An interview with CURED film composer Ian Honeyman

An interview with CURED film composer Ian Honeyman


On Wednesday, May 26th, you have the chance to see a private screening (from home) of the immensely powerful documentary CURED. We recorded the soundtrack, our first, with pianist Daniel Schlosberg in Dallas just days before quarantine orders came down and it remains one of the most intense sessions we’ve been a part of. CURED composer Ian Honeyman is a longtime friend of Russ’ from their time in school at Peabody and Doyle recently caught up with this busy film scorer by phone.

Doyle Armbrust: When you and Russ met in college at Peabody, were you already heading down this path towards film scoring or was that something that came later for you?

Ian Honeyman: That developed later because at that time, when we were in music school, I don't think there was a lot of information about film scoring. I knew about Danny Elfman and John Williams, but I didn't know that that was a job that you could just have.

'Perhaps I was possessed by the film'–An Interview with Sir Lyra Hill

Six and a half years ago and I found myself on the set of Uzi’s Party, cooking lunch for the cast and crew. Although there was technically only one star in the film, the Roger’s Park home was crowded, everyone working diligently under the direction of friend and fellow School of the Art Institute of Chicago alum, Lyra Hill. To be honest, I volunteered for this to get in on Lyra’s magic. 

Sir Lyra Hill is a force—their transition from filmmaker, to Master of Ceremonies, to comic artist, to performer, is entrancing and seemingly effortless. Their method is thoughtful and meticulous. Lyra is the kind of artist and organizer that we all admire, and I’m very excited to have had the chance to connect with them again over this serendipitous showing of Uzi’s Party.

Join us this Sunday (02/09) to catch Lyra’s film, Uzi’s Party, which has never before been shown on 16mm film – as Lyra says, “its true and best form” – in Chicago.

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Alyssa Martinez: Your sister, Johanna co-wrote and starred in the film—what sparked the idea for the film and your collaboration with one another? 

Lyra Hill: The technical challenge of the movie was actually my first inspiration. Then, the setting of a group of adolescent girls having a Ouija party. I experienced a pivotal, terrifying sleepover around age 12, where my friends and I lost our shit over (what seemed to be) Ouija possession. My sister was 19 when I wrote the film. I consulted heavily with her in developing the signature of each character. I saw her in my mind's eye when I imagined the film, and I knew I could trust her with such a grueling project. I never considered anyone else for the role.

AM: How did she prepare to embody each of these five different characters during filming? 

LH: Months of discussion and play familiarized us both with the characters. And Jojo did amazing work in the short time before we started shooting. A lot came together in the week preceding production. I flew her out to Chicago and we collected all the costumes, wigs, accessories and color palettes of each character, with a lot of help from Marjorie Bailey and Jenna Caravello.

 In order to film shots with dialog between visible characters, we had to pre-record the dialog at the pace we desired, so that we could be sure each character, filmed separately using multiple exposure, spoke at the right time. This technical necessity meant that Jojo and I stayed up late nights running through every scene. On set, I would listen to the recordings during takes and whisper the lines back to her to keep her in sync.

A while after filming was done, she told me that making Uzi's Party required her to pull her personality apart. Many people watch the film and don't realize that she plays every role. When she put herself back together, she said, it was in a new way with new knowledge. I am still in awe at how quickly she transformed, again and again, every day on set.

 AM: All effects for Uzi's Party are done in camera – which is amazing. What were the reasons, both technically and thematically, for your decision to work this way? 

LH: I love to do things that are almost impossible! Haha, it's true and it's very painful. I was heavily invested in optical printing and in-camera matting at the time, and I wanted to use my skills for a narrative picture about possession. Perhaps I was possessed by the film. I'd never filmed sync sound or written a script before. Once the task became clear, the world opened up to me. I dove into concepts of multiple selves and split personalities. The dark and spooky backdrop provided cover for the matte lines, where different takes overlap on screen. I knew, based on my limited resources, that it would be a scrappy, imperfect image, not slick like a studio production. I wanted to create the feeling that not only the story but the material itself might fall apart at any moment. I actually expected it to come out much stranger than it did. It casts a glamour!

AM: As a fellow alum of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, I know from experience that the community really encourages students to work in different artistic disciplines—your work is especially interdisciplinary. Will you talk briefly about your experience at SAIC and how it shaped you? 

