‘Music at the HUSH at UIC / Seventh Species performs its neo hour’ romantic, impressionistic music at the ‘Festival of the Millennium, ‘99’ By Yael Menahem Oregon Daily Emerald Music that goes beyond the boundaries. That statement not only sums up what audiences can expect from the University’s School of Music “Fes tival of the Millennium ’99,” the comment also describes one of the event’s participating ensembles, Seventh Species, composer and group member Tim Mason said. The festival will include con certs, panel discussions, lecture/demonstrations and recep tions with the contributing com posers, all under the theme of “Ring in the New: Three Dozen Premieres for the Third Millenium.” Most compositions were written espe cially for this event, which was or ganized by artistic director Robert Kyr, an associate professor of com position and music theory. Seventh Species is one of those ensemble’s that will offer a pre miere. Composer Gary Noland started the group when he lived in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1990 as “a way for composers of new music to get together and put on concerts for audiences to hear,” ex plained Mason. The theme for this upcoming Seventh Species concert at the festi val is “Music at the 11th Hour” which Mason explains is the last opportunity for these composers to write music in the 20th Century. As part of the “Festival of the Millennium,” Mason’s world pre miere piece written for soprano and oboe, called “Three Shakespearean Sonnets,” will be performed. Species regular Art Maddox will premiere “Apocalypso.” He will be joined by another Species regular Jack Gabel, who composed “When Nobody’s Looking.” Other Species members Jeff Defty, Peter Thomas and Guy Tyler will premiere their pieces, as well. Noland has written a perform ance art piece for the event called “Venge Art” that is six hours long, but only a portion of it will be per formed in concert. Mason said he’s not sure what Noland’s piece might include, but jll 'iuvcntti Hpucifih jjerlonns Nov 10 al liuuli Hall i.Bara. »im■ v ;■sjIM he gave an outrageous example of what performance art on stage might look like. Imagine a cellist playing when the conductor signals someone to come from off stage. That person is dressed up in a gorilla suit and is walking around the cellist, who is oblivious to the going-ons, and then the gorilla leaves the stage. “If you heard it on a CD, you wouldn’t get the gorilla,” Mason ex plained. “So you have to see it per formed live in order to under stand.” Mason is an assistant researcher at the neuroscience department and has been with Seventh Species for almost two years. Noland moved to Eugene in 1994. Seventh Species’ sound varies from impressionistic, which Mason said is “new age before new age happened,” to neo-romantic, which has a narrative structure. Seventh Species’ music is at times atonal — music that doesn’t have a dis cernible melody. “You wouldn’t be coming out of the music hall humming the tune,” Mason said. Instruments range from pianos and harps to electronic instru ments, which Mason described as “just noise, kind of like Yanni.” The group performs around Eu gene three or four times a year. The composers have to pay musicians to play their music at the concerts and that is one reason the number of concerts is few, Mason noted. “Our music in not commercially sellable [or] commercially popu lar,” Mason said, emphasizing why the group’s music goes largely un noticed. “I don’t think our music would go over at Sam Bonds — they’d laugh us out of there.” Plus, they’re not your typical group of musicians. “We don’t have a guitar or a drum player. If you ask us who our bass player is, well, we don’t have one,” Mason said, with joking tone. If that doesn’t spark your curiosi ty about this eclectic bunch of com posers, the explanation about their name might. In 1725, music theorist Johann Joseph Fux developed a way to de scribe how music works. “Music is different melodic Turn to Species, Page 6B ] i The QuickCam Express Internet Video Camera With a QuickCam Express hooked up to your computer, it’s embarrassingly easy to show people the real you. Whether that person is Mom and Dad’s perfect angel or their perfect spaz. Send full-motion video with sound or sharp, still images to anyone in the world. No matter how wacked, boring or uncensored, someone will watch. Get the QuickCam Express for under $50 at the Logitech online store. www.buyIogitech.com 1 Web dot r Logitech It’s what you touch