
Gabriella Smith
American composer born 26 December 1991 in Berkeley.
Born in the San Francisco Bay Area, Gabriella Smith was set on a career path in climate science or marine biology. However, encouragement from her piano teacher and a chance encounter with John Adams at the Crowden School, a private music school in Berkeley, sparked the possibility of a future in composition. At fifteen years old, she shared her scores with Adams for his analysis, and he agreed to meet once a month for a lesson. During the same period, she volunteered on a research and surveillance project on songbirds in Point Reyes, California.
Finally settling on music, she studied at the Curtis Institute of Music before beginning a PhD in composition at Princeton University. Troubled by what she perceived as the insignificance of music in the face of a challenge such as climate change, she pushed for an alliance between the art and scientific research. Her thought was that “we need everyone to make climate solutions an integral part of all of our lives,” with music playing a role.1 Smith’s hope is not only that her work connects listeners to the natural world, but also that it incites them to find joy in climate action.
Many of her pieces express the mourning, loss, and fear that climate change might evoke, such as in Requiem (2018), which lists the Latin names of all of the species that have become extinct over the past century. Others express the elation and marvel aroused when one is confronted by wild spaces. Lost Coast, for example, is inspired by the many hikes Smith has taken, often alone, in American national parks. During one of these excursions, she noticed that she could “apply a lot of the same ways you listen to music to natural soundscapes: rhythm, shape, form, texture, color, phrasing, even accidental counterpoint between different sounds.”2 This intuition is the origin of Tumblebird Contrails (2014), a piece that will be performed at the concert for the Nobel Prize in December 2023.
Several of her pieces use field recordings, capturing dawn choruses, trees, cactuses, and coral reefs, such as in Panitao (2016) and Desert Ecology (2023). Smith is interested in subaquatic soundscapes. Equipped with a hydrophone, she takes underwater recordings, debunking the idea that the ocean is a place of silence, capturing the fishes’ groaning and chewing sounds, along with the squeaks of shrimp on barrier reefs.
Recognized for her convictions, Smith is supported by notable musicians who share her outlook, including Esa-Pekka Salonen, director of the San Francisco Symphony, who programmed Breathing Forests (2021) at the inaugural edition of the California Festival in 2023. Adams, her mentor, had already scheduled Carrot Revolution (2015) for the New York Philharmonic’s “Nightcap” concert in 2019. In 2023, she participated in the “Treelogy” concert with Desert Ecology, following a commission from the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts in response to the forest fires that ravaged California.
In 2021, she recorded her first monographic album Lost Coast with cellist Gabriel Cabezas, a regular collaborator on Smith’s work.
Awards and honors
- BMI Student Composer Award, 2018
- Winner of the American Modern Ensemble Ninth Annual Composition Competition, 2015
- ASCAP Foundation Leo Kaplan Award, 2014
1. Steve HOLT, “California Soundscapes: Composer Gabriella Smith,” 1 March 2023, San Francisco Symphony website. ↩
2. Ibid. ↩
Sources
Site de la compositrice ; France Musique ; I Care if you Listen ; San Francisco Classical Voice ; Musical America
- Solo (excluding voice)
- the heaventree of stars hung with humid nightblue fruit for guitar (2013), 10 mn
- I heard the summer dust crying to be born for solo drum set (2015), 3 mn
- elec Lost Coast abridged version for solo cello and electronics (2019), 11 mn
- bare for cello (2020), 5 mn
- Imaginary Pancake for piano (2020), 7 mn
- entangled on a rotating planet for violin (2022), 4 mn
- sanguineum for violin (2022), 6 mn
- Density Rabbits for cello (2023), 3 mn
- Infinity Rabbits for cello (2023), 4 mn
- Chamber music
- Brandenburg Interstices for flute, 2 violins, viola, cello, bass and harpsichord (2012), 13 mn, modern works music publishing
- Children of the Fire for oboe, clarinet, violin, viola and bass (2012), 9 mn, modern works music publishing
- Spring/Neap for saxophone quartet (2012), 6 mn, modern works music publishing
- Gliese 581 for clarinet, guitar and cello (2013), 12 mn
- Inyo for string quartet (2013), 28 mn, modern works music publishing
- Number Nine for flute, clarinet, violin, cello, percussion and piano (2013), 11 mn, modern works music publishing
- Carrot Revolution for string quartet (2015), 11 mn, modern works music publishing [program note]
- Máncora to Huaraz for four-hand piano (2015), 5 mn, modern works music publishing
- the tide is in our veins for flute, clarinet, electric guitar, bass and piano (2015), 7 mn, modern works music publishing
