Matériel : Conducteur et Parties séparées
SKU: GI.G-012630
Spanish.
En este álbum creativo, el compositor Rafael Moreno despliega las historias del Evangelio de los milagros de sanación de Jesús en gemas de inspiración y reflexión. Su habilidad de estilo musical para narrar historias, unida a sus talentos de interpretación y productos, preparan a un encuentro íntimo con la obra de Cristo que caminó en la tierra. ¡Para niños y adultos! This innovative album turns Gospel accounts of Jesus’ healing miracles into gems of inspiration and reflection. Rafael’s unique story-telling ability, coupled with his talents as a singer, performer, and producer, makes for an eye-opening and intimate encounter with the works of Christ as he walked the earth. For children and adults!
SKU: GI.G-012605
Los niños disfrutaran de esta música divertida, llena de energía e inspirada en la Biblia. Este álbum combina las composiciones de Rafael tanto de sus primeros comom de nuevos cantos para niños en uina sola colección para disfrutarla en casa o en el salón de clases. Fun-filled, energetic, and biblically-inspired music for children. This album combines favorites from Rafael's earlier children's albums into a single collection alongside new songs sure to be enjoyed at home or in the classroom.
SKU: GI.G-012607
¡Cateq uesis musicalizada! Todo este álbum es una extraordinaria caja de herramientas para las familias y catequistas hispanohablantes que facilitan educar a los niños en la fe católica. Contiene siete cantos originales (una para cada Sacramento), además hay tres canciones para esos ritos. Cada canto presenta una explicación divertida, cautivadora y teológicamente fundada de los sacramentos, además son niños quienes los cantan. Musicalized catechesis! This entire album is a wonderful toolkit for Spanish-speaking catechists and families to educate children about the Catholic faith. Features are seven original songs (one for each of the sacraments), plus three general songs about these rites. Each song presents a fun, engaging, and theologically-grounded explanation of the sacraments while being performed in children's voices.
SKU: HL.14045637
ISBN 9788438701454. UPC: 888680754235. 8.75x12.0x0.073 inches. English-German-French-Dut ch.
SKU: HL.14041041
French.
SKU: HL.14045661
ISBN 9788438702376. Spanish.
SKU: PD.PIL0933
ISBN 9790350503054.
SKU: BT.SY-2946
German.
Flöte spielen macht Spaß und ganz besonders im Zusammenspiel mit anderen. Man kann damit gar nicht früh genug beginnen! Diese Sammlung abwechslungsreicher und motivierender Spielstücke ist auf Flöte spielen Band F abgestimmt, kann aber natürlich auch parallel zu anderen, ähnlich aufgebauten Schulen verwendet werden. Die Klavierbegleitungen sind weitgehend in ähnlichem Schwierigkeitsgrad wie die Flötenstimme gehalten, um zum Musizieren mit Gleichgesinnten anzuregen. Sie stehen nicht nur als gedruckte Noten-Beilage, sondern auch als Audiotracks online zur Verfügung und können dort nach Bedarf im Abspieltempo angepasst werden.
SKU: GI.G-10827
Del artista discográfico internacional Rafael Moreno llega esta interpretación imaginativa y musicalizada del rosario. Para cada uno de los cuatro conjuntos de misterios (Gozosos, Dolorosos, Gloriosos, Luminosos), Rafael compuso un estribillo común con versos únicos para cada uno de sus cinco misterios. Los versos y estribillos se pueden cantar juntos como una canción completa o intercalados entre las cinco décadas. Se proporciona una breve narración para presentar cada misterio, juntos, el efecto es un hermoso viaje meditativo a través de todo el rosario. Además, Rafael ofrece interpretaciones cantadas del Credo de los Apóstoles y Salve Regina. El libro de acompañamiento complementario contiene versiones notadas y de acordes líricos para cada pieza, y una edición de la asamblea permite a los fieles reunidos cantar juntos estas hermosas meditaciones. From international recording artist Rafael Moreno comes this imaginative, musicalized take on the rosary. For each of the four sets of mysteries (Joyful, Sorrowful, Glorious, Luminous), Rafael has composed a common refrain coupled with unique verses for each of their five mysteries. The verses and refrains can be sung together as a complete song or interspersed between the five decades. A brief narration is provided to introduce each mystery, together, the effect is a beautiful meditative journey through the entire rosary. Additionally, Rafael offers sung renditions of the Apostle’s creed and Salve Regina. The companion songbook contains notated and lyric-chord versions for each piece, and an assembly edition allows the gathered faithful to sing together these beautiful meditations.
SKU: GI.G-012621
In this recording Rafael Moreno includes the traditional mariachi sounds of Mexico in a wonderful homage to San Juan Diego. Includes songs that will undoubtedly become classics and staples of the celebration of the feast of San Juan Diego and Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe novenas across the United States and all the Americas. En esta grabación Rafael Moreno incluye mariachi, la música tradicional de México, en un hermoso homenaje a San Juan Diego. Esta colección tiene algunos cantos que, sin duda, llegaran a convertirse en clásicos y de primera necesidad para las celebraciones en la fiesta de san Juan Diego y las novenas a Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe a través de todos los Estados Unidos y las Américas.
SKU: BT.MUSMS0353
Con no menos de 50 solos de guitarra 100% Blues a la manera de los mayores bluesmen de ayer y de hoy (Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, Joe Bonamassa, Chris Duarte, B.B. King, Albert King, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Otis Rush, Muddy Waters,Buddy Guy...), nuestro método le va a encantar, pero no se trata sólo de eso... En efecto, además del gusto que le procurará tocarlos, dichos solos le permitirán descubrir muchos clichés estilo Blues... que podrá integrarfácilmente en sus propios solos.
Y nada mejor que inspirarse en los grandes maestros del estilo. El hilo conductor es el Blues pero estos solos son muy variados. Ternarios sobre todo, pero a veces binarios. Elaborados enelfamoso «12 bar blues» pero no solamente. En unos aires lentos, estilo Slow Blues, o más enérgicos. En todas las tonalidades y con todo tipo de inspiraciones.
El DVD v deo permite o r y visualizar el conjunto de los 50solos pormenorizados, a velocidad normal y luego lenta, brindándole as la posibilidad de elegir los buenos ademanes las buenas digitaciones y tocar r tmicamente «a compás». El CD mp3 por su parte, abarca el mismo número deplaybacks que de solos. O sea 50 playbacks tocados en dos aires diferentes: el aire deseado (velocidad real) y el aire de trabajo (lento). Son de larga duración (4 o 5 minutos cada uno, o sea ¡más de 7 horas de música en total!)para darle el tiempo de trabajar en las mejores condiciones posibles.
