Migration of peoples across
borders has shaped the human experience for millennia. While securing
permanent shelter—a home—has become a goal for the majority of
individuals in our world, migration remains one of our main strategies
for survival. Today, tens of millions of individuals live a nomadic
lifestyle as hunter gatherers or pastoralists. Pilgrims seek moral or
spiritual significance through extended physical journeys. Immigrants
and refugees seek freedom, stability, and safety in a new community or
country. Whether physical or metaphysical, humanity survives by way of
continuous movement—our culture, beliefs, and histories are marked by
impermanence. Music functions as a container of meaning, a vehicle we
have used for centuries to
express and grapple with the ineffable. We want to capture music—to
write it down with a notation that clearly defines and preserves our
musical ideas for generations to come. Yet, we have struggled to create a
collection of symbols that can fully express our intentions—intentions
that go far beyond pitch and rhythm. With this evolution came an
ever-expanding musical vocabulary, new levels of complexity, and an
increased desire to prescribe performance practices with the pen. But
music resists this containment—the possibilities precede and outlast the
technology that seeks to write them down. The repertoire on this album
is rife with symbolism and metaphor that further teases out concepts of
impermanence, migration, and the transient nature of musical language.
From the wordless vocalises of Takemitsu’s Windhorse depicting Tibetan
nomads, to the 12th century polyphony of the Codex Calixtinus sung by
pilgrims traveling along the Camino de Santiago, to the dramatic shifts
of polyphonic style seen in the 15th century motets of Du Fay and the
Turin Manuscript, to Peter Gilbert’s contemporary meditation on the
phases of the moon—temporality is a common and unmistakable thread.
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