- elec Panitao for clarinet, electric guitar, cello, bass, piano, percussion and field recording (2016), 5 mn
- Strobe for brass sextet (2016), 4 mn
- Loop the Fractal Hold of Rain for two guitars (2017), 10 mn, modern works music publishing
- Maré for flute, clarinet, trumpet, violin, viola and cello (2017), 7 mn, modern works music publishing [program note]
- Anthozoa for violin, cello, piano and percussion (2018), 12 mn, modern works music publishing
- Divertimento for violin, cello and bass (2018), 6 mn, modern works music publishing
- Tessellations for flute, clarinet, trumpet, violin, viola and cello (2018), 5 mn, modern works music publishing
- Divisible for flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano and percussion (2019), 10 mn
- Porcupine Wash for string quartet (2019), 15 mn
- Spark for two violins, viola, cello, bass and percussion (2021), 7 mn
- Instrumental ensemble music
- Tidalwave Kitchen for orchestra (2012), 8 mn
- Tumblebird Contrails for orchestra (2014), 12 mn
- Rust for orchestra (2016), 8 mn
- Field Guide for orchestra (2017), 10 mn, modern works music publishing [program note]
- Hexacorallia for string orchestra (2018), 26 mn
- Bioluminescence Chaconne for orchestra (2019), 14 mn
- f(x)=sin²x-1/x for orchestra (2019), 5 mn
- One for orchestra (2021), 25 mn
- Capybaraology for middle school string orchestra (2023), 5 mn
- elec Desert Ecology for string orchestra and desert field recordings (2023), 23 mn
- Concertant music
- Riprap for marimba and string quartet or string orchestra (2013), 10 mn
- Breathing Forests concerto for organ and orchestra (2021), 28 mn
- elec Lost Coast concerto for amplified cello and orchestra (2023), 26 mn
- Vocal music and instrument(s)
- A cappella vocal music
- Maha for sixteen voices (2014), 5 mn
- 2023
- Capybaraology for middle school string orchestra, 5 mn
- Density Rabbits for cello, 3 mn
- elec Desert Ecology for string orchestra and desert field recordings, 23 mn
- Infinity Rabbits for cello, 4 mn
- elec Lost Coast concerto for amplified cello and orchestra, 26 mn
- 2022
- entangled on a rotating planet for violin, 4 mn
- sanguineum for violin, 6 mn
- 2021
- Breathing Forests concerto for organ and orchestra, 28 mn
- I Fall work written with CARM project, 4 mn 39 s
- One for orchestra, 25 mn
- Spark for two violins, viola, cello, bass and percussion, 7 mn
- 2020
- Imaginary Pancake for piano, 7 mn
- bare for cello, 5 mn
- 2019
- Bioluminescence Chaconne for orchestra, 14 mn
- Divisible for flute, clarinet, violin, cello, piano and percussion, 10 mn
- elec Lost Coast abridged version for solo cello and electronics, 11 mn
- Porcupine Wash for string quartet, 15 mn
- f(x)=sin²x-1/x for orchestra, 5 mn
- 2018
- Anthozoa for violin, cello, piano and percussion, 12 mn, modern works music publishing
- Divertimento for violin, cello and bass, 6 mn, modern works music publishing
- Hexacorallia for string orchestra, 26 mn
- Requiem for eight singers and string quartet, 24 mn
- Tessellations for flute, clarinet, trumpet, violin, viola and cello, 5 mn, modern works music publishing
- 2017
- Field Guide for orchestra, 10 mn, modern works music publishing [program note]
- Loop the Fractal Hold of Rain for two guitars, 10 mn, modern works music publishing
- Maré for flute, clarinet, trumpet, violin, viola and cello, 7 mn, modern works music publishing [program note]
- 2016
- 2015
- Carrot Revolution for string quartet, 11 mn, modern works music publishing [program note]
- I heard the summer dust crying to be born for solo drum set, 3 mn
- Máncora to Huaraz for four-hand piano, 5 mn, modern works music publishing
- the tide is in our veins for flute, clarinet, electric guitar, bass and piano, 7 mn, modern works music publishing
- 2014
- Maha for sixteen voices, 5 mn
- Tumblebird Contrails for orchestra, 12 mn
- 2013
- Gliese 581 for clarinet, guitar and cello, 12 mn
- Inyo for string quartet, 28 mn, modern works music publishing
- Number Nine for flute, clarinet, violin, cello, percussion and piano, 11 mn, modern works music publishing
- Riprap for marimba and string quartet or string orchestra, 10 mn
- the heaventree of stars hung with humid nightblue fruit for guitar, 10 mn
- 2012
- Brandenburg Interstices for flute, 2 violins, viola, cello, bass and harpsichord, 13 mn, modern works music publishing
- Children of the Fire for oboe, clarinet, violin, viola and bass, 9 mn, modern works music publishing
- Spring/Neap for saxophone quartet, 6 mn, modern works music publishing
- Tidalwave Kitchen for orchestra, 8 mn
Documents
- Symphonie des nouveaux mondes. Un portrait de Gabriella Smith par Thomas Vergracht, Feb. 11, 2024
Liens Internet
- Site de la compositrice : www.gabriellasmith.com
- SoundCloud : www.soundcloud.com
(liens vérifiés en novembre 2023).
Discographie
- Gabriella SMITH, Bard of a Wasteland ; Lost Coast ; Swept ; Tarn ; Rise, dans « Lost Coast », 1 CD Bedroom Community, 2021, HVALUR40.
- Gabriella SMITH, Panitao, dans « More Field Recordings », 2 CD Cantaloupe Music, 2017, CA21136.