SKU: GI.G-10827A
SKU: HL.14045597
ISBN 9788438705957. Spanish.
SKU: GI.G-1134
SKU: CF.WF229
ISBN 9781491153789. UPC: 680160911288.
Intro duction Gustave Vogt's Musical Paris Gustave Vogt (1781-1870) was born into the Age of Enlightenment, at the apex of the Enlightenment's outreach. During his lifetime he would observe its effect on the world. Over the course of his life he lived through many changes in musical style. When he was born, composers such as Mozart and Haydn were still writing masterworks revered today, and eighty-nine years later, as he departed the world, the new realm of Romanticism was beginning to emerge with Mahler, Richard Strauss and Debussy, who were soon to make their respective marks on the musical world. Vogt himself left a huge mark on the musical world, with critics referring to him as the grandfather of the modern oboe and the premier oboist of Europe. Through his eighty-nine years, Vogt would live through what was perhaps the most turbulent period of French history. He witnessed the French Revolution of 1789, followed by the many newly established governments, only to die just months before the establishment of the Third Republic in 1870, which would be the longest lasting government since the beginning of the revolution. He also witnessed the transformation of the French musical world from one in which opera reigned supreme, to one in which virtuosi, chamber music, and symphonic music ruled. Additionally, he experienced the development of the oboe right before his eyes. When he began playing in the late eighteenth century, the standard oboe had two keys (E and Eb) and at the time of his death in 1870, the System Six Triebert oboe (the instrument adopted by Conservatoire professor, Georges Gillet, in 1882) was only five years from being developed. Vogt was born March 18, 1781 in the ancient town of Strasbourg, part of the Alsace region along the German border. At the time of his birth, Strasbourg had been annexed by Louis XIV, and while heavily influenced by Germanic culture, had been loosely governed by the French for a hundred years. Although it is unclear when Vogt began studying the oboe and when his family made its move to the French capital, the Vogts may have fled Strasbourg in 1792 after much of the city was destroyed during the French Revolution. He was without question living in Paris by 1798, as he enrolled on June 8 at the newly established Conservatoire national de Musique to study oboe with the school's first oboe professor, Alexandre-Antoine Sallantin (1775-1830). Vogt's relationship with the Conservatoire would span over half a century, moving seamlessly from the role of student to professor. In 1799, just a year after enrolling, he was awarded the premier prix, becoming the fourth oboist to achieve this award. By 1802 he had been appointed repetiteur, which involved teaching the younger students and filling in for Sallantin in exchange for a free education. He maintained this rank until 1809, when he was promoted to professor adjoint and finally to professor titulaire in 1816 when Sallantin retired. This was a position he held for thirty-seven years, retiring in 1853, making him the longest serving oboe professor in the school's history. During his tenure, he became the most influential oboist in France, teaching eighty-nine students, plus sixteen he taught while he was professor adjoint and professor titulaire. Many of these students went on to be famous in their own right, such as Henri Brod (1799-1839), Apollon Marie-Rose Barret (1804-1879), Charles Triebert (1810-1867), Stanislas Verroust (1814-1863), and Charles Colin (1832-1881). His influence stretches from French to American oboe playing in a direct line from Charles Colin to Georges Gillet (1854-1920), and then to Marcel Tabuteau (1887-1966), the oboist Americans lovingly describe as the father of American oboe playing. Opera was an important part of Vogt's life. His first performing position was with the Theatre-Montansier while he was still studying at the Conservatoire. Shortly after, he moved to the Ambigu-Comique and, in 1801 was appointed as first oboist with the Theatre-Italien in Paris. He had been in this position for only a year, when he began playing first oboe at the Opera-Comique. He remained there until 1814, when he succeeded his teacher, Alexandre-Antoine Sallantin, as soloist with the Paris Opera, the top orchestra in Paris at the time. He played with the Paris Opera until 1834, all the while bringing in his current and past students to fill out the section. In this position, he began to make a name for himself; so much so that specific performances were immortalized in memoirs and letters. One comes from a young Hector Berlioz (1803-1865) after having just arrived in Paris in 1822 and attended the Paris Opera's performance of Mehul's Stratonice and Persuis' ballet Nina. It was in response to the song Quand le bien-amie reviendra that Berlioz wrote: I find it difficult to believe that that song as sung by her could ever have made as true and touching an effect as the combination of Vogt's instrument... Shortly after this, Berlioz gave up studying medicine and focused on music. Vogt frequently made solo and chamber appearances throughout Europe. His busiest period of solo work was during the 1820s. In 1825 and 1828 he went to London to perform as a soloist with the London Philharmonic Society. Vogt also traveled to Northern France in 1826 for concerts, and then in 1830 traveled to Munich and Stuttgart, visiting his hometown of Strasbourg on the way. While on tour, Vogt performed Luigi Cherubini's (1760-1842) Ave Maria, with soprano Anna (Nanette) Schechner (1806-1860), and a Concertino, presumably written by himself. As a virtuoso performer in pursuit of repertoire to play, Vogt found himself writing much of his own music. His catalog includes chamber music, variation sets, vocal music, concerted works, religious music, wind band arrangements, and pedagogical material. He most frequently performed his variation sets, which were largely based on themes from popular operas he had, presumably played while he was at the Opera. He made his final tour in 1839, traveling to Tours and Bordeaux. During this tour he appeared with the singer Caroline Naldi, Countess de Sparre, and the violinist Joseph Artot (1815-1845). This ended his active career as a soloist. His performance was described in the Revue et gazette musicale de Paris as having lost none of his superiority over the oboe.... It's always the same grace, the same sweetness. We made a trip to Switzerland, just by closing your eyes and listening to Vogt's oboe. Vogt was also active performing in Paris as a chamber and orchestral musician. He was one of the founding members of the Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire, a group established in 1828 by violinist and conductor Francois-Antoine Habeneck (1781-1849). The group featured faculty and students performing alongside each other and works such as Beethoven symphonies, which had never been heard in France. He also premiered the groundbreaking woodwind quintets of Antonin Reicha (1770-1836). After his retirement from the Opera in 1834 and from the Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire in 1842, Vogt began to slow down. His final known performance was of Cherubini's Ave Maria on English horn with tenor Alexis Dupont (1796-1874) in 1843. He then began to reflect on his life and the people he had known. When he reached his 60s, he began gathering entries for his Musical