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On march 3rd 2004, 'smear' was premiered at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds with the London Sinfonietta at the FuseLeeds Festival after having been commissioned for that occasion. The two Ondes Martenot were played by Valerie Hartmann-Claverie and Bruno Perrault. The piece lasts over 13 minutes at this point:
In march 2005 Jonny was Featured Composer at the South Bank Centre’s cutting-edge Ether Festival, where the revised version of 'smear' was performed by the London Sinfonietta at the Royal Festival Hall on march 27th and 28th 2005. One of those two performances of 'smear' was later released on CD on the London Sinfonietta Label as part of their Jerwood Series.
Information from the Faber Music website:
Description: 2 ondes martenots and chamber ensemble of 9 players
Duration: 10
Genres: Mixed Chamber Ensemble
Instrumentation: 2 ondes martenot - cl.hrn - perc(1): - vib/tam-t - harp - 2 vln.vla.vlc.db
First Performance: March 2004, FuseLeeds festival, Leeds, UK: London Sinfonietta
Availability: Score and parts for hire
Programme Notes: My impetus for writing smear came partly from a desire to get the ondes martenot heard. I'm passionate about the instrument; it’s hard not to be. It’s so little known, and yet it’s the most expressive electronic instrument ever invented. It’s often treated as a special effects device, because of the unearthly noises it can make such as ghostly, swooping tones in science fiction films. Ondistes are forever being invited to sound track recordings, with the only instruction being ‘improvise’, but it can also create earthly sounds to rival any orchestral instrument. Invented by Maurice Martenot in the 1920s, the instrument was initially met with distrust from the early musique concrete composers for being too lyrically expressive. Later, Olivier Messiaen was a champion of the instrument, but there’s a sense today that somehow it’s dated; merely a French curiosity. This is partly because of how it’s most often heard (1950s B-movies and 20th century French composers), and partly because it’s so hard to find one. Also, people assume it’s complicate to play. This isn’t particularly true either: a button, a string and a keyboard are the basis of the player’s control over every aspect of pitch, colour and dynamics, and all this with a subtlety and precision that modern midi technology just can't emulate. It’s a pure instrument, invented from the purest motives – to use electricity like a saxophone uses air. And like Adolphe Sax’s instrument, Maurice Martenot’s deserves to be heard and used by performers and composers everywhere.