LH: The fact that SAIC encouraged me to bounce around departments was life changing. I didn't have an easy time in school, but I did make a plethora of connections that blossomed into years of successful collaborations after school, and I had the freedom to wander down several paths I never expected. Some of those paths became big parts of my artistic identity. In my last year, I co-organized workshops and screenings for the Experimental Film Society, which turned out to be the first year of my still-growing career as an event organizer and emcee.

Good relations with staff and faculty at SAIC allowed me the resources I needed to shoot and finish Uzi's Party. They have incredible 16mm facilities. I spent hours and years after graduation borrowing equipment and sitting in editing rooms, cutting my negative. I could not have made this film without such strong support.

 

AM: When you moved to LA a few years back, you began the “ritual variety show,” MULTI CULT. Will you tell me about how performers participate in this show as well as what your role is as facilitator?

LH: Yes! MULTI CULT is the work of my life! I am putting everything I learned in Chicago and more into this project. There is a submission form for every show, it's always open and free to apply. Sometimes I reach out to artists as well. The event happens quarterly, and each show features 3-4 different performances after grounding, casting, intention and a sermon by yours truly. I am the host, curator, and producer. I have a great team. Because it's a group ritual where the audience participates in creating the magic, I also priestess the show, meaning I hold and conduct the proceedings as sacred. The title that says it all is Master of Ceremonies.

AM: Do you see this role at MULTI CULT as an evolution of your role at the performative comix series BRAIN FRAME (which I and so many Chicagoans loved), a totally different thing, or somewhere in between?

LH: I think about BRAIN FRAME a lot while I'm working on MULTI CULT. My role is very similar, but the content and the context for the show is different. Los Angeles is a different context than Chicago. A ritual variety show invites a lot more artistic diversity than a performative comix reading series. In a way, it's much more difficult because I'm constantly focusing on paradox and multiplicity, both of which are impossible to focus, by their very nature. I thought that BRAIN FRAME was difficult to describe while I was doing it, but I've really done it now.

AM: Ha! Anyone who’s had the pleasure of attending one of your events knows what an incredible host you are—you have a spellbinding way of engaging the audience. When you host, how do you become that person? Do you feel different within yourself when you’re hosting vs when you're not? 

LH: Aww thank you!! Hosting comes naturally to me, not to understate how much I've practiced and studied to become better. I started out as the people-pleasing mediator in a volatile family, growing into an exhibitionist control freak in my spiritual community, and by the time I found myself hosting live events I was actually deeply shocked at how much I liked it, since I avoided performance in art school. Now I understand that when I am MC, I go to a raw place more true to myself than the version I'm playing in my day-to-day life. I channel the powers I generally repress in polite company.

AM: What are you working on now or what’s next?

LH: It's all MULTI CULT all the way! I have a show coming up in LA on the same night as this event, unfortunately, but I will be in Chicago at the end of February to perform at the fourth anniversary of Zine Not Dead! Which means I need to write a new comic this month. I've been releasing videos on YouTube: documentation of MULTI CULT as well as anarchist diatribes. I'm working towards sustaining myself with Patreon (patreon.com/multicult) so I can make all the things that are clamoring to be made inside my head and heart. MULTI CULT is a recurring show, but it's also an ethic, a framework, and a production foundation for an infinite variety of magical ideas. It's the only container that can hold me.

'The Thing that makes being an artist worthwhile'–An interview with Alex Temple

'The Thing that makes being an artist worthwhile'–An interview with Alex Temple

Doyle Armbrust: Behind the Wallpaper is one of my all-time favorite Spektral commissions...we're so happy to be bringing this piece back to Chicago with you and Julia!

Alex Temple: Thanks!  I'm really excited!

DA: Do you remember what you were consumed with, creatively, around the time you wrote it?

AT: I remember thinking a lot about the aesthetics of emotional repression — about things left half-spoken and strong statements delivered quietly.  There's plenty of that in Behind the Wallpaper.  I also remember being frustrated with cultural declinism and the way people idealize the past.  Admittedly, it's a lot easier to feel like things are declining now, in an era of resurgent nationalism and authoritarianism.  But at the time, it was important to me that the piece end with a suggestion that things will be better in the future.