Album of Autographs. Autograph Albums Vogt's Musical Album of Autographs is part of a larger practice of keeping autograph albums, also commonly known as Stammbuch or Album Amicorum (meaning book of friendship or friendship book), which date back to the time of the Reformation and the University of Wittenberg. It was during the mid-sixteenth century that students at the University of Wittenberg began passing around bibles for their fellow students and professors to sign, leaving messages to remember them by as they moved on to the next part of their lives. The things people wrote were mottos, quotes, and even drawings of their family coat of arms or some other scene that meant something to the owner. These albums became the way these young students remembered their school family once they had moved on to another school or town. It was also common for the entrants to comment on other entries and for the owner to amend entries when they learned of important life details such as marriage or death. As the practice continued, bibles were set aside for emblem books, which was a popular book genre that featured allegorical illustrations (emblems) in a tripartite form: image, motto, epigram. The first emblem book used for autographs was published in 1531 by Andrea Alciato (1492-1550), a collection of 212 Latin emblem poems. In 1558, the first book conceived for the purpose of the album amicorum was published by Lyon de Tournes (1504-1564) called the Thesaurus Amicorum. These books continued to evolve, and spread to wider circles away from universities. Albums could be found being kept by noblemen, physicians, lawyers, teachers, painters, musicians, and artisans. The albums eventually became more specialized, leading to Musical Autograph Albums (or Notestammbucher). Before this specialization, musicians contributed in one form or another, but our knowledge of them in these albums is mostly limited to individual people or events. Some would simply sign their name while others would insert a fragment of music, usually a canon (titled fuga) with text in Latin. Canons were popular because they displayed the craftsmanship of the composer in a limited space. Composers well-known today, including J. S. Bach, Telemann, Mozart, Beethoven, Dowland, and Brahms, all participated in the practice, with Beethoven being the first to indicate an interest in creating an album only of music. This interest came around 1815. In an 1845 letter from Johann Friedrich Naue to Heinrich Carl Breidenstein, Naue recalled an 1813 visit with Beethoven, who presented a book suggesting Naue to collect entries from celebrated musicians as he traveled. Shortly after we find Louis Spohr speaking about leaving on his grand tour through Europe in 1815 and of his desire to carry an album with entries from the many artists he would come across. He wrote in his autobiography that his most valuable contribution came from Beethoven in 1815. Spohr's Notenstammbuch, comprised only of musical entries, is groundbreaking because it was coupled with a concert tour, allowing him to reach beyond the Germanic world, where the creation of these books had been nearly exclusive. Spohr brought the practice of Notenstammbucher to France, and in turn indirectly inspired Vogt to create a book of his own some fifteen years later. Vogt's Musical Album of Autographs Vogt's Musical Album of Autographs acts as a form of a memoir, displaying mementos of musicians who held special meaning in his life as well as showing those with whom he was enamored from the younger generation. The anonymous Pie Jesu submitted to Vogt in 1831 marks the beginning of an album that would span nearly three decades by the time the final entry, an excerpt from Charles Gounod's (1818-1893) Faust, which premiered in 1859, was submitted. Within this album we find sixty-two entries from musicians whom he must have known very well because they were colleagues at the Conservatoire, or composers of opera whose works he was performing with the Paris Opera. Other entries came from performers with whom he had performed and some who were simply passing through Paris, such as Joseph Joachim (1831-1907). Of the sixty-three total entries, some are original, unpublished works, while others came from well-known existing works. Nineteen of these works are for solo piano, sixteen utilize the oboe or English horn, thirteen feature the voice (in many different combinations, including vocal solos with piano, and small choral settings up to one with double choir), two feature violin as a solo instrument, and one even features the now obscure ophicleide. The connections among the sixty-two contributors to Vogt's album are virtually never-ending. All were acquainted with Vogt in some capacity, from long-time friendships to relationships that were created when Vogt requested their entry. Thus, while Vogt is the person who is central to each of these musicians, the web can be greatly expanded. In general, the connections are centered around the Conservatoire, teacher lineages, the Opera, and performing circles. The relationships between all the contributors in the album parallel the current musical world, as many of these kinds of relationships still exist, and permit us to fantasize who might be found in an album created today by a musician of the same standing. Also important, is what sort of entries the contributors chose to pen. The sixty-three entries are varied, but can be divided into published and unpublished works. Within the published works, we find opera excerpts, symphony excerpts, mass excerpts, and canons, while the unpublished works include music for solo piano, oboe or English horn, string instruments (violin and cello), and voice (voice with piano and choral). The music for oboe and English horn works largely belong in the unpublished works of the album. These entries were most likely written to honor Vogt. Seven are for oboe and piano and were contributed by Joseph Joachim, Pauline Garcia Viardot (1821-1910), Joseph Artot, Anton Bohrer (1783-1852), Georges Onslow (1784-1853), Desire Beaulieu (1791-1863), and Narcisse Girard (1797-1860). The common thread between these entries is the simplicity of the melody and structure. Many are repetitive, especially Beaulieu's entry, which features a two-note ostinato throughout the work, which he even included in his signature. Two composers contributed pieces for English horn and piano, and like the previous oboe entries, are simple and repetitive. These were written by Michele Carafa (1787-1872) and Louis Clapisson (1808-1866). There are two other entries that were unpublished works and are chamber music. One is an oboe trio by Jacques Halevy (1799-1862) and the other is for oboe and strings (string trio) by J. B. Cramer (1771-1858). There are five published works in the album for oboe and English horn. There are three from operas and the other two from symphonic works. Ambroise Thomas (1811-1896) contributed an excerpt from the Entr'acte of his opera La Guerillero, and was likely chosen because the oboe was featured at this moment. Hippolyte Chelard (1789-1861) also chose to honor Vogt by writing for English horn. His entry, for English horn and piano, is taken from his biggest success, Macbeth. The English horn part was actually taken from Lady Macbeth's solo in the sleepwalking scene. Vogt's own entry also falls into this category, as he entered an excerpt from Donizetti's Maria di Rohan. The excerpt he chose is a duet between soprano and English horn. There are two entries