[cover:] Music by David Kechley The Walbrzych Project Karasuma Wakeful Visions / Moonless Dreams Performed by Philharmonia Sudeka [general intro to project:] The Walbrzych Project My first compact disc, Winter Branches (1997) took more than 10 years to complete. It began with an idea to record two pieces requiring three performers, but it grew with the addition of more works, more performers, and more recording venues. The Walbrzych Project is my fifth collection, and it also has taken longer than planned. Unlike Branches it was complicated from the outset. It includes a seven-
minute introductory work for large orchestra and a four-movement symphony involving performances by hundreds of individuals not to mention travel to audition an orchestra in the Czech Republic before final arrangements were made with Sudeten Filharmonie. Its Chief Conductor Jerzy Kosek worked with New York-based Joel Suben to rehearse and prepare the orchestra for five recording sessions that took place during one week in the small, faraway city of Walbrzych, Poland. And then the project remained stymied after I encountered unexpected health problems in 2013. I am grateful to have recovered enough to finish the editing and production of this collection, and I have hopes it won’t be my last either. [David Kechley bio:] David Kechley began composing as a teen after years spent listening to his composer and music professor father Gerald at the piano. At 19, The Seattle Symphony premiered Second Composition for Large Orchestra and since then more than 1,000 performances of his work in a variety of genres have been performed by orchestras, chamber groups and college musical ensembles throughout the United States and abroad. His music draws from 20th Century classics and from vernacular, popular, and ethnic music. Time spent in Kyoto, Japan, profoundly affected his compositions. His pieces are marked by a distinctive style, but his musical narratives are known for sharp contrasts between lyricism, virtuosity, and dramatic gesture. Kechley’s work has been recognized and applauded for nearly 40 years by such organizations as the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, the North Carolina Arts Council, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Born in Seattle, Kechley was educated at the University of Washington, Cleveland Institute of Music, and Case Western Reserve University. He also followed his father into music education, teaching at the University of North Carolina in Wilmington, and teaching and chairing the Music Department at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts until his recent retirement as professor emeritus. [Liner Notes:] Disc One Karasuma A Fast Funk for Orchestra Karasuma has been called a “crossover” piece as it combines popular “fusion” music rhythms and themes with classical style development and orchestral techniques. The work originates from music written for a presentation given at for the Music Department at Doshisha Women’s College in Kyoto, Japan. To show various ways in which the computer could be used in music composition and performance, I composed a demonstration piece in which music students were to perform written parts on their acoustic instruments while I conducted and improvised at the computer. The instrumentation was completely dependent upon which students volunteered—it turned out to be violin, clarinet, strings bass, piano and two percussionists. The original “Fast Funk Doshisha” was a rather loosely constructed improvisation designed for a specific situation and has not been performed since. However, many of the musical ideas continued to play themselves in my head me so I eventually felt compelled to give them a permanent home in this orchestral form. Karasuma was premiered by the Boston Pops in the summer of 1993 under the title Blackbird. The present, Japanese, title is more meaningful since it specifically refers to a well known street and subway line in Kyoto. Although the word karasu written with its corresponding Chinese kanji characters does mean black bird, raven or crow, the actual name of the street is taken from several kanji characters chosen for their sounds. There are also interesting historical origins to the name Karasuma and its kanji characters that date so far back most modern residents of the area may even not be aware of them. While karasu and its kanji do mean raven or blackbird, thus explaining the original title, the relationship between a bird and this familiar location is pretty much coincidental. I created the original themes for “Fast Funk” to be entertaining, fun to play, American in character and immediate in effect. It was a wonderful experience working with those music students at Doshisha Women’s College and was a highlight of my trip to Japan in 1991. Karasuma is dedicated to Tomomi Ogino, Makiko Oda, Akemi Ueno, Mika Matsumoto, Miwa Oda and Yukiko Iwaasa—the “First Fast Funk Players.” Disc 2 Wakeful Visions / Moonless Dreams A Symphony in Four Movements I. Whirlwind II. Notari Notari III. Something Wicked IV. Moments Dreams can sometimes seem quite real while visions experienced in the light of day may seem completely unreal. Dreams or visions can be frightening, comforting, spiritual, playful, and so many other things. Each movement of Wakeful Visions / Moonless Dreams explores some of these qualities and finds its point of departure in a suggestive literary source. I. Whirlwind As the title suggests, is a fast and furious musical reaction to the well-known biblical quote: “For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind...” (Hosea 8:7). Regardless of its original 
Old Testament context this phrase clearly applies anytime human actions produce dire consequences, which are ultimately beyond the limits of human control or understanding, i.e., irreversible. The movement opens quietly, bubbling below the surface, but quickly becomes explosive with rhythmic interjections, which constantly threaten the stability of the driving triplet rhythms. The transition to a more lyrical, but still foreboding mood is sudden and the harp and marimba continue to provide the underlying rhythm for more sustained and complete thematic statements by solo and tutti strings. The explosions return, but the final texture ultimately implodes as the movement crashes to an abrupt finish. II. Notari Notari is inspired by the following haiku: Haru no umi Hinemosu notari Notari kana Behold! The spring sea undulates And undulates the whole day long. “A delightful picture of the halcyon spring sea rises to the mind’s eye at once. As far as the eye can travel, the ocean swells and sinks gently and regularly all day long.” This is how translator Asataro Miyamori describes this beautiful poem by Buson (An Anthology of Haiku Ancient and Modern, ©1932). “. . . The chief merit of this verse [is] the pleasing rhythm of notari-notari which cannot adequately be reproduced in a translation.” The music moves beyond the imagery and rhythm of the words, as the flute begins an expansive and lyrical solo. The musical ideas continue to expand beyond the first movement into broad and climatic statements. A cello and piccolo dialog returns to the opening mood and imagery. III. Something Wicked The musical imagery for Something Wicked is suggested by MacBeth, Act IV, Scene I, in which the three witches are chanting as they circle the bubbling caldron. Just before Macbeth enters, the second witch says, By the pricking of my thumbs, Something wicked this way comes. Open, locks, Whoever knocks! Because of its playful although not really dance like rhythms, perhaps this serves the role of a traditional symphonic third movement. It might even be called a scherzo in a somewhat grotesque and twisted sort of way. Percussion and various orchestral effects are employed to create a sense of malevolence and occasional chaos from which the ultimate outcome is not entirely clear. IV. Moments Moments is, among other things, about looking back and wondering if what we remember really happened or if it may have been a dream. Musical fragments from previous movements return in original form while others continue their transformative journey and create new connections with one another in a different musical reality, the reality of the present moment. The moments of the past do not remain still; they retain in our memory the motion which drew them towards the future, towards a future which has itself become the past, and draw us on in their train.   —Marcel Proust [back cover:] The Walbrzych Project Performed by Philharmonia Sudeka Disc One Karasuma: A Fast Funk for Orchestra [8:10] Disc Two Wakeful Visions / Moonless Dreams A Symphony in Four Movements [35:20] I. Whirlwind [6:32] II. Notari Notari [10:17] III. Something Wicked [8:31] IV. Moments [9:44] Produced by David Kechley Graphic Design by Rose Michelle Taverniti Liner notes by David Kechley • Liner notes edited by Rosemary Armao Innova is the label of the American Composers Forum. © ℗ David Kechley 2017. All Rights Reserved. Innova Recordings, 75 W 5th St #522, St. Paul, MN 55102, USA Innova Director: Philip Blackburn • Operations Director: Chris Campbell • Publicist: Tim Igel Innova is supported by an endowment from the McKnight Foundation • www.innova.mu • www.pinevalleypress.com