 Section F M.B.S.; I.S.Q.; m-voice f.s.text utilizes pimpin motive
As the table describes, section C and section E feature melodic material that is repeated in a
ternary form; in other words, the music from the beginning of the section returns at the end.
While the melodic material found in section C is an exact repetition, example 68 compares
sections E.1 and E.1a which are not exactly identical. The melodic content is the same in the m-
voice and baritone saxophone; however, the rhythmic placement within the measures is different,
170
Example 68. Melodic repetition in Pimpin', movement 4, mm.162-164 and mm. 169-172.
mm. 162-164
mm. 169-172
171
Movement four is the first time the word pimpin is utilized as a focal point of the
melody. The word is given the rhythmic value of two eighth notes that melodically are displaced
by an octave. The first instance of the pimpin motive occurs in measure 165. From that point
throughout the rest of the movement, the interjection of the pimpin motive is utilized as a loud
articulate interruption in the text. Each time the motive occurs, the baritone saxophone follows
the same melodic, articulate, and dynamic pattern. Furthermore, the verbal phrase, you know
whatm sayin connects many musical phrases and sections throughout the movement. Example
172
5. Like Picasso
Much like movement four, movement five is comprised of fast and rhythmic elements as
well as sustained and lyrical phrases. The entire movement features m-voice with the baritone
saxophone utilizing M.B.S., A.B.S. and S.B.S. The saxophone quartet accompaniment is I.S.Q.,
R.S.Q., and S.S.Q. Unlike the previous movement, the baritone saxophone and e-bass do not
share any of the same melodic material. The e-bass is primarily utilized for providing a funky
A distinct feature of movement five is the use of mixed meters. Each movement thus far
has featured mixed simple meters; however, JacobTV adds compound meters such as 5/16, 5/8,
and 7/8 in movement five. The random order of time signatures not only leads to the
unpredictability of the piece, but the compound meters completely skew any semblance of beat
regularity. Example 70 illustrates one such place where the progression of time signatures from
3/8 to 5/16 to 2/8 and finally 3/4 signifies a portion of music where time feels suspended and
there is no discernable down beat. In addition, the compound meters frantically rush the phrase
173
Example 70. Use of mixed meters in Pimpin', movement 5, mm. 215-221.
174
Movement five begins with three measures that transition from the end of movement four
into the new subject. Measures 186 through 188 are scored with S.S.Q. and e-bass and e-drum
hits on beats two and four for the first two measures and beat one on the last measure. Due to the
light texture, the intensity of movement four fades away for three measures before the driving
bass line begins in movement five. Much like movement four, the e-bass enters with a walking
bass line in measure 189 and is accompanied by an e-drum groove that corresponds to the feel,
A unique feature of movement five is the amount of repetition. Table 15 diagrams the
movement with regard to the reuse of textual, rhythmic, and melodic material.
Although there are many repetitions throughout the movement, the treatment of each reiteration
is done in such a thoughtful way that the listener remains engaged. An illustration of this is
175
shown in example 71. The first statement of section B.1 transitions from a highly rhythmic and
chaotic section. Therefore, the first statement of like Picasso playin a painting anybody cant
paint like Picasso... features a softer dynamic, e-drum on beat one of each measure, e-bass
moving on beat one of each measure, S.S.Q., and the absence of the solo baritone saxophone. At
measure 196, the second statement of the same text the e-drum returns to the groove, e-bass is
paired with the saxophone quartet and the solo baritone saxophone, I.S.Q., and the M.B.S. enters.
Example 71. Differences in repetition of phrases in Pimpin', movement 5, mm. 194-195 and mm.
196-197.
176
PIMPIN Copyright 2008
by Jacob ter Veldhuis (Boombox Holland)
All rights reserved by the copyright holders.
177
6. Hahahaha
The final movement of Pimpin is a departure from each of the previous movements in
several ways. First, the m-voice is rhythmically set to either the syllable ha, hu, or hi for
eight-five percent of the movement. Measures 267 and 268, shown in example 72, are the only
178
Constant eighth notes mixed with occasional sixteenth notes create the rhythmic framework for
the syllables of text. In measure 262, however, the persistent eighth note rhythms yield to a
syncopated rhythm as shown in example 73. At this point, the syllabic text matches the S.B.S.
Due to the lack of textual content and the repetitive nature of the syllabic rhythms, the
baritone saxophone is the melodic focus. From measures 244 through 280, the lyrical S.B.S is the
leading voice accompanied by the m-voice s.p.-text, I.S.Q. and S.S.Q. sustained e-bass and e-
drum groove. Similarly to the repetition found in previous movements, the S.B.S utilizes a two-
179
measure phrase with motives created from the intervals of major sixths, perfect fifths, perfect
fourths, and perfect octaves. With short and quick one-measure interruptions, the repetitions
begin in measure 244 and go through measure 261. Example 74 shows the first two-measure
S.B.S. melody and figure 23 outlines the repetitions with the interruptions.