featuring oboe that are excerpted from symphonic repertoire. One is a familiar oboe melody from Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony entered by his first biographer, Anton Schindler (1796-1864). The other is an excerpt from Berlioz's choral symphony, Romeo et Juliette. He entered an oboe solo from the Grand Fete section of the piece. Pedagogical benefit All of these works are lovely, and fit within the album wonderfully, but these works also are great oboe and English horn music for young students. The common thread between these entries is the simplicity of the melody and structure. Many are repetitive, especially Beaulieu's entry, which features a two-note ostinato throughout the work in the piano. This repetitive structure is beneficial for young students for searching for a short solo to present at a studio recital, or simply to learn. They also work many technical issues a young player may encounter, such as mastering the rolling finger to uncover and recover the half hole. This is true of Bealieu's Pensee as well as Onslow's Andantino. Berlioz's entry from Romeo et Juliette features very long phrases, which helps with endurance and helps keep the air spinning through the oboe. Some of the pieces also use various levels of ornamentation, from trills to grace notes, and short cadenzas. This allows the student to learn appropriate ways to phrase with these added notes. The chamber music is a valuable way to start younger students with chamber music, especially the short quartet by Cramer for oboe and string trio. All of these pieces will not tax the student to learn a work that is more advanced, as well as give them a full piece that they can work on from beginning to end in a couple weeks, instead of months. Editorial Policy The works found in this edition are based on the manuscript housed at the Morgan Library in New York City (call number Cary 348, V886. A3). When possible, published scores were consulted and compared to clarify pitch and text. The general difficulties in creating an edition of these works stem from entries that appear to be hastily written, and thus omit complete articulations and dynamic indications for all passages and parts. The manuscript has been modernized into a performance edition. The score order from the manuscript has been retained. If an entry also exists in a published work, and this was not indicated on the manuscript, appropriate titles and subtitles have been added tacitly. For entries that were untitled, the beginning tempo marking or expressive directive has been added as its title tacitly. Part names have been changed from the original language to English. If no part name was present, it was added tacitly. All scores are transposing where applicable. Measure numbers have been added at the beginning of every system. Written directives have been retained in the original language and are placed relative to where they appear in the manuscript. Tempo markings from the manuscript have been retained, even if they were abbreviated, i.e., Andte. The barlines, braces, brackets, and clefs are modernized. The beaming and stem direction has been modernized. Key signatures have been modernized as some of the flats/sharps do not appear on the correct lines or spaces. Time signatures have been modernized. In a few cases, when a time signature was missing in the manuscript, it has been added tacitly. Triplet and rhythmic groupings have been modernized. Slurs, ties, and articulations (staccato and accent) have been modernized. Slurs, ties, and articulations have been added to parallel passages tacitly. Courtesy accidentals found in the manuscript have been removed, unless it appeared to be helpful to the performer. Dynamic indications from the manuscript have been retained, except where noted. --Kristin Leitterman.Introducti onGustave Vogt’s Musical ParisGustave Vogt (1781–1870) was born into the “Age of Enlightenment,” at the apex of the Enlightenment’s outreach. During his lifetime he would observe its effect on the world. Over the course of his life he lived through many changes in musical style. When he was born, composers such as Mozart and Haydn were still writing masterworks revered today, and eighty-nine years later, as he departed the world, the new realm of Romanticism was beginning to emerge with Mahler, Richard Strauss and Debussy, who were soon to make their respective marks on the musical world. Vogt himself left a huge mark on the musical world, with critics referring to him as the “grandfather of the modern oboe” and the “premier oboist of Europe.”Through his eighty-nine years, Vogt would live through what was perhaps the most turbulent period of French history. He witnessed the French Revolution of 1789, followed by the many newly established governments, only to die just months before the establishment of the Third Republic in 1870, which would be the longest lasting government since the beginning of the revolution. He also witnessed the transformation of the French musical world from one in which opera reigned supreme, to one in which virtuosi, chamber music, and symphonic music ruled. Additionally, he experienced the development of the oboe right before his eyes. When he began playing in the late eighteenth century, the standard oboe had two keys (E and Eb) and at the time of his death in 1870, the “System Six” Triébert oboe (the instrument adopted by Conservatoire professor, Georges Gillet, in 1882) was only five years from being developed.Vogt was born March 18, 1781 in the ancient town of Strasbourg, part of the Alsace region along the German border. At the time of his birth, Strasbourg had been annexed by Louis XIV, and while heavily influenced by Germanic culture, had been loosely governed by the French for a hundred years. Although it is unclear when Vogt began studying the oboe and when his family made its move to the French capital, the Vogts may have fled Strasbourg in 1792 after much of the city was destroyed during the French Revolution. He was without question living in Paris by 1798, as he enrolled on June 8 at the newly established Conservatoire national de Musique to study oboe with the school’s first oboe professor, Alexandre-Antoine Sallantin (1775–1830).Vogt’s relationship with the Conservatoire would span over half a century, moving seamlessly from the role of student to professor. In 1799, just a year after enrolling, he was awarded the premier prix, becoming the fourth oboist to achieve this award. By 1802 he had been appointed répétiteur, which involved teaching the younger students and filling in for Sallantin in exchange for a free education. He maintained this rank until 1809, when he was promoted to professor adjoint and finally to professor titulaire in 1816 when Sallantin retired. This was a position he held for thirty-seven years, retiring in 1853, making him the longest serving oboe professor in the school’s history. During his tenure, he became the most influential oboist in France, teaching eighty-nine students, plus sixteen he taught while he was professor adjoint and professor titulaire. Many of these students went on to be famous in their own right, such as Henri Brod (1799–1839), Apollon Marie-Rose Barret (1804–1879), Charles Triebert (1810–1867), Stanislas Verroust (1814–1863), and Charles Colin (1832–1881). His influence stretches from French to American oboe playing in a direct line from Charles Colin to Georges Gillet (1854–1920), and then to Marcel Tabuteau (1887–1966), the oboist Americans lovingly describe as the “father