2024 . . . kaleidoscopic ostinati (22 minutes)
I have reveled in composing what I call multi-phase ostinato music ever since my first exposure as a performer in the 1970s to the grandfather of the genre, Terry Riley’s famous In C (1964). The style (commonly categorized and misnamed as minimalist music) involves small melodic repeated-pattern ostinato chains overlapping with each other canonically as they weave a rich, pulsating rhythmic and harmonic fabric out of simple threads. Dancing Water is a retrospective medley of my works in this style, from fresh 2024 writing all the way back to my first ostinato piece, Effulgence (1984).
The pieces flow together in one continuous listening (or dancing!) stream.

“Horace’s Fountain” (2024) recalls my 1950s childhood joy of watching the geyser of the Horace Rackham Memorial Fountain at the Detroit Zoo cascade over charming sculpted bears.


“Shore Birds” was music originally composed for my 1993 ballet score, PTACI (“Birds”), based on the musical bird call sketches of the Moravian composer Leoš Janáček. Here the music suggests the flight of birds over the sparkling surf of Mustang Island.
“Buckingham Fountain” is one of my Chicago Sketches (2019) originally scored for flutes, inspired by Reich’s Vermont Counterpoint (1982) commissioned and recorded by flutist Ransom Wilson. The fountain in Grant Park is a magnificent symphony of dancing water.


“Rainbow” portrays the hopeful search for sunlight refracted through water vapor after a storm. Its music is from Looking for the Rainbow (2021), composed during the pandemic as a prequel to Rainbow Rising (2016), an earlier canonic piece for cellos.
“Otter Creek” flows eagerly into Lake Michigan, where its water shines over rippled sand as it spreads out to join the Great Lake’s waves. The music represented WATER, one of Aristotle’s Elements (2022).


“Vltava” the great Czech river flowing through Prague, was celebrated as one tone poem in Smetana’s Ma Vlast. In my string orchestra composition Three States of Water (2021) the music represented water’s LIQUID state, contrasted with the SOLID state of “Ice Dunes”.
“Effulgence” from the 1984 piece that started all this, is a celebration of radiant, resplendent light energetically sparkling on the wind-blown waves of Lake Michigan’s cold blue water.






















