Thursday, November 7, 2013





Saturday, October 26, 2013

The philosophy of working that I strive for:
    Just sit there and see what happens.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Another Primitive YouTube Video


This is a digital demo performance of my recent work for orchestra, completed in early 2013. It is an eight minute piece in one movement. Samsara is a concept common to Hinduism and Buddhism; it is the realm or cycle of suffering in which all beings in the universe participate and which can be escaped only through enlightenment. Samsara is presided over by Yama, the wrathful god of death. Beings are driven by the three poisons: delusion (ignorance of their true nature, represented by a pig), attachment (desire or greed, represented by a bird), and aversion (anger or hatred, represented by a snake).

There are seventeen photos used in the video. As far as I can determine most are in the public domain and appear in numerous sites on the internet without attribution. Here is the list of exceptions, which are used under the indicated Creative Commons licenses:

Photos 5 & 6: BY-NC 3.0 by RigpaWiki.org, site of Rigpa Shedra  -- Nepal
Photo 7: BY-NC-ND 2.5 AU by ccdoh1 (Flickr name... can't determine the actual name) -- Australia
Photo 8: BY-NC 2.0 UK by Wllcome Library -- England
Photo 9: BY-NC-SA 2.0 by Maren Yumi Motamura -- Brazil

If anyone can demonstrate that a photo has been used improperly please contact me via my web site (johnnewellmusic.com). I will be happy to make any necessary changes.





Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Beautiful Performance.

It was a wonderful evening at the Machias Bay Chamber Concerts in Machias, Maine on Tuesday, July 2. The wonderful trio Eight Strings & a Whistle performed the work I composed for them last year, “...and nothing remains the same”. 
 

The short work is an essay on change and the ephemeral nature of our world. The opening unison note and apparently static chords feature the “white” sounds of string harmonics and non-vibrato flute. These evolve into individual instrumental lines, gradually becoming more expressive and distinct. The instruments take turns breaking away into their own short solo cadenzas, leading to a section of counterpoint of instrumental gestures. The work ends as the instrumental lines dissolve into fleeting, vaporous scale passages.
 

Click here for an mp3 audio file.


Saturday, June 29, 2013

Another Busy Month, June.

I had a great time performing the American Landscapes program in Lubec as part of the SummerKeys faculty concert series. One addition: Roberto Pace’s A Dance in the Desert; for the occasion Roberto played the second piano part and Gene Nichols played percussion.

My son Spencer was also here; three days later he ran in the first Bay of Fundy International Marathon. Click here for a couple of photos.

Next up: Eight Strings & a Whistle will perform “...and nothing remains the same” at the Machias Bay Chamber Concerts in Machias, Maine on Tuesday, July 2. They are a wonder to work with!

Friday, May 10, 2013

Busy month, April was.


We had a wonderful trip to Aroostook County late last month. On the 24th and 25th I played two solo concerts, at the University of Maine branches at Presque Isle and Fort Kent. The program, which I titled American Landscapes, included:

Excursions    Samuel Barber

Thoreau (Mvt. IV of the Concord Sonata)    Charles E. Ives

Three Pieces for Piano   Morton Feldman

Three Preludes    George Gershwin

Mad Rush   Philip Glass

Seascape   Scott Brickman

Variations on Amazing Grace   John Newell

Scott Brickman is a wonderful composer who teaches at Fort Kent. I really enjoyed playing the first performances of Scott's Seascape, which he wrote for me.

The following week I participated in a concert by the University of Machias Chorale, under the direction of Gene Nichols. The group did a superb job in performing five of my choral works.












Thursday, March 28, 2013

Eight Strings & a Whistle is a terrific trio (Suzanne Gilchrest, flute; Ina Litera, viola; and Matthew Goeke, 'cello). They recently premiered my work ...and nothing remains the same. Suzanne interviewed me for their web site and the resulting piece is at this link:

http://eightstringsandawhistle.com/the-music/our-featured-composer.html

Thanks!

