Peter Maxwell Davies, Piano • Aquarius • Nicholas Cleobury Peter Maxwell Davies (B
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Sir Peter Maxwell Davies: a Catalogue of the Orchestral Music
SIR PETER MAXWELL DAVIES: A CATALOGUE OF THE ORCHESTRAL MUSIC 1955: “Burchiello” for sixteen percussion instruments “Opus Clavicembalisticum(Sorabji)” for orchestra “Work on a Theme by Thomas Tompkins” for orchestra 1957: St. Michael”-Sonata for seventeen wind instruments, op.6: 17 minutes 1958: “Prolation” for orchestra, op.8: 20 minutes 1959: “Five Canons” for school/amateur orchestra “Pavan and Galliard” for school/amateur orchestra “Variations on a Theme for Chords” for school/amateur orchestra 1959/76: Five Klee Pictures for orchestra, op.12: 10 minutes + (Collins cd) 1960: Three Pieces for junior orchestra 1961: Fantasy on the National Anthem for school/amateur orchestra 1962: First Fantasia on an “In Nomine” of John Taverner for orchestra, op.19: 11 minutes Sinfonia for chamber orchestra, op. 20: 23 minutes + Regis d) 1963: “Veni Sancte Spiritus” for soprano, contralto, tenor, baritone, chorus and orchestra, op.22: 20 minutes 1964: Second Fantasia on an “In Nomine” of John Taverner for orchestra, op. 23: 39 minutes + (Decca cd) 1967: Songs to Words by Dante for baritone and small orchestra 1969: Foxtrot “St. Thomas Wake” for orchestra, op.37: 20 minutes + (Naxos cd) Motet “Worldes Bliss” for orchestra, op.38: 37 minutes 1971: Suite from “The Boyfriend” for small orchestra, op.50b: 26 minutes * + (Collins cd) 1972: “Walton Tribute” for orchestra Masque “Blind Man’s Buff” for soprano or treble, mezzo-soprano, mime and small orchestra, op.51: 20 minutes 1973: “Stone Liturgy-Runes from a House of the Dead” for mezzo-soprano and orchestra, -
The Persistence of Parody in the Music of Peter Maxwell Davies
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Insight - University of Cumbria The Persistence of Parody in the Music of Peter Maxwell Davies Richard E McGregor It’s all about time. Indeed there is not a single piece of musical composition that is not in some way about time. And for Davies the manipulation of time is rooted in his understanding of late Medieval and early Renaissance musical techniques and practices refracted through post 12-note pitch manipulation. In this article I take to task the uncritical use of terminology in relation to the music of Peter Maxwell Davies. Though my generating text is the quotation from John Warnaby’s 1990 doctoral thesis: Since parody is implied in the notion of using pre-existing material as a creative model, it can be argued that, as traditionally understood, it is rarely absent from Maxwell Davies’s music[1] this is in no wise a criticism of Warnaby for whom I have much respect, and especially his ability to be able to perceive patterns, trends and unifying features between works and across extended periods of time. Rather, it is a commentary on particular aspects of Davies’s music which are often linked together under the catch-all term ‘parody’: EXAMPLE 1: Dali’s The Persistence of Memory[2] I take as my starting point the painting The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dali, a painting which operates on a number of levels, the most obvious, because of the immediate imagery, being that is has something to do with time. -
Naxos Catalog (May
CONTENTS Foreword by Klaus Heymann . 3 Alphabetical List of Works by Composer . 5 Collections . 95 Alphorn 96 Easy Listening 113 Operetta 125 American Classics 96 Flute 116 Orchestral 125 American Jewish Music 96 Funeral Music 117 Organ 128 Ballet 96 Glass Harmonica 117 Piano 129 Baroque 97 Guitar 117 Russian 131 Bassoon 98 Gypsy 119 Samplers 131 Best Of series 98 Harp 119 Saxophone 132 British Music 101 Harpsichord 120 Timpani 132 Cello 101 Horn 120 Trombone 132 Chamber Music 102 Light Classics 120 Tuba 133 Chill With 102 Lute 121 Trumpet 133 Christmas 103 Music for Meditation 121 Viennese 133 Cinema Classics 105 Oboe 121 Violin 133 Clarinet 109 Ondes Martenot 122 Vocal and Choral 134 Early Music 109 Operatic 122 Wedding Music 137 Wind 137 Naxos Historical . 138 Naxos Nostalgia . 152 Naxos Jazz Legends . 154 Naxos Musicals . 156 Naxos Blues Legends . 156 Naxos Folk Legends . 156 Naxos Gospel Legends . 