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The
music of Nikola Resanovic brings together the rich traditions of
his Serbian heritage and the weird, but familiar sounds of the computer
age. The squeaks and clicks of our modems and the buzzing of our
cell phones, to Resanovic, are a kind of music-part of the soundtrack
of busy 21st-century lives-that is not without its charms and compositional
possibilities. For University of Akron professor Resanovic (pronounced
Reh-ZAHN-o-vitch), composing is clearly a joyous, deeply human activity
that ought to be playful in the best sense of the word.
His
twelve-minute piece for clarinet and digital audio tape, alt.music.ballistix,
has been described as a wild and fascinating work (The
Clarinet journal, December 2002). Its opening section, subtitled
A Matter of Fax, invites us to contemplate the otherworldly
arias of a computer modem trying, with slithering cadenzas of electronic
squawks and urgent beeps, to connect with the Internet. A clarinet
enters, lost in a reverie, but is soon caught up in the infectious
rhythms of Macedonian and Bulgarian dances until, finally, squealing
static and the recorded voice of an overseas operator join in the
frenzied hoedown.
Is
this, as the composer has impishly suggested, a musical representation
of a peasant downloading the latest Nasdaq figures via his cell
phone/modem onto his laptop in some remote region of the Balkans,
with his cows grazing in the background? The effect, achieved with
a dazzling array of digital technology-from a Kurzweil K2000s sampling
keyboard and synthesizer to a DATAsync sync box-is so droll it has
left audiences from Xian, China, to Oulu, Finland, laughing out
loud.
The
three movements of Resanovic's Crosstalk for E flat alto
saxophone and digital audio tape, written in 1994, are titled Be-bop,
Bloop-beep and Flashback; while South
Side Fantasy (2002) for solo double bass and CD is described
by the composer as a fantastic journey into a large Serbian
hall on the south side of Chicago during the mid-1900s. It's
late at night and the Popovich Brothers tamburitza orchestra is
hopping. The double bass, our interlocutor, both participates in
the ethnic Serbian experience and transforms it into a modern American
experience, weaving together old and new.
Resanovic,
who was born in England in 1955, is also capable of writing much
more straightforward music for acoustic instruments-such as the
lyrical Sonata for Flute and Piano (2001); The Ox and
the Lark (2003), a duo for alto saxophone and clarinet (guess
which role each instrument takes); or Intermezzo: On the Field
of Blackbirds (1999) for solo piano, composed in honor of the
Serbian linguist, historian and ethnologist Vuk Karadzich (1787-1864).
The Golden Canon (1984), recorded by the Solaris woodwind
quintet, was deemed "a radiant series of lyrical and swirling
encounters" (Donald Rosenberg, The Plain Dealer) and
"a fascinating and beautiful work that develops great complexity
while maintaining a basic tonality and theme" (Barry Kilpatrick,
The American Record Guide). Dance In A White Bay (1996)
is a stirring symphonic ode for orchestra commemorating the crew
of the Edmund Fitzgerald, the huge ore freighter lost in
a storm on Lake Superior in 1975.
The
composer may have been thinking of his own ocean crossing at the
age of eleven. His first memories of America are of the Statue of
Liberty, which he sailed past in 1966 with his parents (who had
fled Serbia for England after World War Two) on the Queen Elizabeth.
Musically precocious, young Nikola would in time be admitted to
the University of Akron School of Music, where he studied voice
with Rodney Miller, piano with Douglas Hicks and Marion Lott, and
theory and composition with David Bernstein (winner of the 2000
Cleveland Arts Prize for Music). After earning a doctorate in composition
at the Cleveland Institute of Music in 1982, where he studied composition
with Donald Erb, piano with Olga Radosavljevich, and electro-acoustic
music technology with David Peele, Resanovic continued to teach
at Akron. He joined the school's fulltime music faculty in 1984
and became director of its electronic music program three years
later. In 1999, he was asked to oversee the design and construction
of the university's new state-of-the-art electronic music facility,
which opened the following year.
Resanovic
has not only drawn on his Balkan background for such pieces as Drones
and Nanorhythms, a three-movement work for woodwind quintet
composed in 2000, he has also produced several volumes of liturgical
music adapting the sacred chant of the Serbian Orthodox Church to
the English language. His secular rhapsodies built around the music
of the former Yugoslavia have been performed by Serbian choral societies
throughout the United States and Canada.
Resanovic's
orchestral and chamber music has also delighted audiences throughout
the U.S. and Canada, as well as in Britain, Holland, Germany, Poland,
Portugal, Spain, Finland, Sweden, China, Israel and Australia. Since
1999, his compositions have been featured in more than 75 separate
performances by such groups as the Toledo Symphony, Cleveland Orchestra
Trio and Chicago Brass Choir and in such prestigious venues as Tanglewood,
Boston-Symphony Hall, Severance Hall, Interlochen and Blossom Music
Center.
text
by
Dennis
Dooley
1986 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
Fall 2003
http://www.nikolaresanovic.com
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