Onoma River

Here’s a bluesy tune from a year-long collaboration with fiddler, Esther Morgan-Ellis. This is a performance from our concert at the University of North Georgia, Dahlonega, of my tune “Onoma River.”

YouTube player
Onoma River; Esther Morgan-Ellis, fiddle; Holland Hopson, banjo

And here’s the banjo tablature:

Notes About This Tune

  • “Onoma River” is in G, played in open G tuning (gDGBD) using the clawhammer style.
  • The A part begins with a straightforward 4-bar phrase. But the second phrase has a repeated tag that comes back one beat earlier than expected. I use this kind of gesture often in my tunes.
  • The melody has lots of slips and slides between b-flat and b-natural giving the tune a bluesy feel. The raised 4th and lowered 7th fit this blues pattern, too.

Red Coreopsis

Here’s the next in the series of tunes that resulted from a year-long collaboration with fiddler, Esther Morgan-Ellis. We’ve performed them in a series of concerts beginning in Spring 2024. We plan to release a recording of them soon. Here’s a performance of my tune “Red Coreopsis” from our concert at the University of North Georgia, Dahlonega.

YouTube player
Red Coreopsis; Esther Morgan-Ellis, fiddle; Holland Hopson, banjo

And here’s the banjo tablature:

Notes About This Tune

  • “Red Coreopsis” is in A, played in open A tuning (aEAC#E – open G, capo 2) using the clawhammer style.
  • OK, I lied. It’s not really in straightforward A major. It’s actually in a mixed mode that goes by various names: mixolydian over lydian, lydian dominant, mixolydian #11, etc. The mode includes a raised fourth scale degree and a lowered seventh. It’s popular among bebop jazz musicians.
  • The B part of this tune is so crooked that it’s bent almost completely out of shape. It starts with a lovely hemiola and then leans into the raised fourth scale degree. It’s a bit of a wild ride–lots of fun when played fast!
  • The title comes from the Dwarf Red Coreopsis plant, a member of the tickseed family. I love growing these native perennials and reliably have a few varieties that reseed themselves in my garden every year.

Tidal Pull

I’ve been collaborating with fiddler, Esther Morgan-Ellis, for the last year on a group of new old-time tunes. We’ve performed them in a series of concerts beginning in Spring 2024. We plan to release a recording of them soon. Here’s a performance of my tune “Tidal Pull” from our concert at the University of North Georgia, Dahlonega.

YouTube player
Tidal Pull; Esther Morgan-Ellis, fiddle; Holland Hopson, banjo

And here’s tablature for the banjo part and a representative melody line.

Notes About This Tune

  • “Tidal Pull” is in D, played in Double D tuning (aDADE) using the clawhammer style.
  • This is one of the few tunes we play that is not crooked, which makes this one great for contra dances
  • The syncopation of the a note in the B part is an important detail that’s easy to miss.
  • For variety, I sometimes play the beginning of the second ending down an octave.
  • I wrote this tune at a beach with a very strong undertow–practically a rip current! That explains the title and the motion of the melody.

Give the tune a try, and let me know how you like it!

Numbers Station (Cynthia)

YouTube player

Here’s Rene Reder, viola, and Chris Steele, piano, in the premiere performance of my work Numbers Station (Cynthia). This is from the Chamber Music @ AEIVA concert on October 28, 2021, held in conjunction with the exhibit Marking Time: Art in the Age of Mass Incarceration at the Abroms-Engel Institute for the Visual Arts, Birmingham, Alabama. The concert was organized by Laura Usiskin.

Like many of my pieces, this composition is open form and modular. In Numbers Station (Cynthia) all of the musical material relates to two dates chosen by the performers. So, as much as I love Chris and Rene’s performance here, I’m looking forward to future versions of the piece with different instrumentation, different numbers of performers, different chosen dates, etc.