Air Traffic Control


Composer’s note

Living only a short bicycle ride from Sydney’s Kingsford Smith International Airport, I’ve taken an interest in watching jets, turboprops, helicopters and airside vehicles jostle for position around and about the airfield in a kind of hectic, yet highly choreographed ballet.

Air Traffic Control – a lively and colourful work for solo sax – takes its inspiration from the drama and excitement of this busy airport.

The melodic nature of Air Traffic Control is highly chromatic and characterized by syncopated rhythms and accents akin to those heard in a bebop-style piece. Lending a sense of immediacy to the saxophonist’s action-packed narrative are the notated sounds of an emergency siren and the beeping of an electronic device. Phrases marked crescendo and decrescendo suggest the fading in and fading out of radar and radio transmissions. Dynamics are also used as a means of evoking a sense of varying distances.

Since 2000, I have composed several aviation inspired works. These include a choral work called Aviation (a setting of an aviation-inspired poem of Australian poet, John Kinsella) and Flight of Fancy, a musical joy-ride on a hard-to-start, hand-cranked magic carpet.

Matthew Orlovich.
Composer.


Score details

Title:

Air Traffic Control

Date:

2002

Instrumentation:

Alto Saxophone

Duration:

Approx. 4 mins 15 sec.

Premiere:

Sun 17 Nov 2002 (1.30pm), performed by Martin Hemmingway @ MLC Auditorium, Kew, VIC, Australia.

Available from

Reed Music

YouTube Clip

Above: Bryce McMurray (VIC, Australia, November 2010).


Questions?

If you would like more information about this score, feel free to get in touch. I look forward to hearing from you!