of American oboe playing.”Opera was an important part of Vogt’s life. His first performing position was with the Théâtre-Montansier while he was still studying at the Conservatoire. Shortly after, he moved to the Ambigu-Comique and, in 1801 was appointed as first oboist with the Théâtre-Italien in Paris. He had been in this position for only a year, when he began playing first oboe at the Opéra-Comique. He remained there until 1814, when he succeeded his teacher, Alexandre-Antoine Sallantin, as soloist with the Paris Opéra, the top orchestra in Paris at the time. He played with the Paris Opéra until 1834, all the while bringing in his current and past students to fill out the section. In this position, he began to make a name for himself; so much so that specific performances were immortalized in memoirs and letters. One comes from a young Hector Berlioz (1803–1865) after having just arrived in Paris in 1822 and attended the Paris Opéra’s performance of Mehul’s Stratonice and Persuis’ ballet Nina. It was in response to the song Quand le bien-amié reviendra that Berlioz wrote: “I find it difficult to believe that that song as sung by her could ever have made as true and touching an effect as the combination of Vogt’s instrument…” Shortly after this, Berlioz gave up studying medicine and focused on music.Vogt frequently made solo and chamber appearances throughout Europe. His busiest period of solo work was during the 1820s. In 1825 and 1828 he went to London to perform as a soloist with the London Philharmonic Society. Vogt also traveled to Northern France in 1826 for concerts, and then in 1830 traveled to Munich and Stuttgart, visiting his hometown of Strasbourg on the way. While on tour, Vogt performed Luigi Cherubini’s (1760–1842) Ave Maria, with soprano Anna (Nanette) Schechner (1806–1860), and a Concertino, presumably written by himself. As a virtuoso performer in pursuit of repertoire to play, Vogt found himself writing much of his own music. His catalog includes chamber music, variation sets, vocal music, concerted works, religious music, wind band arrangements, and pedagogical material. He most frequently performed his variation sets, which were largely based on themes from popular operas he had, presumably played while he was at the Opéra.He made his final tour in 1839, traveling to Tours and Bordeaux. During this tour he appeared with the singer Caroline Naldi, Countess de Sparre, and the violinist Joseph Artôt (1815–1845). This ended his active career as a soloist. His performance was described in the Revue et gazette musicale de Paris as having “lost none of his superiority over the oboe…. It’s always the same grace, the same sweetness. We made a trip to Switzerland, just by closing your eyes and listening to Vogt’s oboe.”Vogt was also active performing in Paris as a chamber and orchestral musician. He was one of the founding members of the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, a group established in 1828 by violinist and conductor François-Antoine Habeneck (1781–1849). The group featured faculty and students performing alongside each other and works such as Beethoven symphonies, which had never been heard in France. He also premiered the groundbreaking woodwind quintets of Antonin Reicha (1770–1836).After his retirement from the Opéra in 1834 and from the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire in 1842, Vogt began to slow down. His final known performance was of Cherubini’s Ave Maria on English horn with tenor Alexis Dupont (1796–1874) in 1843. He then began to reflect on his life and the people he had known. When he reached his 60s, he began gathering entries for his Musical Album of Autographs.Autograph AlbumsVogt’s Musical Album of Autographs is part of a larger practice of keeping autograph albums, also commonly known as Stammbuch or Album Amicorum (meaning book of friendship or friendship book), which date back to the time of the Reformation and the University of Wittenberg. It was during the mid-sixteenth century that students at the University of Wittenberg began passing around bibles for their fellow students and professors to sign, leaving messages to remember them by as they moved on to the next part of their lives. The things people wrote were mottos, quotes, and even drawings of their family coat of arms or some other scene that meant something to the owner. These albums became the way these young students remembered their school family once they had moved on to another school or town. It was also common for the entrants to comment on other entries and for the owner to amend entries when they learned of important life details such as marriage or death.As the practice continued, bibles were set aside for emblem books, which was a popular book genre that featured allegorical illustrations (emblems) in a tripartite form: image, motto, epigram. The first emblem book used for autographs was published in 1531 by Andrea Alciato (1492–1550), a collection of 212 Latin emblem poems. In 1558, the first book conceived for the purpose of the album amicorum was published by Lyon de Tournes (1504–1564) called the Thesaurus Amicorum. These books continued to evolve, and spread to wider circles away from universities. Albums could be found being kept by noblemen, physicians, lawyers, teachers, painters, musicians, and artisans.The albums eventually became more specialized, leading to Musical Autograph Albums (or Notestammbücher). Before this specialization, musicians contributed in one form or another, but our knowledge of them in these albums is mostly limited to individual people or events. Some would simply sign their name while others would insert a fragment of music, usually a canon (titled fuga) with text in Latin. Canons were popular because they displayed the craftsmanship of the composer in a limited space. Composers well-known today, including J. S. Bach, Telemann, Mozart, Beethoven, Dowland, and Brahms, all participated in the practice, with Beethoven being the first to indicate an interest in creating an album only of music.This interest came around 1815. In an 1845 letter from Johann Friedrich Naue to Heinrich Carl Breidenstein, Naue recalled an 1813 visit with Beethoven, who presented a book suggesting Naue to collect entries from celebrated musicians as he traveled. Shortly after we find Louis Spohr speaking about leaving on his “grand tour” through Europe in 1815 and of his desire to carry an album with entries from the many artists he would come across. He wrote in his autobiography that his “most valuable contribution” came from Beethoven in 1815. Spohr’s Notenstammbuch, comprised only of musical entries, is groundbreaking because it was coupled with a concert tour, allowing him to reach beyond the Germanic world, where the creation of these books had been nearly exclusive. Spohr brought the practice of Notenstammbücher to France, and in turn indirectly inspired Vogt to create a book of his own some fifteen years later.Vogt’s Musical Album of AutographsVogt’s Musical Album of Autographs acts as a form of a memoir, displaying mementos of musicians who held special meaning in his life as well as showing those with whom he was enamored from the younger generation. The anonymous Pie Jesu submitted to Vogt in 1831 marks the beginning of an album that would span nearly three decades by the time the final entry, an excerpt from Charles Gounod’s (1818–1893) Faust, which premiered in 1859, was submitted.Within this album ...
SKU: HL.49000759
ISBN 9783795734459. German.
