Exploring ecological thought in composition: endangerment as a key point on the map
🗓️ Thursday, 25 June — 3:50pm
- 4:30pm
(40 mins)
Presenters
Image
Abstract
There is no single definition of ecological thought. First emerged in the wake of evolutionary biology, it has since been shaped by multiple influences, among which the rise of systems theory and cybernetics in the mid-twentieth century. In the next decades it has taken on political and philosophical implications, shaping desires and utopias and merging with older and endangered traditions of thought. As it grew into a worldview characterized by layered meanings and a complex set of affective patterns, this form of thought has begun to increasingly inform artistic practices, which in turn have become an essential place to investigate what an ecological approach can be.
As a composer engaged with ecological thought, I constantly experience how this approach resists attempts to embrace it comprehensively. Every experiment generates new questions and insights, which in turn are reflected in the next compositional choices. In order to articulate the knowledge that emerges through this exploration, I started drawing a map in which sound excerpts, quotations, preparatory materials and insights coming from other fields are grouped around nodes of intensity, with a close intertwining between verbal and non-verbal elements—and between the cognitive and the affective.
After an overview of some of the many possible itineraries within this map, my presentation focuses on “endangerment” as one of the main cognitive-affective intensity nodes within ecological thought, and shows its connections and tensions with other nodes, among which “situatedness” and “organicity”. The constellation of practices and materials around these nodes can be intended as an ongoing assemblage capable of bringing out connections between different fields and of hinting at the existence of still unexplored areas. In this sense, the map is also a generative tool, because it allows to identify patterns and tensions in practice and theory and to find new gaps to address in future research.
As a composer engaged with ecological thought, I constantly experience how this approach resists attempts to embrace it comprehensively. Every experiment generates new questions and insights, which in turn are reflected in the next compositional choices. In order to articulate the knowledge that emerges through this exploration, I started drawing a map in which sound excerpts, quotations, preparatory materials and insights coming from other fields are grouped around nodes of intensity, with a close intertwining between verbal and non-verbal elements—and between the cognitive and the affective.
After an overview of some of the many possible itineraries within this map, my presentation focuses on “endangerment” as one of the main cognitive-affective intensity nodes within ecological thought, and shows its connections and tensions with other nodes, among which “situatedness” and “organicity”. The constellation of practices and materials around these nodes can be intended as an ongoing assemblage capable of bringing out connections between different fields and of hinting at the existence of still unexplored areas. In this sense, the map is also a generative tool, because it allows to identify patterns and tensions in practice and theory and to find new gaps to address in future research.
Biography
Leonardo Mezzalira studied Composition and Forest and Environmental Sciences in Padova (Italy) and is pursuing a PhD in Music Composition and Performance in a doctoral program coordinated by the Conservatory of Pescara (Italy). His works received several prizes and were performed at music festivals in Europe and in the USA, among which: EstOvest, Festival Luigi Nono, impuls festival, CAMPGround, IlSuono Contemporary Music Week, ISCM New Music Miami etc. In 2019 he founded Taverna Maderna, a contemporary music collective based in Padova, with which he is involved in collaborative projects.