John Adams Trumpet Essay -.:: GEOCITIES.Ws

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

John Adams Trumpet Essay -.:: GEOCITIES.Ws Graham Dixon - John Adams Trumpet Essay Adam’s Trumpets – Engines or Arbiters? A discussion of the role of the trumpet in John Adams’ orchestral music The history of the trumpet can be divided into four sections. From Early man onwards, the trumpet was used as a noise-making instrument for signaling on the battlefield or at municipal functions. Most music was not notated and almost no “art music” was music composed for trumpets until 1600. The “Golden age” of the natural trumpet (c.1550- c1770) saw many solo works composed for trumpet, particularly after the high clarino register was mastered and the uneven tuning tamed. Gradual acceptance into the orchestra was followed by a very high profile, enjoyed until the decline of the clarino art at the end of the Baroque era. This was followed by a less prominent role for the trumpet, overall, throughout the late 18th and 19th centuries, apart from isolated concertos for the keyed trumpet. During this period the trumpet was relegated to providing support, strengthening cadences and underpinning harmonic movement. However, the trumpet began something of a Renaissance in late 19th century in orchestral music, particularly the Romantic symphony. The 20th century has seen a comparative explosion in solo writing for the trumpet and its involvement in chamber, windband, brass ensemble and orchestral music. The piccolo trumpet was developed to more readily perform the high Baroque register, though it was quickly utilised by contemporary composers. The trumpet enjoys full involvement in contemporary composition, and is seemingly able to cast off some of the lingering “fanfare” stigma. The American composer John Adams (b.1947) belongs to the Minimalist school, though his more recent works have developed a more lyrical and less rhythmically relentless style. Adams’ early pieces were largely for tape or electronics, composed during or shortly after his time at Harvard, where he studied with Leon Kirchner, Earl Kim and Roger Sessions. His first instrumental pieces were for piano (Phrygian Gates) and strings (Shaker Loops), his later writing for full orchestra comprising his more popular pieces, Fearful Symmetries, Harmonielehre, Harmonium and the operas Nixon in China and The Death of Klinghoffer. His earlier music relies largely on rhythmic pulse, without recourse to melody in any traditional sense. Indeed, Adams confessed during a short pre-concert talk at London’s Barbican in November 1998 that he had written his first melody as recently as 1995! Instead, the influence of the early minimalists is clear - repeating, pulsating patterns over which the melodic fragments oscillate rapidly. Over this continuous, often hypnotic foundation are spun longer melodic themes which have become more rhapsodic throughout Adams’ output. The trumpet appears frequently in Adams’ chamber and orchestral works and its importance is worthy of discussion. The enormous changes endured by the trumpet have rendered it a much more flexible instrument, and it is interesting to assess Adams’ attitude to this new-found capability, by which the trumpet simultaneously command a variety of orchestral styles. The question becomes one of the modern trumpet’s orchestral role in Adams’ music - Engine or Arbiter? Does the trumpet exercise a file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/DixonG/My%20Doc...nts/My%20Web%20Sites/Geocities/Adams_Dissertation.htm (1 of 5)06/04/2006 11:07:46 Graham Dixon - John Adams Trumpet Essay controlling influence, as it has so much in the past, or has it reverted to its supporting role, or a mixture of these? To discuss this topic I have slightly narrowed the range of available pieces due to constraints of space, and decided to choose the rich variety of writing dating from the mid- to late-1980’s. Specifically, Harmonielehre, Nixon in China, Fearful Symmetries, The Wound Dresser, The Chairman Dances, A Short Ride in a Fast Machine and Tromba Lontana. These works, though not in essence a representative cross-section of Adams’ total output, give ample material for this study. The trumpet’s ancient role as a signaling instrument is most clearly emulated in the first of the two fanfares for orchestra written in 1985, Tromba Lontana (“distant trumpet”), during which a pair of C-trumpets, positioned offstage, exchange a mixture of sustained and briefer signals (example 1). Though never approximating to the braying of animal horns, as would have been the case in history, the trumpets’ roles are clearly influenced by the ancient vocation of the instrument. The range is somewhat limited and the soloists are never obscured by the orchestral accompaniment, which retains a low, consistently minimalist and repetitive profile, using light textures, high string harmonics and eerie bowed vibraphone tones. The accompaniment crescendos only towards the middle of the work before receding towards the close. The orchestration allows the trumpets ample opportunity to dominate without the need for forcefulness, including as it does divided strings, no brass except for horns, and much involvement of the gentler piano and harp. Throughout this period of Adams’ orchestral output, the trumpet section interrupts the orchestra with short, sharp interjections, often muted and using jarring offbeat patterns. This use of the instrument becomes a trademark of the trumpet’s involvement in the music, particularly in much of Nixon in China, throughout which the trumpets blare out angular, punchy rhythmic patterns, either single quavers or more complex groups, couplets, triplets or dotted figures. These utterances contribute almost nothing to the melody, but add