Composer's note
a commission by Brussels Philharmonic: read the program note by Cassandra Milleron her new work
Music as social experiment - or as a reminder how to cry. On Saturday, two brand-new creations take the stage: Maya Verlaak and Cassandra Miller each composed a new work for the Brussels Philharmonic.
Maya Verlaak, in her typical fashion, tosses aside all conventions and turns – with new rules, electronics, and a classical orchestra setup – the piece into a social experiment. Cassandra Miller’s intimate and engaging compositions take as their starting point existing melodies, which she variously deconstructs, loops, magnifies and utterly transforms.
Discover moreWhen Maya Verlaak receives the commission for a new orchestral work, she immediately knows where to begin: not with a key or a form, but with the performers themselves. Together with cellist Jasmijn Lootens and violinist Sarah Saviet, she explores techniques that form the basis of the concerto. More specifically, they investigate how to produce harmonics using only the bow, without fingering the strings. Technically, this is extremely demanding – and unpredictable: there is never any guarantee the harmonics will actually appear, Maya explains.
Although Maya has written for orchestra before, this is her first concerto. One of the biggest challenges lay in the score itself: how do you notate music that emerges through chance? To tackle this, she developed her own software, capable of analysing recordings of the soloists and translating them into two reservoirs of notes: one for cello, one for violin. Together, these databases contain more than two thousand short fragments, which become the building blocks of the orchestral material.
The fragments appear throughout the score like miniatures, gradually forming a layered, sometimes noise-like sonic landscape. “It is as though you are layering two concertos on top of one another,” she explains.
The title Sci-Volo-Palla refers to the Italian words scivolo (slide), volo (flight), and palla (ball) – and, in a way, to Maya’s own Italian roots as well. Movement lies at the heart of the work: this is a concerto built on action and reaction. The soloists set everything in motion, throwing musical material towards the orchestra, which responds and reflects it back.
Alongside this, Maya incorporates live electronics. Microphones capture the music and send it to a program where it is processed and transformed in real time, before being projected back into the orchestra. The result is a continuous feedback loop between soloists, orchestra, and technology.
“Tectonics? Playful and surprising! Not nearly as serious as ‘contemporary music’ can sometimes seem,” Maya says. She previously appeared at the festival in Glasgow – then as a performer. In Brussels, the DNA of Tectonics remains the same: new sounds, daring experiments, and a willingness to colour far outside the lines. A perfect fit for this young composer.
Over the years, Tectonics has established itself as a festival for new music and emerging talent. Creative commissions are an essential part of that mission: for composers, they offer rare opportunities to work with large ensembles and develop ambitious new work. By commissioning composers such as Maya Verlaak, Brussels Philharmonic consciously invests in a new generation of creators within contemporary music.
Alongside her own premiere, Maya is especially looking forward to the new work by Cassandra Miller, which will also receive its premiere during the same concert. “We both studied in The Hague. Our music is very different, but the way we think is related: critical, inquisitive, and unafraid to do things differently.” How both composers push the concerto into unknown territory will become clear on 20 June at Flagey.
Want to know more about Maya Verlaak? Visit her website.
a commission by Brussels Philharmonic: read the program note by Cassandra Milleron her new work
the full festival programme is now online — two days of new and experimental music, concerts, and installations
Alex Ross on the world premiere of Cassandra Miller's Viola Concerto by Brussels Philharmonic, Lawrence Power & Ilan Volkov