'Gritty to Crystalline' – An Interview with Composer Lisa R. Coons

'Gritty to Crystalline' – An Interview with Composer Lisa R. Coons

Doyle Armbrust: We’ve been lucky enough to have years to develop The Space Between with you. How has the piece transformed since you first conceived of it?

Lisa Coons: You’re right – the work has evolved incredibly from those initial sketches! And I think that's less about the time it took and much more about the process of workshopping and collaborating with all of you; the structure is completely revamped, the materials morphed and grew (and were often discarded), and some ideas created in the workshops became integral to the piece. Perhaps the biggest change is in how I see the material: the gestures and sections started out meaning something specific (and quite personal). As you all developed them with your own bodies and instruments, and through exploration with Mark DeChiazza, these elements grew and stopped being so singular. They now feel multidimensional and inspire a much more complex read – still personal, but encompassing something more than my personal narratives. That has both been exciting and really difficult for me, as I try to work with material that has grown more complex, less linear, and often even changed meaning significantly from when I first started creating it.

'This Alternate, Strange World' – An Interview with Director Mark DeChiazza

'This Alternate, Strange World' – An Interview with Director Mark DeChiazza

Doyle Armbrust: Because you work with artists of different disciplines, is part of your job as a director to "discover your instrument," so to speak? To interact with the performers and find out how to most effectively use their bodies in space, based on what they bring to the table?

Mark DeChiazza: Absolutely, and the fewer assumptions about “the instrument” one starts with, I think the better. I also feel staging and movement should not be decorative, but rather necessary—either grown out of a musical gesture or adding a separate conceptually important dimension or even impediment to it. So I need to understand what that gesture is and what it takes for performers to execute it.

I Had To Do It My Way: An Interview with Shulamit Ran

One of the most gratifying things about playing a piece by Shulamit Ran is getting to interact with this exemplary composer. On December 12th, we are fortunate to be joined by Shulamit on stage at Constellation for Once More, With Feeling! This series exists to deepen your appreciation and enjoyment of an unfamiliar work through on-stage interviews with the composer and by playing the piece in question at both the beginning and end of the show.

Shulamit leads an extraordinary life, and is a wonderful storyteller. We sat down for a conversation at her home recently to talk about her epic second string quartet, the elusive process of creativity, and what parts of herself find their way into her writing.

We hope you enjoy this longer-form interview, and look forward to seeing you on Thursday!


Uniquely Mine – An Interview with Kotoka Suzuki

Doyle Armbrust: When we worked together this past summer, you mentioned that at the point you wrote Minyo, you were feeling quite homesick. Did evoking the sounds of Japan in this piece assuage this feeling?

 

Kotoka Suzuki: I think it was quite the contrary. The process of working with this piece made me feel more at home. I can even say that it was therapeutic. Although I lived and grew up in different countries, I always felt Japan was my homeland. But around the time when I wrote “Minyo”, I was beginning to feel that I was becoming a foreigner of my own culture from living away from Japan for many years. It’s human nature to want to feel like one belongsto something and somewhere, like religion, gender or culture. Japan is also a country that prides itself on authenticity and tradition. I was becoming no longer “authentic” - not by Japanese standard. I did not know how to process this and what this meant in terms of my identity. This question mattered to me because I felt that without knowing my own identity, I would not be able to write a convincing work that is uniquely mine. Identity is your voice.  During this time, I listened and studied numerous recordings of Japanese folk music from different regions across the country. I also learned how music is expressed very differently throughout Japan. For example, folk music from the southern region is more rhythmical and upbeat. I think this process of discovering more about my own culture and their music made me feel much closer to Japan.  It was a path to discovering and accepting my identity.   

"It's Who We Are": An Interview with Nathalie Joachim

"It's Who We Are": An Interview with Nathalie Joachim

Clara Lyon: Where does the story of Fanm d’Ayiti begin?

Nathalie Joachim: My maternal grandmother passed away in September of 2015. She was a really important voice in my life and losing her had me thinking about her voice, and also what female voices in Haiti have meant to me, historically. 

One day after she had passed, I was having a casual conversation with my parents, and it was weird: I was thinking about these voices and how they are such a part of who I am, but also that – except for Emeline Michel – I couldn’t actually name any other female Haitian artists. So my parents and I started talking about which female artists they could remember. I still actually have the handwritten list from that evening, and there were really only a dozen names on it.