156 Naxos Jazz . 157 Naxos World . 158 Naxos Educational . 158 Naxos Super Audio CD . 159 Naxos DVD Audio . 160 Naxos DVD . 160 List of Naxos Distributors . 161 Naxos Website: www.naxos.com Symbols used in this catalogue # New release not listed in 2005 Catalogue $ Recording scheduled to be released before 31 March, 2006 † Please note that not all titles are available in all territories. Check with your local distributor for availability. 2 Also available on Mini-Disc (MD)(7.XXXXXX) Reviews and Ratings Over the years, Naxos recordings have received outstanding critical acclaim in virtually every specialized and general-interest publication around the world. In this catalogue we are only listing ratings which summarize a more detailed review in a single number or a single rating. -
Peter Maxwell Davies Eigentliche Grund Dafür Klar: Ich Wollte Keinen Dicken Deutsche Fassung: Cris Posslac
557400 bk Max 14/7/08 10:53 Page 4 diszipliniert, wobei, wie ich glaube, durch die recht schwarzen Schluss-Strich ziehen, wollte nicht, dass das genaue und komplexe Arbeit mit magischen Quadraten ein letztes Quartett sein soll. Ich musste die Tür offen einige Ordnung entstanden ist. lassen: Mir hat die Arbeit an den Naxos-Quartetten so PETER Ich habe auch auf das dritte Naxos Quartet viel Freude gemacht (und ich habe dabei vielleicht sogar verwiesen. Dort habe ich dem Violoncello einen Vers das eine oder andere gelernt), dass theoretisch daraus von Michelangelo unterlegt, der mit den Worten noch mehr entstehen könnte. MAXWELL DAVIES beginnt: Caro me il sonno, e più l’esser di sasso („Der Eine weitere Versuchung bestand darin, in einer Schlaf ist mir teuer, und von Stein zu sein, ist teurer“). feierlichen Abschiedssequenz auf jedes der vorigen In diesem Gedicht beklagt der Dichter, dass er im Quartette anzuspielen, wie ich das im letzten der zehn römischen Exil leben muss – fern seines Heimatstaates Strathclyde Concertos für das Scottish Chamber Naxos Quartets Nos. 9 and 10 Florenz, dessen Regierung er wegen ihrer Orchestra getan hatte. Ich hielt stand. Zwar ist der dritte „Rechtsverletzung und Schande“ tadelt. Satz als Passamezzo Farewell bezeichnet, doch ohne Der zweite Satz ist auch jetzt (wie die ursprüngliche alle Wehmut – wenngleich es durchaus Rückblicke gibt. Maggini Quartet Skizze) ein Largo, in dem der erste Teil des Kopfsatzes Der erste Satz ist ein Broken Reel. Die Umrisse der langsam durchgeführt wird, heftig unterbrochen von der Tanzform sind vorhanden, die Rhythmen aber sind verworfenen Musik, die hier integriert und verstärkt gebrochen, derweil hinter der barocken Oberfläche eine erscheint. -
Maxwell Davies’S Orchestral Work Is Represented in This Programme
NAXOS NAXOS A wide cross-section of Sir Peter Maxwell Davies’s orchestral work is represented in this programme. Originally written for children, the Five Klee Pictures are anything but childish. Recorded by its dedicatee, Stewart McIlwham, the remarkable Piccolo Concerto displays both the lyrical and mercurial sides of the instrument. Also performed by its dedicatee, John Wallace, the powerful Trumpet Concerto here receives its definitive recording. Maxwell’s Reel, with Northern Lights inhabits worlds comparable 8.572363 MAXWELL DAVIES: MAXWELL DAVIES: with the popular An Orkney Wedding with Sunrise (8.572352). DDD Sir Peter Playing Time MAXWELL DAVIES 68:28 (b. 1934) 7 Piccolo Concerto (1996) 1 16:33 7 Maxwell’s Reel, with 47313 23637 1 I. Andante – Allegro moderato molto – Northern Lights (1998) 3 10:49 Poco meno mosso – Andante 7:12 Trumpet and Piccolo Concertos Trumpet 2 II. Adagio 4:58 Five Klee Pictures and Piccolo Concertos Trumpet 3 III. Lo stesso tempo – Allegro – (1959/76) 4 10:41 Lento 4:23 8 I. A Crusader 1:35 4 9 www.naxos.com Made in Germany Booklet notes in English ൿ Trumpet Concerto (1988) 2 30:25 II. Oriental Garden 1:35 Naxos Rights US, Inc. 4 I. Adagio – Allegro 13:47 0 III. The Twittering Machine 2:20 1991, 1995, 1998 & 5 II. Adagio molto 9:54 ! IV. Stained-Glass Saint 2:28 6 III. Presto 6:45 @ V. Ad Parnassum 2:43 Stewart McIlwham, Piccolo 1 • John Wallace, Trumpet 2 Royal Philharmonic Orchestra 1, 3 • Royal Scottish National Orchestra 2 Philharmonia Orchestra 4 • Peter Maxwell Davies Ꭿ Previously released on Collins Classics in 1991, 1995 and 1998 2013 Recorded at St Augustine's Church, Kilburn, London, on 18th May, 1998 (tracks 1-3, 7); at Glasgow City Hall, Scotland, in April 1990 (tracks 4-6), and at All Saints Church, Tooting, London, on 3rd December, 1994 8.572363 8.572363 (tracks 8-12) • Producer: Veronica Slater • Engineer: John Timperley (tracks 1-3, 7-12); David Flower (tracks 4-6) Publishers: Chester Music Ltd. -
