DifferAnce (Torre, Salvador)

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PDF typeset by composer
SaTo (2017/5/14)

Publisher. Info. Salvador Torre
Copyright
Misc. Notes print score in tabloid 11' x 17'
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PDF typeset by composer
SaTo (2017/8/7)

Publisher. Info. Salvador Torre
Copyright
Misc. Notes This Score is only for facility of reading, please consider at all times the General Score to know which are the actual sounds. Print in 11' x 17'
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PDF typeset by composer
SaTo (2017/5/14)

Publisher. Info. Salvador Torré
Copyright
Misc. Notes print in tabloid 11'x 17'
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General Information

Work Title DifferAnce
Alternative. Title DifferAnce for two violins
Composer Torre, Salvador
I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No. IST 14
Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's 1 movement
Year/Date of CompositionY/D of Comp. 2016
Average DurationAvg. Duration 12 minutes
Composer Time PeriodComp. Period Modern
Piece Style Modern
Instrumentation 2 violins

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DifferAnce for two violins by Salvador Torré (note to hand-program) The Derridian limit is obliquely placed in space, a word (a sound) that does not refer to a disposition but to a tension, a dissymmetry. Borders cannot be represented by a line or an edge: they are complex, pluralistic, mobile, heterogeneous and discontinuous boundaries which can be transformed, increased, decreased or multiplied. In this metaphorical space where words (sounds) carry, derive or derail, the differ(a)nce that produces chains in language, (in art) is unstoppable.

What happens when dissecting a string into sub-parts, is that the smaller the difference between two points, the greater the distance of the result, that happens with the harmonics of a string, the more they approach two points, the further it is the result, this could be a metaphor of love or affective life, but in the case of the strings this is real and totally measurable. The game between two violins is that all distances between the same violin and between the products of the two violins are very small, which makes that the sounds resulting are very far from the generating source. Musically the interval results are remote, also this happens in the rhythmic aspect caused by the speed at which each instrument moves, again the differences are very small resulting in a continuous rhythmic skidding, pitches, intervals and speeds mirroring continuously in these three musical universes, in addition, being that both violins are of the same nature, the listener also “derive or derails “ in a minimum and maximum splitting by differences in each plane of listening, making “chains impossible to stop”. S.T.