180
Figure 23. Melodic outline of S.B.S in Pimpin', movement 6, mm. 244-261.
and I.S.Q. highlighting some of the hits found in the baritone saxophone melody. Measures 272
and 273, shown in example 75, are significant due to the homorhythmic patterns shared by the e-
bass, saxophone quartet, baritone saxophone, and m-voice. After the loud two-measure
punctuation, the saxophone quartet functions as a subtle background with the soft S.S.Q.
undertones.
181
Example 75. Unison rhythm in Pimpin', movement 6, mm. 272-273.
The seven measures from 282 through 288 employ an effect on the m-voice that has not
been used throughout the piece. The ha syllables have been slowed down and elongated. To
enhance this elongated effect, JacobTV changes the time signature to 2/2 and thus the note
values are twice as in the long as previous sections. The sounds in the baritone saxophone and e-
182
bass now match the e.e.-text in both note value and descending melodic line as shown in
example 76. Because the voice sample has been manipulated, the tone quality is not as pure,
creating a rough timbre. Therefore, the baritone saxophone mimics the style and is instructed to
Example 76. Unison melody in m-voice, B.S., and e-bass in Pimpin', movement 6, mm. 282-288.
The section featuring elongated music begins and ends with two hits. Measure 281 is the
transition into the phrase that consists of an m-voice hit on the syllable huh while all other
instruments rest. Similarly, the end of the sustained phrase transitions into the coda in measure
289, which features a hit on the syllable huu and is accompanied by all of the other
instruments. Although the syllables at the beginning and ends of the phrase are not exactly the
183
Measure 290 marks the beginning of the coda. The time signature is 6/8 and the primary
focus has shifted from the baritone saxophone back to the voice sample, an f-voice featuring f.s.-
text, and is accompanied by A.B.S. and e-bass. Measures 291 through 294 are primarily focused
on f-voice with A.B.S, however, S.S.Q., sustained e-bass, and interjections by the e-drums
support the voice sample melody. Halfway through measure 295, the m-voice returns to finish
both the movement and the piece. Example 77 illustrates the S.S.Q. that transitions from f-voice
to m-voice, and the rhythmic nature the piece concludes with all instruments ending in rhythmic
unison.
184
CHAPTER 6
CONCLUSION
The twelve compositions for solo saxophone or chamber ensemble and boombox
illustrate JacobTVs important contribution to the contemporary electro-acoustic literature for the
instrument. In addition, the high technical demands required of his pieces, knowledge of many
genres is important for the success of the works. For example, in Grab It!, discussed in chapter 4,
the performer is responsible for executing specific and technically challenging tonal
idiosyncracies.
By utilizing techniques such as growls, falls, scoops, etcetera, that were definied in
chapter 3, JacobTV employs characteristics of the jazz idiom within a classical concert setting.
JacobTV has truly created his own unique brand of electro-acoustic music.
The harmonic language is indicative of jazz and popular music due to its reliance on a
dominant or mixolydian sound as shown in Tatatata Duo. In addition, the incorporation of funk
and rock rhythms as shown in Heartbreakers, adds another layer of popular music. While
JacobTV has stated he does not know how to define the avant-pop style, his compositions have
been described as a melting pot of characteristics from many genres. While the formal
divisions used to categorize styles and genres have been employed for centuries, JacobTVs
works are truly a new approach that challenges the standard. Although not every characteristic is
found in every composition, JacobTVs style is clearly present and consistent throughout his
body of repertoire.
adapt his works for special requests. For example, at the request of saxophonist Connie Frigo,
185
JacobTV added a piano part to Billie. In addition, Jesus Is Coming was originally composed for
recorder quartet. Currently, it has been arranged for a variety of instrumental combinations. It is
evident JacobTV is eager to work with musicians in order to have his music performed.
Along with performance, JacobTV is interested in sharing his point of view with
provoking thought as much as creating sounds. His extreme interest in American culture not only
serves as the foundational muse of his works, but it is the catalyst for his passion that he is eager
to share. As seen in Grab It!, JacobTV is able to transform the initial text into a deeper, more
personal meaning that is able to transcend the listener. The term grab it was really referring to
a physical act in the original sound source, however, by the end of the composition JacobTV is
metaphorically implying every listener should grab his or her own life and take control.
demonstrates compositional exploration that blurs genre-based rules previously defined and
combines visual and auditory techniques to invoke reactions from his audience. There will
indoubtedly be future study on JacobTV as he continues to push the envelope of composition and
186
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Scores
-----. May This Bliss Never End. Holland: Boombox (1996, rev. 2005).
190
-----. Pimpin. Holland: Boombox (2008).
Interviews
191