Works: The Corley Conspiracy (2007)
Corley, it transpired, believed that he was being watched and listened to through his television and radio by Them (the Government, security services, etc.). He posted his suspicions at very great length and frequency on Usenet in the 1990s, using various early spamming techniques to mask his identity. Intrigued, I then managed to dig up many of Corley's posts from Google's archive of Usenet. They made for fascinating reading; and as one does in these situations, I thought to myself, "you know, this would make a great piece of music theatre!" I put together a rough script formed from the Corley posts, placing them in order to form a linear narrative, and inventing an ambiguous ending for the piece. I began to collaborate with my friend and colleague Sean Starke - who also became hooked on Corley - and he re-worked it into the far superior script we have today, while I got on and composed some music for it.
The script is comprised of seven scenes, which I broadly split into two halves, depicting, in a sense, the rise and fall of Mike Corley. The music for the first half, after the Prologue (Scene I, the music for which is reprised in the Epilogue, Scene VII) is a kind of three movement Concerto Grosso, spanning scenes II through IV. For the second part (spanning scenes V and VI), I have written a set of five variations, thinking perhaps of the final parts of Berg's Wozzeck: variations on a sequence of notes (a Passacaglia followed by a Chaconne), on an interval (a perfect fourth - heard repeatedly throughout the work), on a chord (built from multiple perfect fourths), and finally, on just a single note.
| I: Have The British Gone Mad? | Prologue |
| II: BBC's Hidden Shame | Concerto: Prelude (Adagio) Allegretto Reprise (Adagio) |
| III: Email Protected | Concerto: Recitative |
| IV: Paranoia | Concerto: Finale |
| V: Sulpiride 200mgs | Variations: no. 1. Passacaglia no. 2. Chaconne |
| VI: Censorship | Variations: no. 3. on an Interval no. 4. on a Chord no. 5. on a Note |
| VII: The Continuing Silence | Epilogue |
Although this production is billed as an "opera", there is no singing: all the voice parts are spoken, performed by actors. I felt, following my first opera, The Bridge, that when dealing with a detailed, modern English text, one not originally intended to be sung and which has its own internal pacing, that setting it to music can detract from the text's drama, and not add to it. For Corley, I also rejected the option of sprechgesang and sprechstimme techniques on the grounds that good actors could deliver the lines with better timing than would be possible to set down in music - at least without the luxury of vast amounts of rehearsal time. Furthermore, I find that, to my ears at least, contemporary English sounds faintly ridiculous when subjected to the musical histrionics of modernism. Therefore, although there is music throughout the piece, and although this music relates strongly to the text, all the words are spoken and not sung, with the precise timing left to the actors themselves. Whether or not this counts as "opera", I leave to the listener to decide!
The Corley Conspiracy was commissioned by The London Design Festival 2007.
Further Information / Downloads
| Premiere: | 19th September 2007, Southbank Centre, London, by Radius (Directed by Sean Starke; Paul Tosio as Corley; conducted by John Traill; Jennifer George, flute; Charys Green, clarinet; Jocelyn Lightfoot, horn; Huw Morgan, trumpet; Tyler Vahldick, trombone; Alexander Sitkovetsky, violin; Oliver Coates, cello; John Reid, piano; Adrian Spillett, percussion) |
| Duration: | 80 minutes |
| Instrumentation: | 7 actors (spoken parts), fl, cl, hn, tpt, tbn, vn, vc, pno, perc. |
| Available files: |
|
| Listen: | You must first get Flash to see and use the MP3 player.
|
Return to the full list of works
Free Music
All of my music is available for performance and recording, whether commercial or not, free of charge, under the Creative Commons licence (to be precise, the Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales Licence).
You may simply download scores and parts (they are in PDF format) from this site and print them off yourself for your own use. I simply ask that you give the correct attribution, do not create "derivative works", and contact me to let me know about your performances, and so I can help promote your event.
If however you would like to pay, then there's always the tipjar!
Access the music and listen to online recordings
Tip Jar
Any support for my music is of course very gratefully received, and so — in the time-honoured fashion
of placing one's open instrument case before the public —
I offer you the opportunity of donating towards my work as a composer - securely, online, via Google Checkout.
FREE! If you are so generous as to donate £5.00, and live in the UK, EU or North America, then I'll post you a free copy of Radius's debut CD, which features excellent performances of two of my works, Five Bagatelles and Piano Prelude I.



Find Tim Benjamin on: