SIX DRUMSETS As this piece of music has emerged over the last nine months, it has become more and more apparent to me that it’s origins lie in my experi- ences with Japanese traditional music. Although several American musicians are listed as influences in the musical notes that follow, Six Drumsets could not have been conceived without the musical studies that I pursued while on extended stay in Japan during the winter of 90/ 91. I'had the tremendous good fortune to spend that time studying with the legendary drumming groups Kodo, O Gion Daiko, and O Edo Sukeroku Taiko. These three groups present an orchestration of multiple drummers (performing on taiko, the Japanese traditional drum) in the most stunning compositional and performing context imaginable. I am in great debt to these drummers, and the Uchida Foundation, which made my studies possible. Past: In the Glow of the Fire. The first movement is composed around the basic rhythm of a folk song of the Garifuna tribe of Belize called “Paranda”. This broken 16th note rhythm is stated early in the piece by drumset 5, and is reconstructed one note at a time by drumset 2. This “reconstruction” is displaced by three 16th notes, creating a canonic relationship between the two drumsets. This same process takes place in part two of “Past”, but this time orchestrated on cowbells and woodblocks. This process of thematic statement, displaced reconstruc- tion (and many other techniques heard in Six Drumsets) is greatly inspired by renowned composer Steve Reich whose philosophy of “music as a gradual process” permeates “Past”. Present: Nothing Like This Ever Was. The second movement is based on linear movement and phrasing. Simply stated, linear movement on drums occurs when the performer only plays one note at a time, and avoids the layering common to most drumming. In “Present”, this idea is stretched to apply not only to an individual drummer, but also to the entire group playing “linear tag” with the main theme. The concept of linear drumming has been pioneered and taught for years by drummer extraordinare Gary Chaffee, whose teachings have greatly inspired “Present”. Future: Tomorrow Transformed. The third movement features six simultaneous themes performed on six DrumKats. The themes are stated and developed in the minimalist fashion creating a kaleidoscopic of interlocking melodies and textures. The electronic nature of Future is inspired by, and in debt to, the ethereal textures and atmospheres of film composer Mark Isham. The Dreamtime. Using both electronic percussion and acoustic drums, The Dreamtime introduces new themes and returns to former ones to bring Six Drumsets to it’s conclusion.