Sonic Grace

Nicole Lizée
Slow Motion Music

25.06.20

composer Nicole Lizeé

Vangelis’ Chariots of Fire soundtrack from 1981 is embedded in my subconscious. It’s a movie I first saw when I was maybe 10 years old and to this day I have no real idea of what it’s about. Once I was old enough to understand and perhaps enjoy the movie for its narrative I seem to have subconsciously avoided doing so. It was all about the music and I didn’t want that to change. The images of racing on the beach with expressions of pain and victory, the jackets with school crests, the arguments, the meetings - it was to me a series of beautiful images but, overall, a mystery. I was enthralled and would watch it whenever possible but only as a visual accompaniment to what mattered most to me: that soundtrack. When my parents eventually got me the soundtrack on LP I always preferred to ‘listen to it on videotape’ with the images in the background.

While I was taken with the entire soundtrack it was one particular track - not the main theme, but rather Abraham’s Theme - that made this film an obsession. It put me in a trance from the first eerie glissando. While I certainly don’t listen to this soundtrack now as much as I used to I still love this piece and can perhaps finally articulate to myself why. It was/is the sound of slow motion - space within music, zooming in, disorientation, pacing, breath, energy, and more.

There’s room for further analysis in terms of synths used, production values (close mic’ing the Rhodes, emphasizing its treble overtones), the construction of the melody as it coexists alongside the more gauzy, almost discordant effects, etc. For me it’s the emotional and aesthetic impact that gives it its cogency.

It remains Slow Motion Music - regardless of whether it is coupled with the images or not. This notion is tethered to the way I compose music. I’ve taken it literally (by slowing down and transcribing music and foley to uncover something inconspicuous) and abstractly (by interpreting what something slowed down would sound like apart from merely slowing it down.)

Even at a young age there was an expectation of what film music should sound like. I listened to a lot of soundtracks and musicals - this one was different. I had no way of knowing at the time that Vangelis' choice to buck the trend and score a period film using synths was unconventional and risky. But it was surprising, mysterious, and emotional which is something that has always stayed with me.

This soundtrack could have been partly responsible for the reason I stopped winning races on track and field day - I would always run them at half speed to emulate the scenes in Chariots of Fire.

- Nicole Lizée

Listen to the haunting Abraham's Theme by Vangelis from the Chariots of Fire soundtrack.

Check out Nicole Lizeé's Hitchcock Etudes for piano, electronics, and video performed by pianist Zubin Kanga

Nicole Lizée Bio

Called “a brilliant musical scientist” (CBC), “breathtakingly inventive” (Sydney Times Herald), and “utterly inspiring” (I Care If You Listen), award winning composer and video artist Nicole Lizée creates new music and video from an eclectic mix of influences including turntablism, glitch, malfunction, rave culture, film theory, Alexander McQueen, thrash metal, and 1960s psychedelia.

Nicole’s compositions range from works for orchestra and solo turntablist featuring turntable techniques fully notated and integrated into a concert music setting, to other unorthodox instrument combinations that include the Atari 2600 video game console, vintage board games, omnichords, stylophones, Simon™, Merlin™, Ouija boards, and karaoke tapes.

Her commission list of over 50 works includes the Kronos Quartet, the BBC Proms, the New York Philharmonic, the San Francisco Symphony, Carnegie Hall, Bang On a Can, the National Arts Centre Orchestra, the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra, l’Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, Sō Percussion, Southbank Sinfonia, Eve Egoyan, and Tapestry Opera.

Awards include the Prix Opus for Composer of the Year, the SOCAN Jan. V. Matejcek Award, the Canada Council for the Arts Jules Léger Prize, an Images Festival Award, and the Canada Council Robert Fleming Prize for achievements in composition. She’s received two JUNO nominations for composition of the year. She is a Lucas Artists Fellow (California) and a Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellow (Italy). In 2016 she was selected by composer Howard Shore to be his protégée as part of the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards.