Jenny Davis and Phillip Snyder (Photo: Randy Gibson)

For those savvy in computer programming, you might recognize the code โ€œif else.โ€ For those who arenโ€™t so savvy, Philip Snyder explains, โ€œItโ€™s what you would code if you wanted to say, โ€˜If these parameters are met, do this, or if these parameters are not met, do this something else.โ€™โ€ But Snyder adds that this sentiment also carries in his experimental flute duo, if.else, with Jenny Davis.

โ€œWeโ€™re always looking for ways for the pieces that we do to be reliant on the specific situation as opposed to being the same thing every time,โ€ he explains, โ€œso the energy in the room can change the way the piece progresses. Itโ€™s the sense that every time youโ€™re in a space doing a thing, itโ€™s gonna be wildly different from one time to the next.โ€

For their upcoming performance, the duo commissioned experimental composer Randy Gibson, who, in turn, created The Four Pillars Breathing in Harmonic Time, a durational, immersive sound piece, integrating flutes and electronics. To accompany the three-hour piece, Gibson, also a visual artist, created projections thatโ€™ll move throughout the darkened space. With these different elements, the hope is to make the experience of sound into something new and all-encompassing. Itโ€™s a moment to sit down, without any distractions, and just take in the music and let it guide your thoughts, almost like a meditation.

โ€œThere are these sounds that happen and they are repeating on these very large scales to a point that youโ€™re not immediately perceiving their repetition or the speed of which theyโ€™re repeating,โ€ Snyder says, โ€œbut they are expanding and contracting in a way that shifts and modulates your expectation and experience of time throughout the piece. โ€ฆ And the duration element itself kind of takes it to a new place that we wouldnโ€™t be able go to if we were going to a concert thatโ€™s four- to five-minute songs, or even a classical concert where itโ€™s 10 to 15.โ€

With the performance being so long, though, the duo encourages audience members to get comfortable, whether that be by bringing a blanket or a mat, or choosing a chair removed from the projection field, or even leaving early if they have to.

โ€œAs an audience member,โ€ Davis adds, โ€œwe might put on ourselves like, โ€˜Oh, I need to be or act a certain way or feel a certain way about the performance or know something about it,โ€™ and really, you can throw that out the window a little bit and just come and experience it. Thatโ€™s kind of the whole point of it. Itโ€™s introspective, so consider how you feel.

โ€œThe most beautiful thing about any music performance is that people are gonna get different things out of it,โ€ Davis continues. โ€œMaybe, that person is coming in and they had an extremely stressful day at work and this is a release, or maybe theyโ€™re riding a high and this is gonna continue that or bring it down a little bit. Everybody in the audience is bringing something different into that space and into that room, and that creates an energy in the roomโ€ โ€” an energy that the flutists can channel in their performance.

The Four Pillars Breathing in Harmonic Time, No. 2 Vance, 325 Wagner St., Wednesday, December 14, 7 p.m., free.