Research

In Conversation with Chelsea Komschlies

In Conversation with Chelsea Komschlies

McGill University: Schulich School of Music

by Jordan Gasparik

Winner of the 2021-2022 Research Alive Student Prize, composer Chelsea Komschlies talks about her project, venturing outside one's field of study and finding a vibrant culture for research creation.

2021-2022 Research Alive Student Prize-winner, composer and doctoral candidate Chelsea Komschlies will give her presentation, "Crossmodal Correspondences in Composing and Listening to Music” this week. The Research Alive series aims to unveil what makes music so magical in the ears and minds of the listener through live performance and dialogue between researchers and musicians. 

Penderecki's Phantom Bell

Penderecki's Phantom Bell

AMS 2021 National Conference

Penderecki’s Phantom Bell was presented at the 2021 AMS National Conference and later published on the Timbre and Orchestration Resource (TOR), a peer-reviewed open-access web platform supporting the analysis, creation and teaching of timbre and orchestration.

Penderecki has created a fascinating aural illusion in the fourth movement of his massive, powerful oratorio for Orthodox Easter Eve, Utrenja, Part I: The Entombment of Christ. In the opening seconds we hear the unmistakable sound of the resonance of a great dystonic cathedral bell. However, a look at the score tells us that there is no bell present at this moment. I will give an in-depth look at bell acoustics using Hibbert, Taherzadeh, and Sharp's work in bell pitch perception (2017 p. 55, 62) and show how Penderecki's timbral illusion not only models a bell, but a giant, imaginary Russian-style cathedral bell, as opposed to a European bell.