Founded in 2003 by Daniel Goode
First concert:
April 30, 2004
Conductor: Tara Simoncic
a new idea for a
real orchestral sound with rotating instrumentation
"It's an orchestra."
Ñ JD Parran, clarinetist/saxophonist, 2013
"Lovely music."
Ñ Christian Wolff, composer, 2012
we can surmount the
rigidity of the historical orchestra with a section of one
instrumental family plus a smattering of others; changing
every year or two!
A re-forming of the symphony orchestra so that a
group of, say 15-20 musicians through strategic
instrumentation has an orchestral sound: both the "mass" and
the variety. For example: 10 trombones, 2 clarinets, 2
double basses, piano, percussion (the 2007 orchestra)
The
Flexible Orchestra principles:
1) It should sound like an
orchestra. That means at least oneÑprobably only oneÑsection
of multiples of a single instrumental type. And like an
orchestra there are also different timbres from a few other
instruments used both for contrast and emphasis.
2) It should have flexible
orchestration, meaning it should change its section of
multiples and the contrasting group of instruments every so
often, let's say every year or two, not every two hundred
years (and more) as with the official Western orchestra.
3) It must be economical, that is,
accomplish its sound concept at a reasonable cost. So if the
Flexible Orchestra caps at fifteen players, there might be
twelve for the section of multiples and three for the
contrasting group; or perhaps eleven and four, etc.
4) Such a type of orchestra could
spring up anywhere and make use of the instrumental strengths
of a community or geographical area. Let's say San Francisco
proper has a surfeit of double basses, while the Peninsula has
lots of violas; Cincinnati may have many trumpets. Those could
be the multiples in each of these communities that make up
cores of flexible orchestras in each place.
For the genesis and theoretical
background of the Flexible Orchestra please see Letter
from Vienna (1999), part 3, The
Problem of the Orchestra.