Category Archives: Catalogue of Works

Australian Festival of Chamber Music 2006

This year’s Australian Festival of Chamber Music, held in Townsville in early July, looks to be an absolute cracker. Co-artistic director Chris Latham has organized a stellar cast of fantastic musicians – both national and international – playing a wonderful selection of music. I was lucky enough to attend last year’s festival and being right near the Great Barrier Reef, in the tropics in the middle of winter is a marvellous experience. Temperatures are near 27 degrees and it’s just like summer in Sydney. Sure beats the 13 degrees we’ve had recently.

As part of this festival, I have a new arrangement from the second movement of A Symphony of Modern Objects, “Spirit Song”. This new chamber version is scored for shakuhachi, violin, cello, piano and percussion. Also performed will be the oboe and string quartet version of Rush, played by the inimitable Goldner String Quartet and Diana Doherty, and Technologic, performed by the Fyra Quartet on their western Queensland tour.

Works suitable for final high school music exams

Many of my works have been regularly performed for final year high school or university/college recitals. Often such recitals have strict requirements as to the length of the works that may be performed (this is currently the case with the HSC in NSW, the VCE in Victoria, as well as matriculation exams in other Australian states).

The following is a list of works from my catalogue that may be suitable for such exams.

This list is a suggestion only. I can’t count the number of times that ‘professional’ musicians have told me that a piece is too difficult to play, only to find five years later that students at school are performing it extremely well.

Please note: often I am asked to recommend further cuts to a work if it is too long for a particular examination requirement. Generally I don’t mind a few cuts. It’s best if the player decides for themselves the best place to cut, and then they may contact me if they are unsure whether it will work or not.

Name
of Work
Instrumentation Notes
Basement Art Guru and other pieces Solo violin 4 mvts, each may be played
separately.
Repetepetition not too
difficult (grade 7?), others more challenging.
Song of Life Solo violin Slow tempo, requires a singing tone. Chords but not too difficult.
Little
Chrissietina’s Magic Fantasy
2 violins or violin + piano Quite difficult but a very popular work. Shows off each of the performers very well, particularly if there are great ensemble skills on show.
“Grand Final Day” from Violin Concerto Vioin and piano reduction Difficult but showy and rewarding. Students have won eisteddfods with this piece.
Baroquerie violin and piano or violin and harpsichord Each of the 3 mvt.s may be played independently.
FourScore four violins Difficulty = between grade 6 and above.
Piano Trio violin, cello, piano The 3rd mvt. is quite showy but not wildly difficult for the violin and cello.  The first mvt. is very difficult for the pianist.  The 2nd mvt. is slow and beautiful, with a melodic role at some stage for each of the performers.
techno logic string quartet with optional electronics The 1st mvt. of this piece features the cellist in a soloistic role.  Mvts. 2, 3 and 4 are fast, very rhythmic and very much inspired by techno music.  Mvt. 5 is slow and beautiful after a cello introduction.  This piece has been performed with the addition of a didjeridu and it worked very well.
Five Movements for Saxophone Quartet saxophone quartet The final movement, GameBoy Music, is the most suited for a final performance.  It requires very good players, particularly for the melodic soprano saxophone part.
Night Pieces oboe and piano, or soprano saxophone and piano Two movements.  The first movement is short (2 minutes or so) and so the second movement, “Night Dance” is probably most suitable for this purpose.  It utilizes quarter tones in an ornamental way so would stand out in a larger programme.
By Jingoes oboe and piano Quite easy for all concerned.  Duration is about 2 1/2 minutes.
GameBoy Music clarinet in Bb and piano Virtuosic for the clarinet player. The piano accompaniment isn’t particularly simple either.
Siegfried
Interlude No. 2
clarinet in Bb and piano or soprano sax and piano 3 minute duration.  Reasonably challenging for the performers.
Nintendo
Music
clarinet in A and piano Some challenging parts for both the clarinet and piano parts, particularly in the ‘boss’ section. The work follows the structures of a typical NES platform game, so you’d want to ensure that the examiners could follow what is going on.
In Search of Ecstasy alto saxophone and piano or tenor saxophone and piano Especially written for this level of performance. Alternates between slow, serene sections and fast, loud, techno-esque material.
Ignition: Positive Trumpet in C and piano or alto saxophone and piano Written for this level of performance.  The slow opening introduction may be easily cut for time reasons. The rest of the work is informed by techno music styles.
Jungle Fever Tenor saxophone and piano or cello and piano Not as hyperactive as many of my other works, being slightly more introspective in places. Challenging for the performers, particularly the pianist who has to jump around in the left hand a bit. 
Love Serenade Bassoon and piano or cello and piano At 8 minutes, it may be a little long for the syllabus requirements of many music exams, but if the performer is expressive with a beautiful tone, this piece will come across very well.
Granny Town French horn and piano or alto saxophone and piano or tenor saxophone and piano. Not too difficult at all for the instrumental soloists.
Yandarra Double bass and piano Some cuts will be required but double bassists have told me that it’s a very effective work for their instrument and comes across well.  Challenging for the bassist.
AK-47 Solo piano with optional electronic bass drum This work is very virtuosic, requiring fingers of steel and strong arms. However it is usually stunning in performance.
Moments of Plastic Jubilation Solo piano A difficult piece in some places but very rhythmic and based upon a strong sense of fun.  If it lasts more than 5 minutes performance time, you’re playing it too slow.  Cuts should not be needed in this piece.
Plastic Jubilation Piano with CD backing track The first mvt. fits very much into the time frame.  Based upon Moments of Plastic Jubilation but not quite as technically difficult, much practice is needed to co-ordinate exactly with the CD in performance.
Mechanically Speaking Solo piano A strong sense of rhythm will enable a very effective performance of this piece.
Silent Movie Solo piano Shortish work, probably about
Grade 5 in difficulty. Somewhat informed by ragtime and pianola music, this piece has a jolly character.

