Introducing the first installment of our Achelois Education summer series: Outside the Self!
“Outside the Self” is all about inspiring courageous and vulnerable human connections, especially with people who seem different from you. In this 3-part series, we’ll explore themes such as empathy, social awareness, and active listening through the means of the graphic score. If you’re unfamiliar with a graphic score, it’s a medium containing symbols, images, shapes, or animations from which musicians read as they perform. Anything goes for a graphic score!
Owing to their flexible notation, graphic scores can offer specific instructions for performance or merely present a visual interpretation of the piece itself, leaving the stylistic choices entirely up to the performer(s). Early graphic scores were originally referred to as "Augenmusik", which literally translates to "eye music”. This music is to be appreciated sonically and visually with some of the oldest surviving compositions from the Renaissance period. One example of Augenmusik is the canon “Tout par compass suy corposis”, composed by Baude Cordier (ca. 1380 – ca. 1440). Take a look below for a manuscript animation and performance.