"Let's Make Space": An Interview with LJ White

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On August 14th, we kick off our 2019/20 season with our popular Once More, With Feeling! series, featuring two of our favorite artists: composer LJ White and the 1960’s cult favorites, The Shaggs. Our 2019/20 season is all about uncovering how much of a composer’s personal identity they chose – or not – to include in their writing, so Doyle got in touch with LJ (composer of Spektral fan favorite Zin zin zin zin) about how he aproached one of the most infamous tracks in all of rock history.


Doyle Armbrust: Hey LJ, I love Zin zin zin zin just as much today as I did when you first wrote it.

LJ White: Thanks!

DA: From what you state on your website, it seems like this open-arms approach to sound is still at the heart of what you are up to as a composer. Does it look any different these days than when you wrote Zin?

LJ: I wrote Zin over six years ago now, and I can explain it all better now, but I think the motivations are still the same. I like to examine and question genre barriers, and I do it through considering all of the elements of music under my control – pitches, rhythms, timbres, textures, phrasing, articulation, and on and on – independently of each other and with as open of a mind as possible. In Zin, for example, there are timbres that would fit in at Darmstadt, there are motivic and rhythmic elements from hip hop, there’s a way of thinking about vertical spacing that’s informed by spectral music, and there’s comedic timing in the structure and a rhetorical, onomatopoeic communicativeness of gesture that are reminiscent of opera buffa or cartoons.

There’s no reason all of those things can’t make sense together, if they work toward a singular purpose or feeling for the music, a singular idea that interests me. The reason I’m interested in breaking down these lines of genre, I think, is that as a queer trans person, I’ve had to continually make lots of small decisions in order to build a fitting identity outside of the big binary-gender categories that would have otherwise made those kinds of decisions (what to wear, how to speak, etc) automatically for me. And I like to try and build a world, modeled in music, where the full spectrum of decision making is open in all cases, where we all can, as much as possible, freely make decisions for ourselves.

DA: This season, we are aiming to have composers tell us what aspects of their identity they want front and center, rather than whatever the current narrative about them may be. If we were to write up a one-sentence bio for you in one of our programs, what would be the lede, as of this moment?

LJ: This is a really interesting question. Thanks for the thoughtfulness in striving to represent the composers you’re working with the way we want to be represented.

It seems like there’s two parts to it: 1) Tell us what aspects of your identity you want people to understand about you, or associate with you, and 2) What should your one-sentence bio be? In my case, a one-sentence bio wouldn’t encompass issues of identity directly. The first sentence of my bio (which, for composers, can end up being used as a “one-sentence bio,” and is something we agonize over) says that my music is “direct, focused, and socially relevant” and “assimilates a variety of influences.” This is what I think my work does, in a nutshell. However, identity issues are important to why my music has these priorities, as I’ve described. I want people to know that I’m transgender. My gender identity is something that has strongly informed my work, in tandem with other aspects of myself, and it probably it is a large part of the “current narrative” of me that is out there, cultivated by myself and others. I also care about LGBTQ+ visibility, so it’s important to me to be open. That said, my gender identity is definitely not the full picture, and probing my music would uncover a lot of other features based on an inseparable tangle of identity-based, interest-based, and personality-based traits, one which I don’t think can be summed up fairly in a sentence that would function as a composer bio.

All of this is to say, I guess, that you can feel free to tell audiences that I’m trans and that this informs my music, but let’s make space for this information to be an organic response to questions about why the music sounds the way it does and how I understand my work, along with any other relevant information that could pop up (like the amount of time I spent watching cartoons and MTV as a kid, my interest in language and communication and interpersonal dynamics, etc.)

DA: As a trans composer, that aspect of your identity is probably going to surface pretty often. Is that something you embrace, or is it challenging to automatically be compelled to be an advocate?

LJ: It’s complicated, but I do embrace it, and I hope I’m always an advocate. As I was alluding to, I think my gender identity is something that’s foundational to the way that I think of and write music, whether or not the music deals directly with LGBTQ+ issues – for all of us, our art comes from who we are – so I’ve gotten comfortable talking about it, on my own terms. And I often do want to engage those issues explicitly in music. I feel that there’s been a good balance: I’m getting to write those pieces close to as frequently as I want to, and I’m also getting a lot of opportunities to write pieces about other things.