a great deal of zest to the rhythmic background and push along the work’s insistent pulse. While this does not equate to any specific genre of writing for the trumpet, it is closest in its properties to the loud, rough-hewn fanfares of the battlefield. Writing of this nature dominates many of Adams’ early trumpet parts and the offbeat, complex rhythms and fast, high, muted passagework, often in three-part trumpet chords, provides a challenge for the performers, who must contribute to the rhythmic fabric of the work without becoming overbearing; in this way the instrument combines ancient blaring and bombast with the modern concerns of balance and style. Perhaps the most obvious example of this jarring, punchy style is the famous fanfare piece A Short Ride in a Fast Machine, an orchestral fanfare commissioned for the Great Woods festival. Adams’ best-known work, this features the four trumpets prominently throughout, and the challenging parts include persistently altering rhythmic patterns from the whole brass section (example 2). The pace is lightening-fast, and the brass scythe through sweeping woodwind shapes with jubilant, percussive outbursts. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/DixonG/My%20Doc...nts/My%20Web%20Sites/Geocities/Adams_Dissertation.htm (2 of 5)06/04/2006 11:07:46 Graham Dixon - John Adams Trumpet Essay Though the style is a far cry from that of the prehistoric trumpet, the differences between one style and the other are not as great as might be thought. Variety of rhythm is of great importance in military fanfares, where it substitutes for melodic complexity, and the exciting dotted rhythms in Short Ride replace any real melodic interest until towards the end of the piece. Despite the important role played by the rhythmical fanfare writing, Adams’ trumpet parts also contain much lyricism and subtlety. The contrast provided by this change in approach is similar in effect to that created by the juxtaposition of punchy fanfare figures with orchestral minimalism and lyricism. Of particular note is the chorale section towards the end of Short Ride, where the trumpets break completely with their conventional role in the work and engage in a sweeping melody of considerable range and weight. Importantly, they continue to dominate the texture, but this is now achieved through long-breathed, generous phrases rather than the stronger, persistent and rapid chords of the opening. Other moments of lyricism include the piccolo trumpet solo in the setting of Whitman verse for baritone and orchestra, The Wound Dresser, the steady, muted solo during Pat Nixon’s aria “This is Prophetic”, the slower section of the first movement of Harmonielehre, where the trumpet doubles the high violin melody, the high melody towards the end of The Chairman Dances (example 3), and the dramatic rising sixths in emulation of the soprano in the aria “I am the wife of Mao Tse-Tung” from Nixon in China (example 4). One moment of this opera combines the early, fanfare role of the trumpet with a more soloistic vein - shortly after the landing of the Nixons’ aircraft at Beijing, the solo trumpet plays a Wagnerian, rising arpeggiac solo to welcome China’s guests (example 5). Importantly, however, these moments of lyricism are the exception to the rapid- fire, fanfare-like rule. Their appearance confirms Adams’ enthusiasm for variety of writing for the trumpet, but I believe they also reflect a natural desire for variety in the orchestral texture. The large volume of writing in the punchy, fanfare style is in danger of becoming relentless, on occasion, and the lyrical, soloistic moments help to avoid the less approachable writing from becoming stale or “old hat”. Indeed, the writing is never as soloistic as other examples from the repertoire of the 20th century trumpet, including orchestral works by James Macmillan, Stravinsky and Carl Vine, though these soloistic moments in Adams’ writing are in stark
Recommended publications
  • College Orchestra Director Programming Decisions Regarding Classical Twentieth-Century Music Mark D
    James Madison University JMU Scholarly Commons Dissertations The Graduate School Summer 2017 College orchestra director programming decisions regarding classical twentieth-century music Mark D. Taylor James Madison University Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/diss201019 Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Recommended Citation Taylor, Mark D., "College orchestra director programming decisions regarding classical twentieth-century music" (2017). Dissertations. 132. https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/diss201019/132 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the The Graduate School at JMU Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of JMU Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. College Orchestra Director Programming Decisions Regarding Classical Twentieth-Century Music Mark David Taylor A Doctor of Musical Arts Document submitted to the Graduate Faculty of JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the degree of Doctor of Musical Arts School of Music August 2017 FACULTY COMMITTEE Committee Chair: Dr. Eric Guinivan Committee Members/ Readers: Dr. Mary Jean Speare Mr. Foster Beyers Acknowledgments Dr. Robert McCashin, former Director of Orchestras and Professor of Orchestral Conducting at James Madison University (JMU) as well as a co-founder of College Orchestra Directors Association (CODA), served as an important sounding-board as the study emerged. Dr. McCashin was particularly helpful in pointing out the challenges of undertaking such a study. I would have been delighted to have Dr. McCashin serve as the chair of my doctoral committee, but he retired from JMU before my study was completed.
