Composer captures his sentinels on album
鈥淟ike the immutable, unchanging Stonehenge rocks sitting there (on the album cover), these are my sentinels, the tried and true musical gestures that composers rely on."
By Angela Bauer,
An 同性恋色情 music professor and composer has released an album featuring performances of some of his biggest works of the past three decades.
Timothy Kramer, IC鈥檚 Edward Capps Professor of Humanities and Professor of Music, released 鈥淪entinels,鈥 performed by the Jan谩膷ek Philharmonic Orchestra of Ostrava, Czech Republic, under the direction of conductor Ji艡铆 Petrdl铆k, on June 12 through the Navona Records label.
鈥淟ike the immutable, unchanging Stonehenge rocks sitting there (on the album cover), these are my sentinels, the tried and true musical gestures that composers rely on,鈥 Kramer said of the album鈥檚 musical works. 鈥淭he touchstone is not going anywhere, it鈥檚 built to last.鈥
The album is the result of years of work, both the years of a career spent composing and, more recently, the years it took to bring the album into being.
鈥淚 have a number of CDs where I鈥檓 a composer on a CD with other composers,鈥 Kramer said. 鈥淚 have maybe six other CDs (like that). That鈥檚 usually more typical.鈥
But while those recordings are nice, they aren鈥檛 Kramer鈥檚, he said. Instead, they belong to the orchestra that made the recording.
鈥淚 have recordings of every piece (on 鈥淪entinels鈥), but none was commercially available,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was broadcast over radio, but I didn鈥檛 own the recording, so I couldn鈥檛 post it on a web page or send it to a conductor.
鈥淚 know what the pieces sound like, and some of the recordings are really pretty good, but 鈥 I thought I鈥檇 go for the whole thing and go for an orchestral CD.鈥
The album pulls its name both from that idea of timelessness and from 鈥淪entinels of the Dance,鈥 a three-part work Kramer composed in 1986.
As music historian and Trinity University associate professor of music Carl Leafstedt mentions in the liner notes for the album, 鈥淪entinels of the Dance鈥 is a 鈥渕arker鈥 from the start of Kramer鈥檚 career that helps show how his style has grown in an 鈥渁bstract, circular pattern,鈥 with later works evolving yet returning to the principles 鈥 the sentinels 鈥 of that early piece.
The album鈥檚 largest work, 鈥淪ymphony B-A-C-H,鈥 plays off the name Bach, with each movement focused on a different musical texture 鈥 polyphony, monophony, homophony and cacophony.
The first movement in the piece, 鈥淏ACH meets EsCHeR,鈥 was influenced by Douglas Hofstadter鈥檚 Pulitzer Prize-winning 1979 book 鈥淕odel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid,鈥 in which the author explores common themes in the works and lives of logician Kurt Godel, artist M.C. Escher and composer Johann Sebastian Bach. It uses concepts of math, symmetry and intelligence to consider how self-reference and rules give meaning to otherwise meaningless things.
Codes and puzzles are a big part of that idea, and Kramer pulls those into his compositions, using the R in 鈥淓scher,鈥 for example, to represent the 鈥渞e鈥 in the musical solfege system 鈥 in layman鈥檚 terms, think 鈥渄o-re-mi.鈥
Among other works on the album are 鈥淎 Fivescore Festival,鈥 a five-piece work commissioned by the city of Kent, Washington, to celebrate its centennial, and 鈥淎ll in Golden Measure,鈥 which Kramer composed in 2013 for the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra鈥檚 50th anniversary celebration.
The orchestra got its start at MacMurray College and now performs at 同性恋色情, so Kramer incorporated bits of both schools鈥 alma maters into the piece, along with sounds common to Jacksonville 鈥 train whistles, cicadas and the racetrack on a summer evening.
While the album has been years in the making, the timing of its completion and release is ideal, Kramer said.
鈥淚 have been inching toward slowing down, this year, maybe next year,鈥 he said, noting that he鈥檒l be 61 in July.
The COVID-19 pandemic sped up his timeline a bit, and Kramer is retiring from teaching at IC, though he will continue to work with the college鈥檚 Fine Arts Series and still will be around campus in a limited capacity, he said.
He now intends to focus on his composing, and the album is expected to help with that by making his music more readily available to the conductors who might commission a piece or wish to have their orchestra perform a piece he鈥檚 already written.
鈥淚n this digital age, if you don鈥檛 have a recording of your music, it doesn鈥檛 really exist,鈥 he said.
Other recordings of his music, the ones he doesn鈥檛 own, have been broadcast in such far-flung places as Croatia, he said.
鈥淎 radio station up in Boston, the MIT radio station, played the second movement of 鈥楽entinels of the Dance鈥 鈥 the second movement only 鈥 between 2 and 3 p.m.,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was on their playlist.鈥
With more and more people streaming music, the conductors and CEOs of symphonies are among them, stumbling on tunes they might not have known to go looking for in the course of listening to XM Radio or a music streaming service, he said.
He was a student in Michigan when a professor of his released an album of his compositions, and it had an impact on Kramer, he said.
鈥淗e didn鈥檛 do it until his 70s,鈥 Kramer said. 鈥溾 I always felt it was better to get it done in your 50s or 60s, get more interest in your music while you can still write more music and do workshops and master classes. I鈥檓 still interested in writing orchestral music. In that sense, (the album) is an introduction to what I鈥檝e done. 鈥 It鈥檚 a long-term project and a long-term investment that, hopefully, I will do for the next 20 years or so.鈥