Ceremony of the Seasons
In the Shadow's Light
Liza LIM Born 1966, Perth, Australia
- In the Shadow's Light (2004)
- string quartet
Duration 26' Commissioned by Festival d'Automne à Paris
The Quickening
Liza LIM Born 1966, Perth, Australia
- The Quickening (2004-05)
- soprano, qin
Duration 22' Commissioned by Festival d'Automne à Paris
Qui es-tu? Vois, moi je souffle le monde,
Il fera nuit, je ne te verrai plus,
Veux-tu que ne nous reste que la lumière?
-- Mais je ne sais répondre, de par un charme
Qui m'a étreint, de plus loin que l'enfance.
Who are you? Look, I blow out the world,
It will be night, I will no longer see you,
Do you want only light?
-- But I cannot answer, for I am seized
By a spell from further off than childhood.
--Yves BONNEFOY
L'Agitation du rêve
(part 3) from
Ce Qui fut sans lumière
(In the Shadow's Light) translated
John NAUGHTON, Uni of Chicago Press, 1991.
I have thought of this pair of pieces -- In the Shadow's Light
and The Quickening -- as a `ceremony of the seasons´.
These `seasons´ are aligned to the turning points between autumn-winter
and spring-summer, metaphors for journeys into death and into life.
Both works inhabit a dream-world where things are not grasped directly,
where sensations are filtered through different kinds of veils. These veils
might be experienced as a tangle of submerged pathways through which one
senses the movement of creatures on the surface above; perhaps as a trance
of saturated light coming from a place beyond, or as oscillating
interference patterns created by intersecting lines and arising from the
coupling and uncoupling of sonic elements.
I am describing a `shimmer´ effect, something that, for me, calls to mind
the ecstatic Central Desert art of Aboriginal Australia. This is a culture
in which rituals are brought into being by shaman-healers who `stalk and
capture´ songs, dances, ceremonial body markings and other designs in dream.
It is said that they recognise these forms by the force of their `shimmer´,
for instance, songs found in dreams are described in the Kukatja language as
`kalyuyuru´ -- `like water shimmering as it falls´.
The `shimmer´ that I seek in my own work is also comprised of physical and
visual dimensions as much as being an aural phenomenon. For example, the
tactile awareness that the musicians of the string quartet bring to the
sounding of their instruments is of key importance in interpreting the
music. This kinaesthetic dimension is certainly central to the traditional
performance practice of the Chinese zither, the qin, which has a highly
refined aesthetics of touch, in which qualities of silence are savoured.
Silences -- both furious and tender -- performed as suspended moments and as
breathing gestures -- signal metaphorical turning points. They perhaps mark
out the `flinching points´ in the radical uncoupling of the senses, of body,
memory and spirit in death. And beyond this, the miraculous alchemical
quickening of elements as new life is formed.
The term `the quickening´ describes a mother's first sensation of her baby's
movement in the womb but also other kinds of `beginnings of life´ whether
ideas or the sap running in trees. In the duo for soprano and qin, I have
used fragments of Chinese text by Yang Lian whose poems revolve around
themes of a dynamic duality that admits a third state `in-between´ and who,
like Bonnefoy, finds a light that shines through darkness. The intonation of
these Chinese words combine with the strokes of the qin's silk strings to
sing of the illumination of flesh, of opening to vulnerability, and the
awareness of being truly present in the moment when `cicadas in the body
endlessly cry´.
Poems for The Quickening are fragments, used with the
poet's permission, from the collection Where the Sea Stands Still
by Yang Lian, translated Brian Holton, Bloodaxe Books, 1999.
part 1:
a pair of fleshy wings
has just touched the moon under the water
has time to move in
the radiance that eliminates the ocean
is finally pointed out when it is past
part 2:
one lip has been carved tender as grass
and a tongue so vulnerable it can't help crying out
whatever was called hired flesh from the dead
shadow dies again is only then shed to become human skin
big white bird tiny baby
wings of trees flapping
from light slipping terribly towards the light that lays
you bare
part 3:
a tiny white grain buried in your flesh illuminates you.
because flesh is the only thing that can be lit up.
the dead, they like a ceremony for childbirth
part 4:
cicadas
in the body
endlessly cry
In the Shadow's Light
and was commissioned by the
Festival d'Automne à Paris and premiered by the Kairos Quartett.
It is dedicated to the
Kairos Quartett and in memory of Mark Randall Osborn.
The Quickening was commissioned by the
Festival d'Automne à Paris and premiered by
Deborah KAYSER (soprano) and Yang Chunwei (qin).
It is dedicated to Joséphine Markovits.
Both premieres were on 29 November 2005, Amphithéâtre,
Cité de la Musique, Paris.
Programme note © Liza LIM, January 2005
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