UP TO 50% off Christmas Choral Multi-Copy Purchases Ask the CE team
UP TO 50% off Choral Multi-Copy Purchases Ask the CE team for more info

The Transistor Radio of St. Narcissus

for flugelhorn, live electronics and tape

Tim Souster

🔍 Preview Score
Logged-in user discounts applied
Log in to get discounts (now or at checkout)

£7.99£13.99

for flugelhorn, live electronics and tape

£13.99
£7.99
Ask about this work
Composer Tim Souster
Year of Composition 1983
Duration ca.25'
Categories (all composers) , ,
Catalogue ID ce-ts1trsn1

Notes

The Transistor Radio of St Narcissus was commissioned by John Wallace with funds made available by the Arts Council of Great Britain, and first performed on the Arts Council Contemporary Music Network Tour undertaken by Electronic Music Now early in 1983. It was awarded first prize in the mixed music category of the Bourges Electro-acoustic Awards in 1984. The piece requires two performers, one playing flugelhorn, the other operating the tape and live electronics, and balancing the sound.

The idea of using the flugelhorn came partly from the experience of recording some arrangements with Equale Brass for Nimbus Records the previous year, and partly from a long-standing fascination with the rich and languorous sound of many of Miles Davis’s early recordings where the flugelhorn is featured. Its lyrical fullness of tone is matched by an extraordinary range, from the lowest pedal tone on the B flat below the bass stave to the F sharp or so above the treble stave. First experiments involved recording lip glissandi on six fundamental tones, yielding six series of overtones. From these series four basic ‘matrix’ chords were derived, each of which comprises eleven to thirteen notes stretched out like an overtone series. Mirror images of the ‘matrix chords’ extending below the range of the flugelhorn were created using the Fairlight CMI. These new ‘synthetic spectra’ provide the harmonic framework as well as the timbre-world of the work. The idea of the mirror image either in pitch or time dominates the work, relating to the title which refers to a passage in Thomas Pynchon’s book The Crying of Lot 49. The heroine is reminded of her first sight of a printed circuit-board by the layout of a new housing development in San Narcisco, Southern California.

[She drove into San Narcisco on a Sunday, in a rented Impala. Nothing was happening. She looked down a slope, needing to squint for the sunlight, on to a vast sprawl of houses which had grown up all together, like a well-tended crop, from the dull brown earth, and she thought of the time she’d opened a transistor radio to replace a battery and seen her first printed circuit. The ordered swirl of houses and streets, from this high angle, sprang to her now with the same unexpected, astonishing clarity as the circuit card had. Though she knew even less about radios than about Southern Californians, there were to both outward patterns a hieroglyphic sense of concealed meaning, of intent to communicate. There’d seemed no limit to what the printed circuit could have told her (if she had tried to find out); so in her first minute of San Narcisco, a revelation also trembled just past the threshold of her understanding. Smog hung all round the horizon, the sun on the bright beige countryside was painful; she and the Chevy seemed parked at the center of an odd, religious instant. As if, on some other frequency, or out of the eye of some whirlwind rotating too slow for her heated skin even to feel the centrifugal coolness of, words were being spoken.’]

Moments of ‘revelation’ or heightened understanding occur at nodal points in the work where different sets of frequencies interlock to form some larger structure. The key nodal point lies at about 19 minutes, where the tape falls silent just before the coda. Here the flugelhorn melody is derived from cyphers in Pynchon’s book. The bass line is a mirror of the melody, and the harmony is created by live digital transposition of the melody. It is the performer who triggers these events, enhancing and extending electronically the resources of his instrument.

The shape of the work also reflects the idea of revelation in a process of changing focuses on a journey down through the layers of the sound spectrum. It starts with the noisiest distortions of the flugelhorn, concentrating on the upper reaches of the spectrum. The work moves down through the simple and more complex sound mixtures of the middle regions, to the euphony, consonant harmony, and regular rhythm of the lowest region in the coda which is a microcosm of the whole work. The sound of a transistor radio being tuned in, the emergence of the four ‘matrix chords’ out of the static, Morse signals, bass line and percussion, and finally the flugelhorn melody lead to the point of arrival, a perfect cadence based on the flugelhorn’s B flat fundamental tone.

First performed by John Wallace at the Round House, London on 27 February 1983.

The Notes which preface the score are the composer’s original instructions of 1983, slightly clarified in 1999. They apply therefore to the equipment available in the 1980s/90s. However, it is hoped that a new generation of players without access to these machines will be able to find ways of recreating the required delay and pitch-change effects by means of present-day technology.

‘Souster’s The Transistor Radio of St Narcissus is by contrast a slow trawl through gladdening networks of sound, bringing now and then to the fore a virtuoso flugelhorn part, played by John Wallace, and concluding the concert in a spirit of engaging openness and amazement.’

– Paul Griffiths The Times 28 February 1983

‘Souster’s The Transistor Radio of St Narcissus is also much concerned with contrapuntal mirroring. But its surreal title … inspires music with a phenomenal sense of fun and fantasy … Souster’s score is a virtuoso exercise in the coordination of live flugelhorn, tape and live electronics, and it derives a well-nigh mythic power from its basic, elemental images.’

– Arnold Whittall The Gramophone February 2003

The tape for The Transistor Radio of St Narcissus was produced at the Clockhouse Studio, Keele University, with the assistance of Cliff Bradbury, and at the composer’s studio in Cambridge, OdB Sound.

The following equipment was used in the realisation of the tape part.

Fairlight CMI

Roland Jupiter 8 synthesizer

Roland MC4B micro-computer

Roland Vocoder Plus

Serge Modular System analogue synthesizer

Lexicon Prime Time digital delay line

MXR pitch transposer

In the original live performances, the digital delay line, pitch transposer and Serge Modular System were used.

Performance of this work requires an additional electronic ‘tape’ part. Upon purchase of this item, the audio files will be sent to you via file transfer service.