Originally from Texas, award-winning composer and conductor Ryan Lindveit (b. 1994) has written music in a variety of media, from band to film to electronics. He studied composition at the University of Southern California, Yale University, and the University of Michigan, and has been acclaimed at every stage. He is now on the faculty at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. His music is widely performed across genres and levels, and he continues to receive commissions from top ensembles. To learn more about him, visit his website, the University of Tennessee, IMDb, and the Wind Repertory Project. There is also an interview from his time at USC when he was named salutatorian of his class.

Lindveit wrote Great Unconformity in 2017 for a pair of high school bands, which he explains in his program notes (to which I have added some links):

When I stumbled upon the term Great Unconformity at a lookout point on the south rim of the Grand Canyon, I knew immediately that it needed to be the title for this piece. While an unconformity technically describes a gap in time of several hundred million years between rock strata, Great Unconformity is more broadly inspired by (1) the beauty and diversity of the American West and (2) the concert band as a metaphor for this beauty and diversity.

The landscapes of the West are both incredibly scenic and hostile, and the communities which have formed out of this shared confrontation with survival are remarkably diverse. The popular 20th-century view of the American West, inextricably linked to the cinematic Western, is of a place filled with conflict and hostility, where different kinds of people are constantly clashing in their pursuit of resources. By contrast, I view the unified variety (or, unconformity) of coexisting peoples and landscapes as the defining characteristic of the contemporary West.

The concert band, with its many types of instruments and sounds, is an especially apt metaphor for community and the value that comes from different kinds of people coming together to work towards a common goal. A band is not just a sound-making machine; crucially, it is a diverse group of individual people who have banded together to make music. In one sense, musicians in a concert band need to be independent nonconformists who can play their parts by themselves, but in another sense they must conform to the tempo and mood and volume of the rest of the group in order for the musical outcome to be coherent and meaningful. Thus, a great band must be full of (un)conformists.

Great Unconformity was co-commissioned by Drew Eary and Jeffrey de Seriere for the Casteel High School Symphonic Band and the Orange County of the Arts Symphonic Band, respectively.

Take a listen with the score:

Read more about Great Unconformity at the Wind Repertory Project, Lindveit’s website, and Band Room Canvas.

Bonus – get educated about the actual Great Unconformity: