Kubing
Music For Bamboo percussion and Men's voices; 14mins. In Kubing, men’s voices are treated in various ways – as “percussion” sounds in the form of clicks and stops, as a rapid succession of plosives and as continuous sounds, vowel colors, glissandi, pitch levels of speech trills, whispers and high-pitched calls. These voices are set against a background of low-volume attacks produced by the zithers and rasping of the scrapers. The sounds of bamboo tubes, buzzers and sticks serve as bridges between sections. The characteristics twang of the jaw’s harp provides another musical ingredient. As a substitute to the vocal chords its sounds are amplified in the mouth chamber, and altered by tongue placements to produce sounds that approximate those of speech. *from program notes for “A Concert of Asian and Avant-Garde Music”, 13 and 14 December 1967
Tube (Pairs of Bamboo tubes in diminishing sizes), 7/ Baseboard (On which to stamp the tube)/ Buzzers (Buzzers of diminishing sizes), 7/ Jaw's Harp, 7/ Zithers, 3; 2 sticks to hit the strings and the tube/ Sticks for Zither/ Scraper, 3/ Tube for scraper, 3 pairs of tube/ Slit Drum/ Stick for Slit Drum
Performed in Abelardo Hall, U.P., Quezon City, 1966; CCP, Manila, 1966; Honolulu, 1967; Bahia-Brazil 1968; Hongkong 1978
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