When I write LGBTQ+-focused music, I tend to write it for friends and close colleagues in the contemporary classical world, who I know support me, and who I know think carefully about gender and other issues of identity for themselves. That way, we’re all connecting to the music with passion, and I don’t feel isolated or other-ized. There are so many important issues to grapple with right now, in 2019 – gender is just one of all of the things we’re collectively taking on. At times, I’ve turned down opportunities where that collaborative, world-improving, inclusive spirit seemed to be missing: interviews that felt tokenizing, or commissions that were too prescriptive and inauthentic to my experience, or situations where I wasn’t sure I trusted the presenting organization to get it right. But I’m thankful that an abundance of fruitful collaborations has made those experiences irrelevant, in my case.

DA: We chose you to re-imagine one of our favorite tunes, My Pal Foot Foot, because 1) We love your work, and 2) because we figured a tune this fringe would be right up your alley. Do you remember your reaction when you first heard the original track?

LJ: I was like, “This is bananas. And I need to listen to this whole album a lot.”

DA: One thing I find so compelling about this tune, and The Shaggs in general, is that they are unabashedly doing their own thing. I think the “other-ness” is what draws me in. Do you find yourself with any similar feelings of camaraderie with the music-making in this way?

LJ: I didn’t really experience it in this way, honestly. I think what was compelling about it for me was the improbable musical material and the seeming belief among the band members that they were “doing it right,” doing what musicians do – the dutiful rudiments in the drum part, the simultaneous earnestness and wackiness of the lyrics, etc. I geeked out on things like the really complex rhythmic and pitch material and amazingly weird harmonic and lyrical structure of the song, which coexist really interestingly with that dutiful vibe that I felt I was picking up on. To me, it felt more like a misguided attempt at conformity than a rebellion.

The connection for me might be in the ways that I’ve tried but spectacularly, cluelessly failed to conform to things like gender roles in the past. I’m not sure how to say this without being condescending towards the band, though.

DA: What was your lightbulb moment, when you were writing your cover?

LJ: I think it was figuring out how to do something original with this music without having it feel like I was just making fun of the Shaggs because they’re out of tune and out of time, etc. I had several false starts before I started to bring in a bigger variety of material and to, in a way, poke fun at all of it by juxtaposing it all with references to opposing styles and associations. This includes the references to my own previous music that are in the piece. I had to discover that the music needed more territory to cover in order to not take itself too seriously.

DA: You’re now a teacher of composition. Do you find yourself offering your students specific advice in terms of how much of themselves, personally, they should invite into their music?

LJ: I want my students to write really personal music, by learning how to control all of the musical elements at their disposal toward their chosen goals in a musical work, and also by being thoughtful about themselves and what’s important to them, so that they can infuse their music with their own aesthetic and extra-musical values. This doesn’t mean that they should all write explicitly confessional or identity-focused music if that isn’t what feels right – it’s really about the way of constructing music more than the music’s stated topic or purpose. I want them to make decisions in a way that’s individualized and thoughtful and connected to what they’ve been able to observe that they like or believe in or care about. I want them to think more deeply than conforming to any one style blindly, and to write music that no one else could write but them.

It’s something I put a lot of thought into.

A Larger, Mysterious Logic: An Interview with Composer Tonia Ko

A Larger, Mysterious Logic: An Interview with Composer Tonia Ko

This Friday, October 5th, we bring you Tonia Ko’s Plain, Air…a riveting encounter with the Lake Michigan shoreline ecology that received its world premiere just three weeks ago at the Openlands Lakeshore Preserve.

We’ve fallen head-over-heels for this string-quartet-and-electronics piece, and to this day, we’re fielding exuberant emails and text messages from concertgoers, eager to tell us about their personal reverberations following this unique experience.

Reconditioning the String Quartet: An Interview with Wadada Leo Smith

Reconditioning the String Quartet: An Interview with Wadada Leo Smith

There are certain artists with whom you dream of coming into orbit, and Wadada Leo Smith is finally in our galaxy. Clara and I went to see his trio play Constellation a while back, when the Cubs were winning at sportsball or whatever – so it was a small house – and both of us were struck by the patience and nuance with which he infused his performance. Every note felt purposeful and considered, and more importantly, honest.