Wortlich ubersetzt ist das Libretto ein 'kleines Buch', ein 'Buchlein'. Doch nicht irgendein Buchlein. Seit es Opern gibt, gibt es die Textbucher dazu. Oft erzahlen die Universalsprache Musik und der Ausdruck der Darsteller die Geschichte, auch wenn man die Worte nicht versteht. Trotzdem ist ein Libretto sehr hilfreich fur das Verstandnis der Details. Gerade dann, und das fast immer, wenn die Oper in der Originalsprache aufgefuhrt wird. In den Libretti ist in der Regel das Original der Ubersetzung gegenubergestellt. Sie konnen so problemlos parallel Handlung und Inhalt folgen. In den meisten Fallen existiert das Textbuch Oper bevor die Musik dazu komponiert wird. Spannende und dramatische Geschichten bilden die Grundlage fur faszinierende Opernkompositionen.3 (2. und 3. auch Picc.)* 3 (3. auch Engl. Hr.) * 3 (2. auch in Es, 3. auch Bassklar. in B) * 2 * Kontrafag. - 4 * 3 * 3 * 1 - P.S. ( Trgl. * 2 hg. Beck. * Beckenpaar * gr. Tamt. * Schellen * Glocken * Schellentr. * 3 Tomt. * 3 Ruhrtr. * kl. Tr. * gr. Tr. * Kast. * Holzbl. * 3 Tempelbl. * Rute * Steinsp. * Glspl. * Xyl. * Marimba) (3-5 Spieler) - Hfe. * Klav. (auch Cel.) * Mand. - Str. (12 * 10 * 8 * 6 * 53 (2. und 3. auch Picc.)* 3 (3. auch Engl. Hr.) * 3 (2. auch in Es, 3. auch Bassklar. in B) * 2 * Kontrafag. - 4 * 3 * 3 * 1 - P.S. ( Trgl. * 2 hg. Beck. * Beckenpaar * gr. Tamt. * Schellen * Glocken * Schellentr. * 3 Tomt. * 3 Ruhrtr. * kl. Tr. * gr. Tr. * Kast. * Holzbl. * 3 Tempelbl. * Rute * Steinsp. * Glspl. * Xyl. * Marimba) (3-5 Spieler) - Hfe. * Klav. (auch Cel.) * Mand. - Str. (12 * 10 * 8 * 6 * 5.
SKU: HL.49013479
ISBN 9783795735012. UPC: 884088060664. 5.75x8.25x0.235 inches. German.
Wortlich ubersetzt ist das Libretto ein 'kleines Buch', ein 'Buchlein'. Doch nicht irgendein Buchlein. Seit es Opern gibt, gibt es die Textbucher dazu. Oft erzahlen die Universalsprache Musik und der Ausdruck der Darsteller die Geschichte, auch wenn man die Worte nicht versteht. Trotzdem ist ein Libretto sehr hilfreich fur das Verstandnis der Details. Gerade dann, und das fast immer, wenn die Oper in der Originalsprache aufgefuhrt wird. In den Libretti ist in der Regel das Original der Ubersetzung gegenubergestellt. Sie konnen so problemlos parallel Handlung und Inhalt folgen. In den meisten Fallen existiert das Textbuch Oper bevor die Musik dazu komponiert wird. Spannende und dramatische Geschichten bilden die Grundlage fur faszinierende Opernkompositionen.3 (2. u. 3. auch Picc.) * 3 (2. auch Ob. d'am., 3. auch Engl. Hr.) * 3 (2. auch Klar. in Es und Altsax. in Es, 3. auch Bassklar. in B) * 3 (3. auch Kontrafag.) - 4 * 4 Tromp. in C (1. u. 2. ad lib. auch kl. Tromp. in D) * 1 Basstromp. in C * 3 Pos. (Tenor, Tenor-Bass, Kontrabass) * Kb.-Tb. - P.S. (Xyl. * Vibr. * Glspl. * Marimb. * 12 mechan. Autohupen * 4 Spieluhren * 6 elektr. Turklingeln * 2 Schellentr. * Militartr. * 2 kl. Tr. * 3 Bong. * Conga * Ruhrtr. * Paradetr. * 4 Tomt. * 2 gr. Tr. * 2 Trgl. * 3 Paar Crot. * 3 hg. Beck. * 1 Paar kl. Beck. * 2 Paar norm. Beck. * Gong * 2 Tamt. * Rohrengl. * 2 jap. Tempelgl. [Rin] * Mar. * 2 Gueros * 2 Peitschen * 1 Paar Claves * 1 Paar Kast. * Ratsche * 3 Woodbl. * Holztr. * 5 Tempelbl. * gr. Holzhammer * Holzlatten * Lotosfl. * Trillerpfeife * Kuckuckspfeife * Signalpfeife * Sirenenpfeife * Dampfschiffpfeife * 2 Sirenen * 2 Flex. * Entengequake * 2 Brummtopfe * gr. Weckeruhr * gr. pyramidenform. Metronom * Papierbogen, Seiden- oder Zeitungspapier * 1 Paar Sandpapierblocke * Windmaschine * Papiertute * Tablett voll Geschirr * Kochtopf * Pistole) (4 Spieler) - 3 chrom. Mundharmonikas (werden von den Blasern oder Schlagzeugern gespielt) * Cel. (auch Cemb.) * Konzertflugel (auch elektr. Klav.) * elektr. Org. (nur Manual) (auch Regal) * Mand. * Hfe. - Str. (3 * 0 * 2 * 6 * 4) Buhnenmusik: Instrumentalisten aus dem Orchestergraben3 (2. u. 3. auch Picc.) * 3 (2. auch Ob. d'am., 3. auch Engl. Hr.) * 3 (2. auch Klar. in Es und Altsax. in Es, 3. auch Bassklar. in B) * 3 (3. auch Kontrafag.) - 4 * 4 Tromp. in C (1. u. 2. ad lib. auch kl. Tromp. in D) * 1 Basstromp. in C * 3 Pos. (Tenor, Tenor-Bass, Kontrabass) * Kb.-Tb. - P.S. (Xyl. * Vibr. * Glspl. * Marimb. * 12 mechan. Autohupen * 4 Spieluhren * 6 elektr. Turklingeln * 2 Schellentr. * Militartr. * 2 kl. Tr. * 3 Bong. * Conga * Ruhrtr. * Paradetr. * 4 Tomt. * 2 gr. Tr. * 2 Trgl. * 3 Paar Crot. * 3 hg. Beck. * 1 Paar kl. Beck. * 2 Paar norm. Beck. * Gong * 2 Tamt. * Rohrengl. * 2 jap. Tempelgl. [Rin] * Mar. * 2 Gueros * 2 Peitschen * 1 Paar Claves * 1 Paar Kast. * Ratsche * 3 Woodbl. * Holztr. * 5 Tempelbl. * gr. Holzhammer * Holzlatten * Lotosfl. * Trillerpfeife * Kuckuckspfeife * Signalpfeife * Sirenenpfeife * Dampfschiffpfeife * 2 Sirenen * 2 Flex. * Entengequake * 2 Brummtopfe * gr. Weckeruhr * gr. pyramidenform. Metronom * Papierbogen, Seiden- oder Zeitungspapier * 1 Paar Sandpapierblocke * Windmaschine * Papiertute * Tablett voll Geschirr * Kochtopf * Pistole) (4 Spieler) - 3 chrom. Mundharmonikas (werden von den Blasern oder Schlagzeugern gespielt) * Cel. (auch Cemb.) * Konzertflugel (auch elektr. Klav.) * elektr. Org. (nur Manual) (auch Regal) * Mand. * Hfe. - Str. (3 * 0 * 2 * 6 * 4) Buhnenmusik: Instrumentalisten aus dem Orchestergraben.