MAXWELL DAVIES Symphony No
Peter MAXWELL DAVIES Symphony No. 6 Time and the Raven • An Orkney Wedding with Sunrise Royal Philharmonic Orchestra • Maxwell Davies Peter Maxwell Davies (b. 1934) becomes a symbol of warning – in my work, dark music At the outset, we hear guests arriving, out of extremely Symphony No. 6 • Time and the Raven • An Orkney Wedding with Sunrise hints at what could be, were attitudes to nationalism not to bad weather, at the hall. This is followed by the modifyʼ. Hence the non-triumphant ending, hinting at the processional, where the guests are solemnly received by Symphony No. 6 (1996) Time and the Raven (1995) manner in which the anthems ʻcan get along together, and the bride and bridegroom, and presented with their first accommodate each other. This is, perhaps, the most glass of whisky. The band tunes up, and we get on with Symphony No. 6 was composed during the first half of The art of the occasional overture, commissioned for a “real” for which we can hopeʼ. Despite the note of caution, the dancing proper. This becomes ever wilder, as all 1996. It has three movements. The starting-off point is a specific celebration, has given rise to some remarkably the orchestration is of suitably celebratory proportions, concerned feel the results of the whisky, until the lead slow tune from Time and the Raven, a work fluent and even inspired exercises in the genre in the with triple woodwind, a sizeable (though by no means fiddle can hardly hold the band together any more. We commissioned to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the nineteenth century. -
PETER MAXWELL DAVIES an Orkney Wedding, with Sunrise
PETER MAXWELL DAVIES An Orkney Wedding, With Sunrise Scottish Chamber Orchestra Ben Gernon Sean Shibe guitar Scottish Chamber Orchestra Ben Gernon conductor Sean Shibe guitar Peter Maxwell Davies (1934–2016) 1. Concert Overture: Ebb Of Winter ..................................................... 17:41 Hill Runes* 2. Adagio – Allegro moderato ................................................................ 1:58 3. Allegro (with several changes of tempo) ........................................ 0:50 4. Vivace scherzando ............................................................................... 0:48 5. Adagio molto .......................................................................................... 2:27 6. Allegro (dying away into ‘endless’ silence) ..................................... 1:55 7. Last Door Of Light ............................................................................... 16:38 8. Farewell To Stromness* ...................................................................... 4:26 9. An Orkney Wedding, With Sunrise ................................................. 12:34 Total Running Time: 59 minutes *solo guitar Recorded at Usher Hall, Edinburgh, UK 14–16 September 2015 Produced by John Fraser (An Orkney Wedding, with Sunrise, Ebb of Winter, Last Door of Light) and Philip Hobbs (Farewell to Stromness and Hill Runes) Recorded by Calum Malcolm (An Orkney Wedding, with Sunrise, Ebb of Winter, Last Door of Light) and Philip Hobbs (Farewell to Stromness and Hill Runes) Post-production by Julia Thomas Cover image by -
Iconnotations Production Info Sm
