Spin-Flip Texu Kim

fter earning bachelor’s and master’s a coffee grinder up and down while pulver- A degrees from Seoul National University, izing coffee beans. (“I am unsure whether Texu Kim moved to the to or not it made any difference in the taste of complete his doctorate in music at Indi- my coffee,” he reported, but he decided that ana University. Along the way, he studied “it would be fun to translate the effect of the with such composers as Unsuk Chin, David multi-dimensional tremble into music.”) Dzubay, Sven-David Sandström, Claude About those exclamation marks: as a titlist, Baker, and Sangjick Jun, who prepared him Texu Kim does not lack for enthusiasm. His to make the most of his multicultural back- catalogue includes pieces named Splash!!, ground. He previously taught at Portland Flash!!, Treppab!!, Stre-----tch!!, Hiccups!!, State University and Lewis & Clark College Pali-pali!!, and Blow, Fly, Pop!!. They were in Oregon and is now on the faculty at Syr- inspired, respectively, by bursting water acuse University’s Setnor School of Music, balloons, momentary sparks of insight, an where he is assistant teaching professor of M.C. Escher lithograph, warm-up exercises, music composition, theory, and history. Kim diaphragmatic contractions, a work ethic of also served as composer-in-residence of the efficient diligence, and bubble-blowing. His Korean Symphony Orchestra from 2014 to orchestral piece Zzan!! will be premiered by 2018. In 2019 he was a fellow of the Civitella the Busan Philharmonic Orchestra in South Ranieri Foundation, an arts residency pro- Korea this April. gram that afforded him creative time at a Kim’s works have been performed by such 15th-century castle in Umbria, Italy. groups as the Minnesota Orchestra, Seoul Some of his works have focused on Kore- Philharmonic Orchestra, National Orchestra an traditions in a modern context. Monas- of Korea, Gyeonggi Philharmonic Orchestra, tic Scenes, a 2013 work for ten musicians, considers from a musical perspective how Protestant religious practices interlace with In Short indigenous shamanistic traditions in Kore- Born: December 22, 1980, in Seoul, an Christianity; Ko-Oh (2014–15) is a South Korea concerto based on a Korean folk lullaby; Resides: in Syracuse, New York, and and Chopsalteok (2012), for male singer and Portland, Oregon choir, builds on street cries of Korean ven- dors of mochi, a popular rice cake. Work composed: 2014, on commission from Spin-Flip falls more in line with a different the Korean Symphony Orchestra, Hun-Joung Lim, conductor strand of his oeuvre: works inspired by ev- eryday experiences and observations about World premiere: April 1, 2015, at the Seoul the physical world. Other works of this sort Arts Center Concert Hall as part of the SAC include Bounce!!, from 2014, prompted by Orchestra Festival, by the Korean Symphony Orchestra, Hun-Juong Lim, conductor basketballs and incorporating rebounding musical gestures and alternating chords New York Philharmonic premiere: this and instruments, and Shake It!!, an instru- performance, which marks the New York mental octet from 2014, which emanated Premiere from the composer’s experience of shaking Estimated duration: ca. 8 minutes

26 | NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC KBS Orchestra, Ensemble Intercontemporain, the latter; as an undergraduate at Seoul Ensemble Modern, and — in New York City National University, he earned bachelor’s — Alarm Will Sound, Ensemble 212, Ensem- degrees in both music and chemistry, and ble Mise-en, Harpyday Ensemble, Arcus in 1998 he won a silver medal at the Interna- Project, and the New York Classical Players. tional Chemistry Olympiad in Melbourne, He has been honored with awards from Co- Australia. Spin-Flip draws on the forces of pland House, American Modern Ensemble, a large orchestra with a substantial percus- the SCI / ASCAP Commission Competition, sion section, but the composer employs and the Isang Yun International Composi- those resources very selectively, stressing tion Prize. He is also active as an arranger, the subtle interactions among individual creating settings performed on commercial instruments or sections rather than mas- recordings featuring such artists as sopra- sive effects. No small part of its delight re- nos Sumi Jo and Youngok Shin, violinists sides in its celebration of the momentary. Suyoen Kim and Chee-Yun, violist Rich- ard Yongjae O’Neill, harpist Jung Kwak, Instrumentation: three (one dou- and pianist Yeol Eum Son, as well as at the bling ), three (one doubling opening ceremony of the 2014 Paralympic English horn), three (one doubling Winter Games. bass ), three (one doubling As Texu Kim explains, Spin-Flip was ), four horns, three , born of imagery connected to, on one three , tuba, timpani, suspend- hand, ping-pong and, on the other, the be- ed cymbals, hi-hat, castanets, vibraslap, havior of protons and electrons within a triangle, flexatone, crotales, xylophone, hydrogen atom. Although he has only an log drum, snare drum, tambourine, temple outsider’s acquaintance with the former, blocks, bongo, tom-toms, kick drum, water he is considerably more informed about gong, harp, and strings.

In the Composer’s Words

The proton and the electron in a hydrogen atom spin permanently with their rotation axis parallel to each other. That being said, they could rotate in the same direction (clockwise-clockwise, for exam- ple) or the other way. When the directional relationship changes due to absorption or emission of a certain type of energy, it is called spin-flip. The same term could also mean a sudden change of a ro- tating black hole’s spin axis, mostly when it merges with another one. Regardless of its use in physics, I titled my piece Spin-Flip simply because of the image it gives — of table tennis, with spin serve and flip shot being ping-pong techniques. I happened to share my name (spelled differently in English) with a legendary Korean table tennis player, Taek-soo Kim (b. 1970), who coached the Korean National Team of table tennis. For this reason, when meeting new people in Korea, I am often asked if I am good at table tennis. Though the answer is no, this silly coincidence has led me to write a musical piece about it. Spin-Flip is an eight-minute overture that is all about ping-pong: it conveys the driving energy of a (good) ping-pong match; its primary motives are derived from the sound of cheering.

— Texu Kim

JANUARY 2020 | 31