Field of Vision

Field of Vision (2022) is a 60-minute, large-scale, outdoor work for 36 percussionists. Commissioned by the Caramoor Center for the Arts, it is performed on specially-constructed tuned percussion instruments, industrial metals, and gongs — each a resonant instrument that produce a complex spectrum of overtones and resonances. The number of percussionists and the vast playing field highlights the perspective and the architectural movement of sound.


Field of Vision (excerpt) at Mass MoCA (North Adams, MA) July 27, 2022
Doug Perkins conducting University of Michigan percussion and SoSI


Field of Vision (excerpt) at Caramoor (Katonah, NY) July 24, 2022
Doug Perkins conducting University of Michigan percussion and SoSI


“This piece uses a lot of industrial metals,” Gordon tells Resonance FM’s Future Classical. “I use twenty-four brake drums in the piece—an automobile part that, when a car is junked, is usually discarded. People typically strike them. But I found with experiments that if you roll on them with yarn mallets, they produce a really beautiful sound—they have a lot of overtones that are very rich, it’s almost otherworldly.”

Gordon continues:

I think of this perspective of sound a bit like moving from two-dimensional art to three-dimensional art. Sound isn’t a flat line — in Field of Vision it takes on multiple roles in space and time. The resulting waves of moving sound and varying densities are meant to induce a quasi-meditative, almost ecstatic state, in the listener as well as the performer.

I’ve been fortunate to work with the great American percussionist Doug Perkins, who teaches at University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and who has given me his percussion ensemble to experiment with. It’s fantastic to work with an orchestra of percussion. Percussion is so open—it’s really the golden age of percussion, and it has been for fifty years. Percussionists are so flexible, and even the definition of percussion is—what is percussion? Anything you can bang on, or rub, or slide your hands across, or kick; things that are finely-made instruments, or just the pots from the kitchen. It’s a world to discover, and it’s a world that is still open with possibilities.

Field of Vision is part of a series of works for single instrument groups composed by Gordon that use spatial arrangement to explore the physical and perceptual experience of music and sound. Previous pieces include 8, for eight cellistsTimber, for six percussionists, performed on 2x4s; Rushes, for seven bassoonists; and Amplified, for four electric guitarists. Each of these works toys with the listener’s perception, using subtle movements of notes through time and physical space, their interactions reveal new sounds beyond their instruments’ standard timbral palette. Taken as a whole, these discrete elements and the environment in which they are embedded form the architecture of a larger structure—one in a state of slow but unrelenting flux, in which no two moments are alike.