Red Note Ensemble & Matthew Hawkins Iconnotations Koechlin Excerpts from Les Heures Persanes Maxwell Davies Vesalii Icones A new production and choreography of the iconic Peter Maxwell Davies work Vesalii Icones. Written in 1969 this is one of Peter Maxwell Davies’s classic works of concert-hall music theatre. An extraordinarily dramatic, multi-layered fusion of dance and music, its shape superimposes the 14 stations of the Cross on a series of 16th-century anatomical drawings by Vesalius, with a dancer and a solo cellist as the protagonists. Scored for the classic Fires of London Sextet line-up the work is filled with unconventional percussion instruments, a honky tonk piano and much allusion to foxtrots as well as medieval and renaissance music. In contrast to the vibrant sonorities of Vesalii Icones, the first half features the atmospheric piano works inspired by Persia and written during the First World War by the prolific French composer Charles Koechlin. “It was touching, eccentric, wry, surprising, profound. I adored the nods to surrealist art. Goodness, there was so much there.” “Superb performance of Maxwell Davies' Vesalii Icones. Virtuosic playing of cellist Lionel Handy was exceptional, pacing and balancing by conductor Pierre-Andre Valade very thoughtful. Humanity of Hawkins choreography was heart rending.” Audience feedback Matthew Hawkins Red Note Ensemble Matthew Hawkins is Royal Ballet School trained. Hawkins’ shift Red Note performs the established classics of contemporary from ballet to contemporary practice involved his being a founder music, commissions new music, develops the work of new and member of Second Stride and Michael Clark dance companies, emerging composers and performers from Scotland and around studying Cunningham technique at source and presenting his the world, and finds new spaces and new ways of performing own work, including as Artistic Director of Imminent Dancers contemporary music to attract new audiences. -
Peter Maxwell Davies' Worst Nightmare: Staging the Unsacred In
Peter Maxwell Davies’ Worst Nightmare: staging the unsacred in the operas Taverner and Resurrection —Majel Connery INTRODUCTION Peter Maxwell Davies first began writing music for the stage in the late 1950s. Throughout a series of premieres in the late 60s and early 70s, he developed a reputation for experimental vocal and theatrical effects. His Revelation and Fall (1966), for instance, features a singer dressed as a nun who bellows obscenities into a loudspeaker. Davies recruited Vanessa Redgrave to orate Luke’s version of the betrayal of Christ in Latin for Missa super l’Homme Armé (1968, rev. 1971). And in Vesalii Icones (1969), a nude dancer who writhes in representation of the Stations of the Cross is revealed at the last minute as the Antichrist. Davies’ first opera, Taverner, is based on the historical John Taverner, a late-medieval Catholic composer with a troubling story. Having turned his back on the Church and his music during the Reformation, Taverner assisted in the ensuing dissolution of the Catholic monasteries. Davies lost half the original manuscript for Taverner in a fire at his Dorset cottage home in 1969, but reconstructed it in time for a 1972 Covent Garden premiere. At the same time, Davies had already begun mulling over a second opera, a companion piece to Taverner called Resurrection, which was almost complete at the time of Taverner’s premiere. Resurrection is a black comedy in which the central character (a blow-up dummy) is ritually brutalized by his family and singled out for special correction at the hands of various “Pillars of Society.”1 At the end of the opera, the dummy’s lobotomization triggers the resurrection of the Antichrist. -
Summer School Options - Sessions A: B: C: D
Orkney CoMA Contemporary Music Summer School with Allcomers Strings 1: Summer School options - sessions A: B: C: D: Fundamentals B: Mindfulness and Music Making Rolf Hind These sessions focus on fundamental aspects of musical creativity, the practice of physical embodiment, dealing with nervousness and addressing the function & place of music in our modern society. The course touches on aspects of yoga, meditation & mindfulness and considers how these can be used to benefit people in their musical practice. Suitable for all. Contemporary Ensembles (all instruments: wind, brass, strings, piano and percussion, except session D) A: Open Score Pilgrimage Workshop William Conway These sessions will serve as a workshop ensemble for pieces submitted for Alasdair Nicolson’s Pilgrimage composition course. It will also rehearse a new Open Score work by William Sweeney commissioned for the Orkney Summer School. All instrumentalists welcome. B: Stone Sounds James Weeks This course is suitable for all instruments and voices and, drawing on recent developments in archaeoacoustics, will concentrate on making sounds with