Game of Attrition (2009)
New York Philharmonic commission for chamber orchestra

Ms. Sierra has long been fascinated by game theory and Darwinian evolution, and this piece is an attempt to evoke the process of attrition, as in natural selection. Throughout the bustling work, instruments engage and tussle with one another as if struggling to prevail and move up the musical/evolutionary ladder. Yet, as the title suggests, Ms. Sierra makes a game of it. Little cells of tightly confined pitches knock about with others, grow into larger gestures and then cut loose into skittish flights.
The New York Times

Listen to an excerpt of the world premiere performance →
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Program note:
A game of attrition gradually reduces the strengths of the opponents through sustained attack or pressure; in game theory, it is when two contestants compete for a resource while accumulating costs and losses over time. Natural selection as described in Darwin’s Origin of Species was probably the first description of this game in nature: When two species share the same place in the same environment, they will compete all the more to survive.
An important feature of the work is the competitive duo, where two solo instruments of similar tessitura compete for dominance or territory within the overall sound. The musical environment in which these competitions take place is made up of small cellular figurations that replicate, grow and evolve throughout the body of the piece.
In this Darwin bicentenary year, the sense of Game of Attrition is a contemporary and scientific wonder of the pastoral, leaving behind the old, somewhat naive romantic ideal. Through a modern understanding and appreciation, we have the means to account not just for nature's beauty, but also its complexity, violence and vulnerability.

The new age of classical music in New York couldn’t be more aptly heralded than with Arlene Sierra’s Game of Attrition. ... At turns spry, savage, sly and seductive, Game of Attrition is a Stravinskian play among brass and strings, piano and percussion ... so enrapturing.
Time Out New York

Seen and Heard International
Video Feature on Game of Attrition:

Photos:
1. Arlene Sierra discusses her score with Magnus Lindberg, conductor and NYPO Composer-in-Residence
2. Pre-concert interview at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
3. The world premiere of Game of Attrition at Symphony Space
4. Post-concert Composer Panel at Symphony Space:
(l to r) Kampela, Sierra, Liang, Dalbavie, & Lindberg
Photography © Chris Lee and Liz Thornton
arlene sierra,composer biography works performances, 12/13 reviews debut cd contact
listen: orchestral listen: vocal listen: chamber faustine art of war
ny phil: game of attrition interviews photos past performances
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