Sunday, September 6, 2020

Locking Horns

 Locking Horns is a chamber horn concerto that was commissioned by Sequitur for hornist Daniel Grabois. It has a narrative that the ensemble hornist tries to usurp the soloist role, and fails. Here is Sequitur's recording.







Saturday, April 4, 2020

Persistent Memory

Persistent Memory was written in 1995-96 in memory of Lily Auchincloss, who sponsored my Rome Prize. Accordingly I started it while in Rome (since I wasn't that good at doing like the Romans) and I wrote a long elegy movement emanating from the opening five note melody in cellos.

The piece was commissioned by the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, and the contract specified exactly how many players in each string section: 5-4-3-3-1. That gave me the idea of melodic lines with "split ends", as in melodies that cadence, however strongly or weakly, on chords that emerge within each section, depending on how many players were available. The elegy is split up into all strings, all winds, all strings, and finishes on a 16 note chord — the number of string players.

The elegy goes attacca into a kind of scherzo movement, cast as four variations (on the elegy music), a scherzo in compound time plopped right there in the middle, and four more variations. Weird form, huh? The fifth variation, the one right after the scherzo, recaptures the slowness of the elegy music, and gives the first horn a high, difficult melody before resuming as fast music. That is the "persistent memory" of the title (as well as the obvious "in memory of"). I wrote the second movement at Yaddo in 1996, more than a year after I wrote the elegy, because teaching and kid's ballet to write. You can view the complete sketch for the piece here.

The piece was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 1999. The recording is tracked, even though the movements are designed to be attacca.



Winged Contraption

This is my second non-student orchestra piece, dedicated to Martin Boykan at 60. I had been invited to a birthday celebration for him, but I couldn't make it, since I was at the Djerassi Foundation in California at the time (writing my first non-student orchestra piece), so I promised to write him a piece for his birthday. I wrote all of it at Yaddo in the summer of 1991, on a schedule of two pages per day. Why that? The conceit is that the piece for a 60th birthday would be 60 pages in orchestral score. Also, it's all copied by hand, so I was both composing and copying daily, occasionally joining some of the Yaddo group at a dance club in Saratoga Springs (She's Homeless was the popular jam at the time).

The opening cello melody is extracted from a Boykan piano piece, and a few other quotes from Marty are in there as well.