voices and other sound sources at one or more of Orkney’s Neolithic sites. The aim is to develop these into an original work to be performed as part of a location-based concert towards the end of the course. In addition to the workshop sessions there will be two site visits, on Sunday on Tuesday morning, each leaving immediately after session A. Note that you will miss options C and D on Sunday. B: The Physicality of Sound Hollie Harding All performed sounds require sounding objects (instruments), actions (a physical movement that makes the object sound), agents (a performer carrying out a physical action), a localisation (a position in space and an environment to exist within) and an observer (audience). -
New on Naxos | August 2014
NEWThe World’s ON Leading ClassicalNAXOS Music Label AUGUST 2014 Myroslav Skoryk This Month’s Other Highlights At least 8 titles include world première recordings! © 2014 Naxos Rights US, Inc. • Contact Us: [email protected] www.naxos.com • www.classicsonline.com • www.naxosmusiclibrary.com • blog.naxos.com NEW ON NAXOS | AUGUST 2014 Myroslav Skoryk Includes Myroslav SKORYK (b. 1938) World Première Recordings Carpathian Concerto Diptych† • Violin Concerto No. 7†1 Cello Concerto†2 • Dytynstvo (Childhood) from the ‘Hutsul Triptych’ • Melody† Caprice No. 19 from ’24 Paganini Caprices’† Spanish Dance from ‘The Stone Host Suite’† Nazary Pilatyuk, Violin1 • Valery Kazakov, Cello2 Odessa Philharmonic Orchestra • Hobart Earle †WORLD PREMIÈRE RECORDINGS Myroslav Skoryk holds the title of People’s Artist of Ukraine and is one of his country’s outstanding composers. Both the Cello Concerto and the Seventh Violin Concerto combine bittersweet lyricism with explosive dynamic contrasts. With its swinging rhythms and folk-music pungency the Carpathian Concerto is one of Skoryk’s most engaging and popular works. The pensive Melody for strings propelled him to the forefront of Ukrainian music, while the slapstick in his transcription of Paganini’s Caprice No. 19 reveals the composer’s humorous side. These live recordings were made at Myroslav Skoryk’s 75th anniversary concerts in Odessa. Born in Venezuela of American parents, Hobart Earle has developed 8.573333 Playing Time: 76:42 a reputation on several continents as a dynamic and exciting conductor. As Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Odessa Philharmonic Orchestra, Mr. Earle has elevated the orchestra to a 7 47313 33337 0 position of international prominence, unprecedented in the history of the organization. -
Naxos Catalog07
CONTENTS Foreword by Klaus Heymann . 3 Alphabetical List of Works by Composer . 5 Collections . 105 Alphorn 105 Easy Listening 113 Operetta 120 American Classics 105 Flute 113 Orchestral 120 American Jewish Music 105 Funeral Music 114 Organ 122 Ballet 105 Glass Harmonica 114 Piano 124 Baroque 106 Guitar 114 Russian 125 Bassoon 106 Gypsy 117 Saxophone 125 Best Of series 106 Harp 117 Timpani 126 British Music 107 Harpsichord 117 Trombone 126 Cello 107 Horn 117 Trumpet 126 Chamber Music 107 Light Classics 117 Tuba 126 Chill With 107 Lute 118 Very Best Of series 126 Christmas 108 Mandolin 118 Viennese 127 Cinema Classics 109 Music for Meditation 118 Violin 127 Clarinet 109 Oboe 118 Vocal and Choral 127 Early Music 110 Ondes Martenot 119 Wedding Music 129 Easter 113 Operatic 119 Wind 129 Naxos Historical . 130 Naxos Nostalgia . 144 Naxos Jazz Legends . 146 Naxos Musicals . 148 Naxos Blues Legends . 148 Naxos Folk Legends . 148 Naxos Gospel Legends . 148 Naxos Jazz . 149 Naxos World . 149 Naxos Educational . 150 Naxos Super Audio CD . 151 Naxos DVD Audio . 152 Naxos DVD . 152 List of Naxos Distributors . 153 Naxos Website: www.naxos.com Symbols used in this catalogue # New release not listed in 2006 Catalogue $ Recording scheduled to be released before 31 March, 2007 ♦ Titles transferred from LP † Please note that not all titles are available in all territories. Check with your local distributor for availability. Reviews and Ratings Over the years, Naxos recordings have received outstanding critical acclaim in virtually every specialized and general-interest publication around the world. In this catalogue we are only listing ratings which summarize a more detailed review in a single number or a single rating.