Escaping the Straightjackets of the Past: A Conversation with soprano Kiera Duffy

Escaping the Straightjackets of the Past: A Conversation with soprano Kiera Duffy

When we programmed Arnold Schoenberg's String Quartet No. 2 for this season, we decided to shoot for the moon in the soprano realm. We're still a little astonished that Kiera Duffy agreed to join us, given that the bands that typically lay claim to her calendar include the Berlin Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera, and the Lyric Opera. In addition to a profound fluency in 20th century and contemporary music, we should say that Kiera is also a most chill hang. Rehearsals have been artistically stimulating, and also gut-bustingly entertaining. Schoenberg's 2nd is a life-and-perspective-altering piece for all of us, so we thought we'd ask her to go a little deeper on the subject.

Between Two Pianos: An Interview with Maeve Feinberg

Between Two Pianos: An Interview with Maeve Feinberg

This Friday, January 27th, marks the Chicago debut of our fantastic new violinist, Maeve Feinberg, and we thought you all might like to get a glimpse behind the scenes at what she's like...and why her personality is a perfect fit for our brand of skylarking. 

 

Doyle: So...Beethoven Op. 74, Ravel Quartet, and Dai Fujikura’s first quartet. We’re not exactly easing you into your first Chicago concert, are we?

Maeve: I want a raise.

DA: So this show is all about pieces that feature pizzicato. If you were going to get a finger tattoo, what would it look like?

MF: Well, they say you should never get tattoos on your hands but I’m thinking “FUJIKURA” across my knuckles would be suitable for this concert.

A League of Extraordinary Violinists (Part IV): James Lyon

A League of Extraordinary Violinists (Part IV): James Lyon

This violinist feature needs little-to-no introduction because it's Mr. Clara's Dad! We are very fortunate to be working with the exceptional James Lyon for our Ear Taxi shows, and given his role as violin prof. at Penn State, we expect to learn a thing or fifteen from the experience. Keep reading for string technique secrets, TMZ-level dirt on Clara, and some USDA Prime dad jokes. This run with Jim is going to be an absolute hoot!

Doyle Armbrust: Hi Jim! At one point in your career, you were a member of a quartet with a rather unusual framework. Can you tell us a bit about it?

James Lyon: Yes, for seven years I played in the Harrington String Quartet out in west Texas (insert obligatory yeehaw here).  HSQ had three missions: (1) to bring the glories of the string quartet repertoire to the good people of the Texas panhandle (B) to serve as string faculty at West Texas State University (now West Texas A&M) (3) to serve as principal players in the Amarillo Symphony (D) to go where no string quartet had gone before…whoops, NASA wanted us to keep that top secret! I guess I eventually got the proverbial seven year itch and we moved to beautiful central Pennsylvania where I have taught violin and chamber music for 25 years now! (insert nature sounds and the purr of a friendly mountain lion).  It was an honor to be associated with the fine musicians of the HSQ and we have remained friends as members have gone on to play in the St. Lawrence Quartet, the Montreal Symphony, San Francisco Opera, and the like.

A League of Extraordinary Violinists (Part III): Mathias Tacke

A League of Extraordinary Violinists (Part III): Mathias Tacke

For our first concert on the upcoming Ear Taxi Festival, we've been working feverishly on brand-new commissions from George Lewis, Tomeka Reid, and Samuel Adams with none other than Mathias Tacke. Mathias has been a coach of ours since the early days of Spektral, and his years as violinist with the (hometown heroes) Vermeer Quartet and Ensemble Modern have presented us with tremendous insights into repertoire new and old. He's also generally pretty quiet...until he comes out swinging with a zinger. It's been a true pleasure to work alongside a mentor, and we certainly threw a ton of music at him for our first foray together.

 

Doyle Armbrust: Hi Mathias! As one of our coaches in the early life of the quartet, you are a violinist we are particularly excited to be working with this fall. I'm wondering what it feels like to be sitting in with a string quartet after playing for so many years with the Vermeer?

Mathias Tacke: I am actually more aware of the many years - almost nine - without having a quartet, since the Vermeer retired in 2007.  It feels great to play with you guys - I do miss that life!