SKU: BR.PB-5420
ISBN 9790004211830. 9 x 12 inches.
Vielleicht so etwas wie ein ,,Parergon zu meiner Madchen-Oper Zwei Klangquellen - unter ambivalenten Aspekten zugleich homogen und heterogen, nicht so ohne weiteres zusammenpassend: - Posaune und Flote/Bassflote - (mit Resonanzen aus zwei Konzertflugeln), 8 Mannerstimmen - alle erzeugen Tone, und Luft, Zweiklange, Vibrationen, Schwebungen, Rattern, Konsonanzen. Und rattern und sprechen - und japsen, Orchester mit 4 Oboen, 3 Floten, 3 Klarinetten, zwei Kontrafagotten (unterbeschaftigt), 4 Horner, drei Trompeten, keinen Posaunen, 2 Tuben, die in der Tiefe rappeln, zwei Klavieren, Gitarre-Harfe, Streicher (,,Perforateure), 3 Schlagzeuger, rappeln (Fellwirbel), - und schwingen China-Becken durch die Luft, dampfen aus und vorzeitig ab (,,japsen) und: halten aus. Musik zum Aushalten, ist nicht zum Aushalten. Ein Orchester mit vielen Unisono-Quellen Es ist immer wieder auf andere Weise - jedes Mal das gleiche: Musik, nicht als Text, nicht als diskursiver Verlauf, gar als klingendes Drama, - eher eine Art kunstliches und als Produkt einer komplexen Spekulation zugleich transzendentes Natur-Schauspiel, als ,,reine Prasenz - (Das sind allerdings Wort-Hulsen, die schlecht an das erinnern, was sie nicht mehr zu nennen, zu fassen wagen bzw. imstande sind. Begriffe, die es abzurufen und zugleich im Blick auf die Sache selbst auszustreichen gilt.): Sie zu beschworen, ohne dabei in schlecht besinnliche ,,meditative Idyllen, bzw. idyllische Standards zu verfallen, gehort zu meinen zentralen Utopien - Ihre Wunschbarkeit/Stringenz/e xistentielle Notwendigkeit, ,,Wahrheit ist hienieden nicht zu trennen von ihrer Unmoglichkeit, wegen der Standardisiertheit aller Mittel, auf der ihre Verwirklichung, ihre Anpeilung, ihre Ins-Werk-Setzung verwiesen ist. Aber: alles soll/wird in dieser wie auch immer vermittelten Prasenz beruhrt, erlost, befreit sein. Kann man Erfahrungen, deren Unmoglichkeit, deren Verschuttetheit man sich bewusst macht, vermitteln durch den Kampf gegen diese Unmoglichkeiten, Verschuttetheiten (= Unfreiheiten)??? Wer bin ich? Was ist das: das ich, das solche Suche, solches Abenteuer, solchen Kampf gegen die Materie auf sich nimmt?? Das ,,Ich ist kein Ding, sondern ein Ort (Kitaro Nishida - aber ich bin kein Buddhist, und auch kein Zen-Monch, sondern ein Anfanger in allem, auch im Komponieren des jeweilig konzipierten Stucks.) Das Wasser wascht das Wasser nicht - das Feuer verbrennt das Feuer nicht - der Schmerz selbst tut nicht weh. Der Genuss geniesst nicht. Das Horen hort nicht, das Leben lebt nicht - und so lebt es. Das Ich ist nicht das ich. Musik ist nicht Musik, ist Nicht-Musik: die einzige Musik, die den Namen in seiner emphatischen Bedeutung verdient. Musik sei Nicht Musik?? Sondern?? Ja - sondern. Komponieren heisst: sondern. Utopien kompositorisch zu beschworen, bedeutete fur meinen Mechanismus stets: ihre Verschuttetheit. Und das was - nicht zufallig - sie verschuttet hat. Oder zu verschutten droht, in den Griff zu nehmen.Helmut Lachenmann (Skizze)Mitten in meiner Oper Das Madchen mit den Schwefelholzern - nach Hans Christian Andersen -, die im winterlichen eiskalten Kopenhagen spielt, gibt es einen Sprung in die mediterrane Vulkanlandschaft Suditaliens, wo - nach einem Text von Leonardo Da Vinci - ,,die Schwefelfeuer den grossen Berg offnen, um Steine und Erde samt den heraustretenden und herausgespieenen Flammen durch die Luft zu schleudern, und im Ausbruch ,,jedes Hindernis verjagen, das sich ihrem ungestumen Wuten entgegenstellt. Leonardo sieht in diesem Naturvorgang eine Metapher fur die Unruhe des menschlichen Herzens bei der Suche nach Erkenntnis. Er beschreibt eine Wanderung durch die schattigen Klippen hindurch bis vor den Eingang einer grossen Hohle, vor welcher der Erzahlende ,,im Gefuhl der Unwissenheit eine Zeitlang verharrt: ,,Ich hockte mit gekrummtem Rucken, die mude Hand aufs Knie gestutzt, beschattete ich mit der Rechten die gesenkten und geschlossenen Wimpern: - und n u n -, da ich mich mehrmals hin und her beugte, um in die Hohle hineinzublicken, verbot mir das die grosse Dunkelheit, die darin herrschte. Als ich aber eine Zeitlang verharrt hatte, erwachten in mir zwei Gefuhle: Furcht und Verlangen - Furcht vor der drohenden Dunkelheit der Hohle, Verlangen aber, mit eigenen Augen zu sehen, was an Wunderbarem darin sein mochte. Diesem ,,n u n ist meine Komposition gewidmet: Sie - ahnlich wie auf andere Weise mein Klavierkonzert Ausklang - ist sozusagen ,,meine Alpensymphonie. Anders als bei Strauss allerdings beschwort sie Energien und Eruptionen in einer Klanglandschaft weitab von jeglicher musiksprachlichen Geborgenheit. Wahrend im Strauss'schen Meisterwerk der Wanderer aus stimmungsvollem b-moll-Morgennebel