    [Show full text]
  • Production Database Updated As of 25Nov2020
    American Composers Orchestra Works Performed Workshopped from 1977-2020 firstname middlename lastname Date eventype venue work title suffix premiere commission year written Michael Abene 4/25/04 Concert LGCH Improv ACO 2004 Muhal Richard Abrams 1/6/00 Concert JOESP Piano Improv Earshot-JCOI 19 Muhal Richard Abrams 1/6/00 Concert JOESP Duet for Violin & Piano Earshot-JCOI 19 Muhal Richard Abrams 1/6/00 Concert JOESP Duet for Double Bass & Piano Earshot-JCOI 19 Muhal Richard Abrams 1/9/00 Concert CH Tomorrow's Song, as Yesterday Sings Today World 2000 Ricardo Lorenz Abreu 12/4/94 Concert CH Concierto para orquesta U.S. 1900 John Adams 4/25/83 Concert TULLY Shaker Loops World 1978 John Adams 1/11/87 Concert CH Chairman Dances, The New York ACO-Goelet 1985 John Adams 1/28/90 Concert CH Short Ride in a Fast Machine Albany Symphony 1986 John Adams 12/5/93 Concert CH El Dorado New York Fromm 1991 John Adams 5/17/94 Concert CH Tromba Lontana strings; 3 perc; hp; 2hn; 2tbn; saxophone1900 quartet John Adams 10/8/03 Concert CH Christian Zeal and Activity ACO 1973 John Adams 4/27/07 Concert CH The Wound-Dresser 1988 John Adams 4/27/07 Concert CH My Father Knew Charles Ives ACO 2003 John Adams 4/27/07 Concert CH Violin Concerto 1993 John Luther Adams 10/15/10 Concert ZANKL The Light Within World 2010 Victor Adan 10/16/11 Concert MILLR Tractus World 0 Judah Adashi 10/23/15 Concert ZANKL Sestina World 2015 Julia Adolphe 6/3/14 Reading FISHE Dark Sand, Sifting Light 2014 Kati Agocs 2/20/09 Concert ZANKL Pearls World 2008 Kati Agocs 2/22/09 Concert IHOUS
    [Show full text]
  • Full Orchestra
    John Adams City Noir 2009 34 min for orchestra picc.3(III=picc).3.corA.3(III=bcl).bcl.asax.dbn--6.4.3.1--timp.perc(5):vib/lg sus.cym/SD/bongos; tuned gongs/sus.cym/glsp/mar/tam-t/BD/chimes/vib/low tom-toms/tgl/castanets/cowbell/clave/temple bl; chimes/glsp/tamb/med tam-t/2 timbales/sus.cym/crotales/xyl; BD/tuned gongs/med tam-t/2 sus.cym/mar/crotales/castanet/tgl/glsp; 2 tam-t/BD/sus.cym/tgl/temple block/SD/2 tom-t/timbale/bongo/conga/tuned gongs.trap set--pft--cel--2harps--strings 9790051097791 Orchestra (full score) John Adams photo © Christine Alicino World Premiere: 08 Oct 2009 Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, CA, United States Los Angeles Philharmonic FULL ORCHESTRA Conductor: Gustavo Dudamel Availability: This work is available from Boosey & Hawkes for the world Absolute Jest 2011 25 min Doctor Atomic Symphony 25 min for string quartet and orchestra 2007 2.picc.2.corA.2.bcl.2.dbn-4.2.2.0-timp.perc(2):cowbell/xyl/BD/chimes/glsp/vib-harp-pft.c for orchestra el-strings 2.picc.3(III=corA).3(II=Ebcl, III=bcl).3(III=dbn) -4.4(IV=picc.tpt).3.1-harp-cel-timp-perc(4):crotales/chimes/SD/thunder sheet/glsp/BD/2 This work requires additional technological components and/or amplification. tam-t/2 susp.cym/tuned gongs-strings 9790051097326 (Full score) <u>NOTE</u>: Due to certain balance issues in the orchestration, it is strongly recommended that very light amplification of the solo quartet be used with the sound controlled through a mixing board located at the rear, behind the audience.
