My process involves the construction of compositions from many small musical fragments. These fragments are performed by live musicians, recorded, edited and then loaded into a software program where I construct the actual composition. Many of the fragments are then subjected to extensive signal processing and other manipulations. Working in this software environment affords me an enormous amount of flexibility as to how the various fragments are aligned, combined, layered, altered and mixed. The pieces that I've been able to create using this new technique have been the purest most refined personal musical expressions that I've ever been able to achieve. This new music feels right to me and is intensely personal.

The process combines the three elements of: the manipulation of musical materials, musical performance and audio recording. Of course, a composer generally has control over the musical materials (pitches, rhythms, dynamics, etc.), but the performance is always a bit of a wild card, and if you're fortunate enough to get a musically transcendent performance of your material, you've got to hope that you were able to get a good recording of it. With my method of composing, an excellent recording is a given, seeing as I have complete control over that. I've also found that I am able to exercise a remarkable amount of control over the performance, or what the listener would perceive as the performance. As I construct the finished piece in the computer, I essentially create a new performance as part of that same process. At that stage of construction, I am manipulating musical materials and creating a performance as one integrated process. The two are now inextricably interwoven for me. I have been very pleased with the results.

My compositional style is a kind of highly linear through-composition. I’m striving to avoid self-conscious formalism in favor of following the rule of “what sounds good next”. It’s an attempt to capture my own instinctive improvisational impulses. It is in fact a kind of slowed down improvisation. I start by creating the opening seconds of a piece. Once I'm satisfied with how that sounds, I listen for what I think should follow immediately thereafter. Once I have that in place and am happy with how it sounds, I listen through from the beginning and try to feel what should come next. I try to think in terms of, “if I were improvising, what would be the next thing that I would do,” or more simply, “what sounds good next”. I follow this ethos strictly all the way through the composition of the piece. Whatever structure, aesthetic unity and/or coherent linear through-line one might perceive in the finished work, is simply that which has developed naturally by following this compositional method.