Requiem for a city (2015)

for wind symphony (picc.2.2.ca.Ebcl.3.bcl.cbcl.2.cbsn.ssax.asax.tsax.bsax – 4.6.2.btrb.2 euph.2 – organ/synth – timp – perc(4) glsp/mar/mcas/clave/susp.cym/vib/BD/2 wdbl/2 c.bell/tamb/xyl/tam-t/log drum/hi-hat/cabasa/SD/crash cym – harp – string bass – synth bass)

duration: 16 minutes

Faber Music publishing details


Audio – complete performance


Programme Notes

Paul Mac writes:

Music is about freedom. All good cultural movements occur on the fringes where ratbaggery, a sense of mischief, and new vistas of visions are found and formed into newly created genres. Techno is most definitely an example of this. It is always forward looking, where new sounds, rhythms, atmospheres and ideas are continually being discovered in some kind of international dialogue from the African-Amercian straight and gay club lands of Detroit, and Chicago, the technical / conceptual response from Germany, the continual invention of new instruments from Japan (such as the Roland TR-808,909 and 303 etc) and the cultural revolution of illegal parties in warehouses and fields and the ultimate crossover of this music going Top 40 in the UK. It’s always been an exciting adventure for me.

In 2014, I was fortunate enough to receive a Fellowship from the Australia Council for the Arts. This allowed me the time to work on a wider range of compositional projects than I can normally achieve whilst still eating at the same time. One of these goals was to embark on a classical collaboration with Matthew Hindson. We both have a love of Techno, and whatever it is that you define as “Classical”. I bring the synthesisers and chords, and Matthew brings the orchestration and an over-arching compositional technique that was a master class for me. It was a weekly buzz for both of us to meet up and see where we could go, applying Techno tropes to a Wind Band.


Requiem For A City is my statement against the Lock Out Laws and the cultural squeeze that is currently occurring in Sydney because of them.

After The Imperial Hotel was closed down recently, I felt so sad for the current state of Techno culture in Sydney. I lost my job/income, as did all of the bar staff and Drag/ Performance artistsTry to explain the current nanny state laws to a visitor from Berlin. Eg, you have to be there by 1.30, you can’t walk up a staircase with a drink (even if it’s in plastic), you can’t drink and smoke at the same time, smoke four metres away from the entrance (but not after 1.30am or you are ejected from the venue), you can’t eat and smoke at the same time. No whisky on its own: it has to be diluted with a mixer etc. If you want to meet your friends at that other party later- forget it.

I’m fully aware of drunken violence, and the sad events that led to the introduction of these, some would say, draconian laws,and I don’t smoke so I love having smoke free areas, but it came as a revelation one morning as I was riding my bike up Oxford St. in Sydney, that late night mainstay Olympic Yeeros had closed. This was the cultural equivalent of the gas cylinder at the BBQ becoming empty, and there is absolutely no chance of a refill!!!!.
It’s OVER!!!!!!!

Anyway, Requiem For A City is my humble prayer to a very First World Problem. But, any music culture is important, and should be respected and nurtured. I was trying to capture the joy, melancholy and triumph of the situation.
Forever forward!

Matthew Hindson writes:

I have long been a fan of Paul Mac’s work as a composer, DJ and electronic music artist.  I have also long been a fan of electronic dance music, dating right back to “Ride on Time” in 1989.

The opportunity to collaborate with one of Australia’s foremost DJs was an opportunity too good to miss, and particularly to write for the centenary of the Sydney Conservatorium of Music (which has undergone its own renaissance in recent years, embracing popular music as a valid form of musical expression.)

My last piece of electronic dance music was written in January 1990, and so it was fascinating to work with Paul on this piece in a truly collaborative way 25 years later, in 2015. Paul’s sense of harmonic progression and rhythmic layering is extremely musical.  I helped with the large-scale sense of structure and direction.  We decided on the orchestration along the way, then I entered it all into notation format and added various subtleties along the way.

This is a unique work in many respects.  Apparently there is nothing else like it in the wind symphony world. It’s testament to Paul Mac’s skill and intuition that we chose to write for this most incredible of ensembles, the wind symphony, and great that we managed to create something new and different in the process.

Programme notes by Paul Mac and Matthew Hindson. First performance: 7 Oct 2015, Australia, Verbrugghen Hall, Sydney Conservatorium of Music Wind Symphony cond. John Lynch.


CD Recording Available?

The first movement of this piece was recorded by the Sydney Conservatorium of Music Wind Symphony and was released.


Other information

The Metallic Violins (2008)

for two violins.

duration: 8 minutes

Faber Music publishing details


Audio Excerpt


Programme Notes

Adapted from a work for solo violin, The Metallic Violins uses as its inspiration the manic, wild and over-the-top electric guitar solos commonly found in varieties of heavy metal music. Known as ‘shredding’, the point of such solos is to demonstrate the performer’s virtuosity, especially in playing as fast as possible. There are a number of blistering passages for each of the violinists in this piece and it certainly requires extensive technical facility on the part of the performers.

Further reference to the heavy metal inspiration in this work can be observed through the use of a dark-sounding set of pitches and the use of similar rhythmic figures to those employed by ‘cheese-metal’ bands such as Dream Theater.

 

notes by Matthew Hindson.


Ordering Information

The full score and parts may be ordered from the Australian Music Centre


CD Recording Available?

This piece is available on a disc entitled “The Metallic Violins”, released by Tall Poppies, featuring violinists Natsuko Yoshimoto and James Cuddeford who gave the work’s premiere at the 2008 Aurora Festival.


Other information