    [Show full text]
  • An HD Odyssey
    The Earth - An HD Odysse y Grades 9-12 Young Peopl e's Concert Listening Guide PERFORMERS Nashville Sympho ny Giancarlo Guerrero, condu ctor PROGRAM John Adams – Short Ride in a Fast Machine R. Strauss – Also sprach Zarathustra The program will be accompanied by high-definition images taken from NASA missions to Earth’s orbit JOHN ADAMS Born on February 15, 1947, in Worcester, Massachusetts; currently lives in Berkeley, California John Adams, whose new opera Girls of the Golden West received its world premiere at the end of last year at San Francisco Opera, is equally at home on the stage and in the concert hall. In fact, Short Ride in a Fast Machine is a concert-opening fanfare that Adams wrote during the period, in the mid-1980s, when he was busy composing his first opera, Nixon in China. It also shows a kinship with the exultant passages of Harmonielehre, Adams’s breakthrough orchestral work that preceded Nixon. Adams had an opportunity around this time to experiment twice with the format of the stand-alone concert fanfare. Preceding Short Ride in a Fast Machine was Tromba Lontana (“Distant Trumpet”). The composer characterizes both pieces as “in extremis versions of the traditional fanfare.” As a pair, they form a kind of fanfarish yin-and-yang: Tromba being a reserved, ruminative “anti-fanfare,” while Short Ride is a boisterously in-your-face, virtuoso roller coaster ride of orchestral sonorities. Although both are sometimes presented as companion pieces, Adams points out that he never actually intended them to be played together. WHAT TO LISTEN FOR: Short Ride in a Fast Machine Composed: 1986 First performance: June 13, 1986, with Michael Tilson Thomas conducting the Pittsburgh Symphony Short Ride might almost be heard as a concise primer on how Adams forged a freshly powerful musical language all his own from the building blocks of Minimalism as well as from the vernacular idioms of his upbringing—all transmogrified by his buoyant imagination.
    [Show full text]
  • FMSO COMMISSION Or COMMISSION PARTICIPANT
    FMSO COMMISSION or COMMISSION PARTICIPANT MAJOR COLLABORATION WITH OTHER ORGANIZATION/COMMUNITY OUTREACH PROJECT HYBRID PROGRAMMING – POPS/THEMATIC/TRADITIONAL AUDIO-VISUAL ENHANCEMENT LOCAL/YOUTH EMPHASIS MASTERWORKS SERIES PROGRAMMING – 2005 – Present 2018-2019 – EXPERIENCE THE SYMPHONY CHEE-YUN & SERGEY Dvorak – Slavonic Dances No. 2 & 7 Popper – Hungarian Rhapsody – with cellist SERGEY ANTONOV Liszt – Mephisto Waltz No. 1 Saint-Saëns – Introduction & Rondo Capriccioso – with violinist CHEE-YUN Brahms – Double Concert – with CHEE-YUN & SERGEY HIGDON HARP CONCERTO – regional premiere Mozart – Concerto for Flute & Harp, mvt. 2 – with harpist YOLANDA KONDONASSIS & Deb Harris Higdon – Harp Concerto – with harpist YOLANDA KONDONASSIS Nielsen – Symphony No. 4 “The Inextinguishable” MYTHICAL HEROES & WOMEN WARRIORS - with projected images Djawadi/Peterson – Music from “Game of Thrones” Smetana – “Sarka” from Ma Vlast (My Homeland) Shore – Music from “Lord of the Rings” Sibelius – Four Legends from the “Kalevala” (Lemminkainen Suite) THE VIRTUOSO NEXT DOOR – featuring FMSO musicians as soloists Shostakovich – Festive Overture (side by side with FMAYS Sr. High Orchestra) Poulenc – Double Piano Concerto – with pianists Jay Hershberger & Tyler Wottrich Tower – Fanfares for the Uncommon Woman – featuring FMSO brass & percussion Adams – Tromba Lontana – featuring FMSO trumpets Corigliano – Chaconne from “The Red Violin” CLAUSEN WORLD PREMIERE – FMSO COMMISSION Wagner/Clausen – “Elsa’s Procession to the Cathedral” from Lohengrin Copland – Appalachian Spring Clausen – TITLE TBA – FMSO Commission 2017-2018 – JUMP IN ALTERED STATES Hermann – Music from “Psycho” Corigliano – “Three Hallucinations” from Altered States Berlioz – Symphonie Fantastique THE ILLUMINATED SOUL – A COLLABORATION WITH THE ST. JOHN’S BIBLE PROJECT Bruch – Ave Maria (with cellist Inbal Segev) Bloch – Schelomo (with cellist Inbal Segev) Strauss – Death and Transfiguration Theofanidis – Rainbow Body (with projected images from The St.
