David J. Peterson talking at the Contemporary Music Festival, 2017

Evolving the language of love

It all began when Eduardo had an idea for creating a piece of music where I would write the lyrics in a language Id invented that had been evolved to demonstrate the separate stages of its evolution.
This language became Vv, which translates to 'love'. It is a working language in the same way that Esperanto is a constructed language, or 'conlang'.
I first met Professor Eduardo Mirandain 2016 at the EG Conference an annual conference of creative talents. We talked about his musical ideas including a prequel to 'The Tempest' by William Shakespeare, as an opera using one of my languages but I didnt think much more about it. 
However, Eduardo soon got in touch: 'Okay, maybe we can start to talk seriously about this piece of music'. I was like, oh my goodness, he was serious. Everything he said on that first day was pretty much everything he ended up wanting to do. 
So, for 50業子's 2017 Contemporary Music Festival, in the space of a few months, I created Vv, a language that I evolved over six different stages. I chose three of those periods to write lyrics in, a poem on the evolution of love.
Eduardo gave me the choice to hear it first, and I said, 'I dont want to surprise me'. I heard it for the first time as an 18-minute piece, also called 'Vv', all sung in my created language with four singers. It was really weird. It was really out there. But in the end, it was quite beautiful.

Tikum. Durloi.  I am small. We are great.
Loi vv.  We are love.
Bon gil笛r vdak, ulloi qas.  With many bodies, we will not feel cold.
Bon gid朝s vdak, ulloi br.  With many children, we will not hunger.
Kinl朝k sqen mbau nanahloi.  We will show them our paths.
Kinl朝k sqen mvm h.  We will teach them of fire.
Ab笛v qen svmosloi.  They will keep our knowledge.
Vv笛v loi.  They will love us.
Qen loi.  They are we.
E ohl笛v.  And we will be.
Gibil ndr e ndr.  From now to then and then.

Watch David talk about the evolution of Vv.

Using Vv to reimagine Shakespeare

Initially, I was hesitant about using Vv again, because I didnt know if it would apply to Eduardo's vision.
I knew 'The Tempest' well, it is my favourite Shakespeare play, which is saying something because I dont like Shakespeare. So, I was totally on board, but I didnt fully get it until Eduardo shared with me his plan for 'Lampedusa'.
Were in a place, this island, which is almost out of, and even before, time, with these magical beings. The universe we live in may not be the only one out there. It might be one of an infinite number of universes making up a multiverse. The Lampedusa of the opera could be one of an infinite number of other Lampedusas.
Once this was explained to me, I was fine with taking the initial stage of Vv and implanting it there as a language which is outside of time. Eduardo gave me these beats. Heres the song and heres a sentence describing whats happening. He also gave me a time stamp. But there was no hint towards the music, so it was up to me to decide on the meter. I tried to do some funky stuff. For the Ariel part, things are very metrical and melodious. For Caliban, it's ametrical. 
The opera raises an interesting question of what might have happened if humanity had gone in a different direction using this language as its base.
I'm really happy to be involved in the festival again. To work with Eduardo again. To give my talk on designing languages for would-be worlds. I love to do it and I'm really happy to be bringing my family over from California to 50業子 to see my libretto in 'Lampedusa' come to life at the Gala Concert performed by the BBC Singers.

You taught me language, and my profit ont
Is I know how to curse. The red plague rid you
For learning me your language!

Caliban, 'The Tempest'

David J. Peterson
'Lampedusa' was written in Vv
Sycorax in 'Lampedusa'
Sycorax: 'Sik letmem'
Ariel in'Lampedusa'
Ariel: '暢 laiv!'
Caliban in'Lampedusa'
Caliban: 'Naur ginah sik?'

How to invent a new language

Grammar comes first when inventing a new language. The place where the world enters into this language is in the lexicon and the idioms.
I spend a good deal of time thinking about the world, how it exists, and how it might exist, how the inhabitants perceive it, how they describe it. Sometimes its a world very much like our own, and other times
I did a show where several alien cultures came from different worlds from a solar system that had been destroyed, so they were refugees arriving on Earth. Of course, those languages they speak evolved in this old solar system, so I would make references to plants and animals that no longer exist. Id use them for adjectives and making expressions, things like 'quick like a bunny', but using something that not only is an alien animal, but doesnt even exist anymore.
One of my larger languages I work with a lot is High Valyrian from 'Game of Thrones'. The problem there is it is the language of an evolving civilisation created by George RR Martin, and it is clear there are going to be things revealed when the later books come out. I feel hemmed in, because I dont want to go and create a bunch of stuff that talks about this culture, because I dont know what its like.
So, I can stick to the very general human experience and physicality, but people ask me things like, 'whats the word for wedding in High Valyrian?', and I dont know what their weddings were like. I cant just invent it because it might be contradicted later, and thats an argument I wont win. It is his universe, and Im just playing inside it.

David's network of languages

Vv brought to live on stage at the University's Contemporary Music Festival.
Vv brought to life on stage at the Contemporary Music Festival 2017
Contemporary Music Festival Lampedusa

Contemporary Music Festival 2019: MULTIVERSE

MULTIVERSE is the theme of University of 50業子 Contemporary Music Festival (CMF) 2019, which celebrates the internationally renowned research combining music, engineering and the life sciences developed at the University of 50業子s Interdisciplinary Centre for Computer Music Research (ICCMR).
MULTIVERSEproposes a weekend of musical interpretations of the quantum world.