Wednesday, February 27, 2013


Ice Clouds  

Here's a little project involving photos I took of our porch windows recently, coupled with the first movement from my work Sky Music, for flute, clarinet and harp. The music is titled River of Clouds. More information at www.johnnewellmusic.com/Chamber_Ensemble.html



Wednesday, February 6, 2013

News & Upcoming Events

Upcoming concerts

I look forward to playing a series of solo piano recitals in Maine this spring... Fort Kent and    Presque Isle in late April, and Lubec in June (Summerkeys faculty concert series). The program is titled American Landscapes, and includes works by Samuel Barber, Charles Ives, George Gershwin, Philip Glass, Scott Brickman, Roberto Pace and myself. 

First performances   

On March 2 the ensemble Eight Strings & a Whistle will premiere my latest chamber work “... and nothing remains the same.” The NYC-based trio will perform at La Grua Center in Stonington, Connecticut. In July they will perform it on the Machias Bay Chamber Concert series in Maine. What wonderful players they are, and how rewarding to work with them in finishing the work! Trio members are Suzanne Gilchrest (flute), Ina Litera (viola) and Matthew Goeke (‘cello).

Suzanne plans to perform my Preludes for solo flute in July in Lubec, Maine as part of the Summerkeys faculty concert series.  
     
Samsara Breakdown

Just completed a digital demo performance of my new one-movement work for orchestra. The effort was quite time-consuming and full of learning opportunities. One could even call it an exercise in obsessive-compulsive behavior. I tried something new: First, I completed a four 
stave piano reduction score then input that into Finale (notation software). I used the full orchestra template, but inserted an additional 4 staves for the piano reduction. Honestly, I had not thought much about the orchestration, except for opening violin melody, the brass fragments and a few wind licks. After completing the piano reduction staves I then used copy and paste to fill out the instrumental parts. This worked well for me, I think... it made me focus on the details
of the orchestration. 

Then I saved the Finale file as a MIDI file and imported it into Digital Performer (my sequencer software), then went to work on editing and fine tuning each instrumental part (e.g. tempo changes, expression, dynamics, phrasing). I used Garritan Personal Orchestra software for the orchestral sounds and had great fun choosing the GPO instruments.  

Actually, listening so intensely to the piece helped me to make decisions on a number of orchestration issues (percussion, flute doublings, some string registers), and I often worked back and forth between the score and DP. I rather enjoyed the process, as it called upon my experience as a performer. This was my first attempt at such a big production project, and I learned a great deal from members of the Garritan online forum. Here is the link to the performance on SoundCloud:  


God is Love 

In November 2012, my small choir at St. Aidan’s Episcopal Church in Machias, Maine performed my just-completed choral work. My working thesis that a piece isn’t finished until at least the first performance. There is something to the idea of reality-based composing. The piece is based on a wonderful poem by Steve Colhoun, a fellow member at St. Aidan’s. Upon seeing his words I knew instantly that I must set to music. Thanks to all involved!

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Creation and Creating


Here are a few thoughts I have picked up over the years that 
say something about my approach to composing music:

“What I have in my heart must come out; that is the reason 
why I compose.”
         - Ludwig van Beethoven

“I myself having been created, I cannot help having the desire
 to create.”
         - Igor Stravinsky  

“You must do something to make the world more beautiful.”
         - from Miss Rumphius, by Barbara Cooney

“Soli deo gloria”  
         - Johann Sebastian Bach would write the initials SDG 
           (Glory to God alone) at the end of a completed score. 

“Inspiration may be a form of super-consciousness, or perhaps
 of sub-consciousness. I wouldn’t know. But I am sure it is the
antithesis of self-consciousness.”
         - Aaron Copland

 “The artist is not a person endowed with free will who seeks 
his own ends, but one who allows art to realize its purposes through him.” 
         - Carl Gustave Jung