    [Show full text]
  • Tromba Lontana F *}Rra,&,Cll;Ricx,& S (Fo 1S4?I
    Tromba lontana f *}rra,&,cll;ricx,& s (fo 1S4?i Trombq lontana is one of two pieces that Adams' publishers brought together under the title Two Fanfares. lts companion, however, couldn't be more different - Short Ride in a Fast Machine is loud, boisterous, full of kaleidoscopic colour and rhythmic drive. Adams insists that he never intended the two works to be paired, but recent history nevertheless brought them together. Short Ride in a Fast Machine had originally been programmed for the Last Night of the Proms on 1 5 September 200'l , just four days after the 9/1 1 terrorist attacks - wisely considered inappropriate at a time of such turmoil and grief, it was replaced with the consoli ng, contemplative Trom ba lonta n a. The music It's a relatively early work in Adams'output and comes from a time when it still felt appropriate to call his music'minimalist' - certainly in the gently rippling, pulsing orchestral backdrop to the trumpets' insistent calls. Adams' glittering texture US composerJohn Adams wrote the of glockenspiel, piano, harp, flutes and brief orchestral fanfare Tromba lontana piccolos almost sounds gamelan-like, * literally'distant trumpet'- in 1986 for an effect emphasised by the strangely the Houston Symphony, as part of a unresolved mode he uses. Further in celebration marking the 150th anniversary the background, the strings play almost of Texas' declaration of independence unheard, slow-moving chords, the double from Mexico. lt was part of a fanfare basses growling at the very bottom of their commissioning project instigated by fellow register. The trumpets'fanfare themes are US composer Tobias Picker, but what restricted to just a few pitches that return Adams came up with was a deliberately again and again - Adams describes them provocative'a nti-fa nfa re'.
    [Show full text]
  • AS Level Performance Studies Topic Exploration Pack (John Adams)
    Performance Studies A LEVEL Performance Studies: John Adams Topic Exploration Pack September 2015 www.ocr.org.uk Topic Exploration Pack We will inform centres about any changes to the specification. We will also publish changes on our website. The latest version of our specification will always be the one on our website (www.ocr.org.uk) and this may differ from printed versions. Copyright © 2015 OCR. All rights reserved. Copyright OCR retains the copyright on all its publications, including the specifications. However, registered centres for OCR are permitted to copy material from this specification booklet for their own internal use. Oxford Cambridge and RSA Examinations is a Company Limited by Guarantee. Registered in England. Registered company number 3484466. Registered office: 1 Hills Road Cambridge CB1 2EU OCR is an exempt charity. 2 www.ocr.org.uk AS Level Performance Studies Contents John Adams Teacher Resource Pack ............................................................................................. 4 Background ..................................................................................................................................... 5 Adams’ Works ................................................................................................................................. 5 Fingerprints of Adams’ Style ........................................................................................................... 7 Influences ......................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 26 October 2019
    26 October 2019 12:01 AM Marcel Tournier (1879-1951) Images for harp and string quartet, Op 35 Erica Goodman (harp), Amadeus Ensemble CACBC 12:12 AM Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904) Klid , B182 Shauna Rolston (cello), Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, Uri Mayer (conductor) CACBC 12:18 AM Giuseppe Verdi (1813-1901) "Caro nome" Gilda's aria from Act I, scene ii of Rigoletto Inese Galante (soprano), Latvian National Symphony Orchestra, Aleksandrs Vilumanis (conductor) LVLR 12:23 AM Adolf Schulz-Evler (1852-1905) Concert arabesque on themes by Johann Strauss for piano Benjamin Grosvenor (piano) GBBBC 12:34 AM Georges Bizet (1838-1875) Carmen Suite RTV Slovenia Symphony Orchestra, Marko Munih (conductor) SIRTVS 12:51 AM Georg Philipp Telemann (1681-1767) Quadro for 2 violins, viola & continuo in B flat major King's Consort, Robert King (director) GBBBC 12:58 AM Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c.1590-1664), Francesco Soriano (arranger) Missa Papae Marcelli arr. Soriano for double choir (orig. 6 vv) BBC Singers, Bo Holten (conductor), Unknown (organ) GBBBC 01:24 AM Silvius Leopold Weiss (1687-1750) Prelude, Toccata and Allegro in G major Hopkinson Smith (baroque lute) HRHRT 01:34 AM Joseph Haydn (1732-1809) Symphony no 97 in C major (H.1.97) Netherlands Radio Chamber Orchestra, Antoni Ros-Marba (conductor) NLNOS 02:01 AM John Adams (1947-) Short Ride in a Fast Machine Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, John Adams (conductor) NONRK 02:06 AM John Adams (1947-) Tromba Lontana - fanfare for orchestra Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra, John Adams (conductor) NONRK 02:10
