Jonah Elrod

Composer

Collaborative Work

Music for the Valparaiso University Dance Ensemble, Spring Performance, 2025. Can. And Will. Performed by Laura Reid. Choreography and light design by Karter Ensley.

 

Music for the Valparaiso University Dance Ensemble, Spring Performance, 2025. Anchorage. Performed by Logan Albright, Tyla Gross, Laura Reid, and Bella Tieri. Choreography and light design by Karter Ensley.

 

Vignette No. 8 (2023). Jonah Elrod, composer and electronics; Jessica Lindsey, bass clarinet; Kaus Sarkar, dance.

Vignette No. 8 was performed at dys/connect, a collaborate arts showcase featuring faculty and students from the UNC Charlotte College of Arts and Architecture on January 30, 2023. The performance took place off campus at The Charlotte Arts League. The fixed media is controlled through a Max patch by the composer at a laptop and through a foot pedal controlled by the dancer.

 

Acoustic Works

Score for A Lost Winter

Program Notes: A Lost Winter was composed during the 2023-2024 winter season, the warmest winter in U.S. history since record keeping began. Lost winters are characterized not only by warmer temperatures but by the lack of cold, snow, and ice. The distress of winter fundamentally changing is expressed in this piece. At the beginning, the flute represents an imaginary bird, calling for its expected winter conditions. The call eventually becomes an agitated and frustrated theme, broken down into small motives, and expressed throughout the ensemble. A middle section features searching and sustained solos from different members of the ensemble. The piece finally ends with a mournful lament, while the original bird call of the flute has been replaced by a more mechanical and artifical sounding motive in the piano, which gradually fades away into nothingness.

 

Score for In the Absence of Snow

Program notes: This piece is based on the potential of future low-to-no snow events in the North American Cordillera, which is the continuous collection of mountain ranges in the west, starting in Alaska and ending in Mexico. Scientists are anticipating that in order to prevent a low-to-no snow event, we must prevent the level of global warming from reaching +2.5 degrees Celsius. Much of the musical materials located in the piano were created from mapping US average annual maximum temperature data onto musical pitches and registers. About two-thirds of the data is presented before the music changes, representing our anxiety and frustration with the potential low-to-no snow events. Finally, the rest of the data is revealed, emphasizing the rising maximum temperatures as it moves higher through the ensemble.

 

Score for Slow Emergencies, first movement “Drought as the New Normal” (for solo piano, 2022)

Program notes: Slow Emergencies refers to climate-change related issues or disasters that are perceived as slow moving to our human perception. We understand that the melting of a glacier or the creation of a megadrought takes decades, but we rather quickly become desensitized to the process and the absence of the glacier or the presence of the drought becomes a "new normal." This movement, titled Drought as the New Normal, features two contrasting musical ideas, one rather quick and florid in the high register of the piano, and the other slow moving, regular, and in the lower register. The first idea represents the natural presence of water in the Southwestern United States, and the low register idea represents human draw from the limited water resource. As the piece progresses, the human draw becomes overwhelming, but the piece ends with the hope that we can make a correction and require less draw on our water resources for our future needs.

 
The Center for New Music is performing on stage, conducted by Dr. David Gompper. The conductor is standing in front of three rows of performers. They are all wearing black pants and a different solid colored shirts.
 

Score for Lilliputian Arctic Deviation (for small symphony orchestra, 2018)

Program notes: Lilliputian Arctic Deviation is a work for sinfonietta inspired by average snow and ice extent in the Northern Hemisphere. The Rutgers University Global Snow Lab records weekly snow extent averages for the Northern Hemisphere from 1967 until the present day. This work focuses on the summer months and uses musical materials to reflect two characteristics of the data collection: a significant decline in average snow extent from 1967 to 2015, and a transition from drastic yearly differences in the late 1960s through the early 1990s, to more consistent and predictable values in the late 1990s to 2015. Similar yearly average data values are reflected through shared musical materials. Data regions are grouped into eight regions, and data points falling within the same region share motivic, melodic, harmonic, and timbral materials.

 

Score for The Vulture (for solo mezzo-soprano, 2015)

Program notes: The Vulture was selected as a winner of the One Voice Project organized by Lisa Neher in 2015. The piece considers the idea that nothing really disappears, only transforms into something new. The vulture in the text even anticipates this transformation, not only searching for a meal, but relishing her participation in this universal process.

 

Electroacoustic (live performer with electronics)

Score for The night is empty… (for clarinet and fixed media, 2018)

Program notes: The night is empty… was written for Emily Mehigh and her Miniature Month of May project in 2018. The title and the text refer to the deaths of bats in North America as they succumb to white-nose syndrome, a deadly disease that is spreading outward from the state of New York. The music evokes the atmosphere of a cave of bats, in their place of safety and hibernation, while the fungus, represented by crackling noise, is unfortunately spreading. Emily's entire Miniature Month of May project is available here.

 

Score for Urban Sky Glow (for marimba and live electronics, 2016)

Program notes: Urban Sky Glow explores how missing starlight returns to our lives as we reduce city lights. It acts as an interpretation of the levels of the starlight magnitude of one particular area of the night sky. The marimba musically represents the stars that are visible in the different magnitudes. After the first minute of the piece, four stars have been revealed: Sirius, Rigel, Betelgeuse, and the Hyades star cluster. As we move through the levels of magnitude, city light is reduced, more stars are revealed, and previously visible stars become brighter. The fixed media creates both a contrasting artificial light as well as extensions of the marimba’s starlight. As we travel through the magnitudes we also engage in two Dreams which are variations on the starlight materials.

 

Fixed Media (electronics alone)

Program notes: Ambalangoda was created for the Cities and Memory Global Collaborative Sound Project. The source recording was gathered by Stephane Marin of Espaces Sonores. The source recording features sounds from a busy roadway in Ambalangoda, Sri Lanka. These source sounds are reimagined into a kind of daydream, one that quickly focuses on particular sounds, changes the perception of the passage of time, and remixes foreground and background materials at the slightest whim.

 

Program notes: It Means ‘Light’ was inspired by the location where the original sound recording took place; the Speakers’ Corner at Hyde Park in London. People have been speaking and protesting there since the middle of the 1800s, and the source recording, to me, represents a tiny snapshot of the total collection of exchanged ideas at that specific location. This hyper-object, something that we cannot experience within our short lifetimes, is represented by crowd noise rapidly speeding up and slowing down through the piece.

 

Site-Specific Environmental Music and Installations

Site-specific pop-up multimedia installation. Luther College, Summer, 2019.

Program notes: This excerpt is from a piece titled Cries of the Earth at Solstice first performed at the exact moment of sundown on the day of the summer solstice, June 21, 2019. The music represents the cries of the many species of the Earth, simultaneously celebrating and mourning the ending of the days getting longer and the beginning of the long march toward the next winter solstice six months later. Originally performed in an open field, the daylight was still rather bright and the video was not viewable. This video shows the same piece, but presented simultaneously inside (video on a screen visible through the window) and outside (small Bluetooth audio speakers) and at a time of day where the video is visible.

 

Site-specific pop-up multimedia installation. Athletic Center at Luther College, Summer, 2019.

Program notes: This excerpt is from a longer pop-up sound installation that briefly appeared inside the Athletic Center at Luther College in the summer of 2019. The music was created from manipulated field recordings of nature, here presented inside a large reverberating space of concrete. One major goal of this project was to bring the manipulated sounds of nature inside human spaces to make others more aware of their growing absence from our everyday lives.