    [Show full text]
  • 2020-2021 Season Chronology of Events
    Carnegie Hall 2020–2021 Season Chronological Listing of Events All performances take place at Carnegie Hall, 57th Street and Seventh Avenue, unless otherwise indicated. October CARNEGIE HALL'S Wednesday, October 7, 2020 at 7:00 PM OPENING NIGHT GALA Los Angeles Philharmonic LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC Gustavo Dudamel, Music and Artistic Director Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage Lang Lang, Piano Liv Redpath, Soprano JOHN ADAMS Tromba Lontana EDVARD GRIEG Piano Concerto in A Minor, Op. 16 EDVARD GRIEG Selections from Peer Gynt DECODA Thursday, October 8, 2020 at 7:30 PM Weill Recital Hall Decoda LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN Septet in E-flat Major, Op. 20 FRANZ SCHUBERT String Trio in B-flat Major, D. 471 GUSTAV MAHLER Selection from "Kräftig bewegt, doch nicht zu schnell" from Symphony No. 1 in D Major (arr. Decoda) ARNOLD SCHOENBERG Selections from Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31 (arr. Decoda) VARIOUS COMPOSERS Ode to Beethoven (World Premiere created in collaboration with the audience) LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC Thursday, October 8, 2020 at 8:00 PM Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage Los Angeles Philharmonic Gustavo Dudamel, Music and Artistic Director Leila Josefowicz, Violin Gustavo Castillo, Narrator GABRIELLA SMITH Tumblebird Contrails (NY Premiere) ANDREW NORMAN Violin Concerto (NY Premiere, co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall) ALBERTO GINASTERA Estancia, Op. 8 Andrew Norman is holder of the 2020-2021 Richard and Barbara Debs Composer's Chair at Carnegie Hall. LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC Friday, October 9, 2020 at 8:00 PM Stern Auditorium / Perelman
    [Show full text]
  • Music for Youth Orchestras Selected in Conjunction with National Association of Youth Orchestras (UK)
    Music for Youth Orchestras Selected in conjunction with National Association of Youth Orchestras (UK) Boosey & Hawkes invites youth orchestras to explore the rich and exciting repertoire created by 20th century and contemporary composers. Works have been specially selected and graded for youth orchestra, and information includes helpful suggestions for training and rehearsals. 1 Symphony Orchestra 10 Chamber Orchestra 11 String Orchestra 13 Wind Orchestra Levels of difficulty are from 1-5 (hardest) * these works are on sale through good music retailers, all other works are on hire through B&H ** in addition to the inspection scores available upon three week loan, scores of these works are available on sale for continuous study For further information, inspection scores and tapes of the works in this brochure, please contact Unafrances Clarke on +44 (0)20 7054 7258 or [email protected] Symphony Orchestra Adams, John Two Fanfares (1986) ** Duration 8 mins Level 4/5 2.2picc.2.corA.4(III,IV ad lib)—4.4.3.1—timp.perc(3)— 2 opt.synth(Casio 200 or Yamaha DX series)—pft—harp—strings The two orchestral fanfares by American composer John Adams (b.1947) are amongst his most popular works, performed by leading orchestras throughout the world. The scoring of Tromba Lontana highlights two solo trumpets placed either side of the platform and their calls are accompanied by ethereal orchestration which demands great subtlety in performance. The contrasting Short Ride in a Fast Machine is a brilliant study in minimalist pulsation, whose exciting challenges will ensure an enthusiastic response. Argento, Dominick Fire Variations (1981-82) ** Duration 20 mins Level 4 3(III=picc).2.corA.3(III=bcl).3—4.3.3.1—timp.perc(2)—pft—cel—harp—strings The American composer Dominick Argento (b.1927) is best known for his widely-performed operas, but he has also written a number of very attractive orchestral works, including Fire Variations.
    [Show full text]
  • PROGRAM NOTES for “French Connection with Isabell Lippi” by Daniel Maki
    PROGRAM NOTES for “French Connection with Isabell Lippi” by Daniel Maki Tromba lontana by John Adams (1947- ) Duration: Approximately 4 minutes First Performance: April 4, 1986 in Houston, Texas Last ESO Performance: February, 1989; Robert Hanson, conductor Tromba lontana (The Distant Trumpet) is one of a series of fanfares commissioned by the Houston Symphony Orchestra in celebration of the sesquicentennial of the state of Texas and was first performed by that orchestra in April of 1986. Fanfares being usually rather noisy affairs, one might expect that a fanfare in honor of the entire state of Texas might be unusually so. In fact, however, this one is quiet and meditative in character, almost a kind of anti-fanfare which the composer himself described as “ slowly moving, mysterious, almost ethereal.” The scoring is for an orchestra of strings, percussion, harp, piano, and a small group of woodwind and brass instruments, which serve as a backdrop for two solo trumpets which are placed far away from the orchestra as well as from each other. Although John Adams’ enormously successful career has embraced a wide range of styles and techniques and he has said that he no longer likes to be identified as a “minimalist” composer, this fairly early work clearly contains many of the features of the minimalist style. Marked by a consistently steady pulse and the systematic repetition of simple melodic and rhythmic figures, this style contributes greatly to the ethereal quality of the music. Although most fanfares with their forceful statements seem to suggest little doubt about anything , this one ends quietly and enigmatically, leaving questions unanswered.
    [Show full text]
  • A Wind Ensemble Transcription of Part 1 (The First Movement) of Harmonielehre by John Adams with Commentary Richard E
    University of Connecticut OpenCommons@UConn Doctoral Dissertations University of Connecticut Graduate School 12-9-2014 A Wind Ensemble Transcription of Part 1 (the First Movement) of Harmonielehre by John Adams with Commentary Richard E. Wyman University of Connecticut - Storrs, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://opencommons.uconn.edu/dissertations Recommended Citation Wyman, Richard E., "A Wind Ensemble Transcription of Part 1 (the First Movement) of Harmonielehre by John Adams with Commentary" (2014). Doctoral Dissertations. 613. https://opencommons.uconn.edu/dissertations/613 A Wind Ensemble Transcription of Part 1 (the First Movement) of Harmonielehre by John Adams with Commentary Richard Edward Wyman, DMA University of Connecticut, 2014 John Adams, perhaps the most prominent American composer of the last twenty-five years (and reported to be the most frequently performed living composer), has created important repertoire for almost every major musical medium except the Wind Ensemble or Band. Published transcriptions exist of two shorter orchestral works, Lollapalooza (1995, six minutes long), transcribed by John Spinazzola, and Short Ride in a Fast Machine (1986, four minutes long), transcribed by Lawrence Odom, and both of these have become important works in the repertoire. By presenting a transcription of the seventeen-minute long first movement of Adams’s large-scale symphonic work Harmonielehre (1984-1985), this project presents the possibility for wind ensemble performers and their audiences to experience John Adams’s music on a larger scale. Also included is contextual commentary of value to conductors, performers, and scholars of John Adams; this discusses the historical background and the analysis of music relating to Minimalism, post-minimalism, John Adams, and Harmonielehre.
    [Show full text]