aufbricht - allerdings erst den in A-Dur strahlenden Sonnenaufgang abwartet ... - und in frohlichem Es-Dur lossturmend auf tonal gesicherten Wegen zum majestatischen C-dur-Gipfel glucklich hinaufgelangt - den er allerdings bei hereinbrechendem Unwetter eilends verlasst, um ins schutzende Tal hinabzufluchten -, verharrt der Wanderer Leonardos in NUN in unwirtlicher Hohe vor jener Furcht und Verlangen erregenden Hohle. Meine Musik, sozusagen als brodelnder Krater beginnend, verwandelt sich in eine Sequenz von Rufen, deren Widerhall die ,,drohende Finsternis zu durchdringen und auszuloten versucht, und sie mundet - auf dem Umweg uber eine Art ,,Tanz auf dem Vulkan der beiden Solo-Instrumente - in eine instrumental paraphrasierte Sprech-Landschaft, als ob das Zischen und Fauchen, nichts weiter wiedergabe als die erweiterten Konsonanten eines gesprochenen imaginaren Textes. Dieser schliesslich - als Botschaft des im Ungeborgenen nach Erkenntnis Suchenden - konkretisiert sich zu jenem abgrundigen Satz des japanischen Philosophen und Grunders der ,,Kyoto-Schule, Kitaro Nishida: ,,Das Ich ist kein Ding, sondern ein Ort. Die Beziehung meines Werks zur Strauss'schen Alpensymphonie - der Komponist wollte sie ursprunglich nennen ,,der Antichrist - ist in ihrer antipodischen Gegensatzlichkeit evident. Es ist eine machtvolle, letztlich aber gutige, dem Menschen zugewandte, idyllische Natur, die bei Strauss beschworen wird, und den nachtlich in die hausliche Behaglichkeit Heimkehrenden erfullt Ehrfurcht und Dankbarkeit: es ist ein ,,glaubiger Antichrist, und die Pastorale Beethovens lasst grussen. Wie alles von Strauss war es ein - s e i n - letzter (oder vorletzter ...) Blick auf ein zerfallendes Paradies (1915 geschrieben ...). Heute ist vielleicht jedes Werk, welches sich den innovativen Anspruch von musikalischer Tradition zu Eigen gemacht hat und im 21. Jahrhundert den Musikbegriff jenseits tonaler Sprachvertrautheit in ungesichertem Klang-Terrain neu zu bestimmen sucht - eine Art Bergbesteigung in weglosem Gelande, und wenn schon nicht eine ,,Alpensymphonie, so doch eine Gratwanderung: abenteuerlich - verlockend - nicht ungefahrlich: ,,non hay caminos .... Helmut Lachenmann (Februar 2003)CDs: Gaby Pas-Van Riet (flute), Michael Svoboda (trombone), Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart, WDR Sinfonieorchester Koln, cond. Jonathan Nott CD KAIROS 0012142KAIDietmar Wiesner (flute), Uwe Dierksen (trombone), SCHOLA Heidelberg, Ensemble Modern Orchestra, cond. Markus StenzEMCD-004Bibliography :Hidalgo, Manuel: Mozart in Lachenmann, in: auf (-) und zuhoren. 14 essayistische Reflexionen uber die Musik und die Person Helmut Lachenmanns, hrsg. von Hans-Peter Jahn, Hofheim: Wolke 2005, pp. 35-46.Hiekel, Jorn Peter: Interkulturalitat als existentielle Erfahrung. Asiatische Perspektiven in Helmut Lachenmanns Asthetik, in: Nachgedachte Musik. Studien zum Werk von Helmut Lachenmann, hrsg. von Jorn Peter Hiekel und Siegfried Mauser, Saarbrucken: Pfau 2005, pp. 62-84.Kaltenecker, Martin: Was nun? Die Musik Helmut Lachenmanns als Beispiel, in: Der Atem des Wanderers. Der Komponist Helmut Lachenmann, hrsg. von Hans-Klaus Jungheinrich, Mainz: Schott 2006, pp. 113-128.Maier, Birgit; Britz, Vanessa; Arnold, Miriam: Helmut Lachenmann: NUN, in: Flote aktuell (2003), Heft 4, pp. 20-24.Pas-Van Riet, Gaby: On NUN, in: Helmut Lachenmann Inward Beauty, hrsg. von Dan Albertson, Contemporary Music Review 23 (2004), Heft 3/4, p. 165f.Svoboda, Mike: NUN An Inside View, in: Helmut Lachenmann Inward Beauty, hrsg. von Dan Albertson, Contemporary Music Review 23 (2004), Heft 3/4, pp. 161-164.Wellmer, Albrecht: Helmut Lachenmann: Die Befreiung des Klangs in der konstruktivistischen Tradition der europaischen Moderne, in: ders., Versuch uber Musik und Sprache, Munchen: Hanser 2009, pp. 270-299.Utz, Christian: Paradoxien musikalischer Temporalitat. Die Konstruktion von Klanggegenwart im Spatwerk Bernd Alois Zimmermanns im Kontext der Prasenzasthetik bei Giacinto Scelsi, Gyorgy Ligeti, Morton Feldman und Helmut Lachenmann, in: Die Musikforschung 68 (2015), pp. 22-52.World premiere: Cologne (Musik der Zeit), October 20, 1999 World premiere of the revised version: Berlin, Konzerthaus, January 17, 2003.
SKU: PR.416414230
ISBN 9781598066630. UPC: 680160602087. 9x12 inches.
Colonnade is James Matheson’s intriguing response to the Albany Symphony’s commission to create a work inspired by the NY State Board of Education Building, designed by the renowned architect Rafael Guastavino. Matheson explains that “A colonnade acts as a metaphor for the tension between knowledge and perception. The columns are the same height and equidistant from each other; while the mind understands this fully, there exists no place from which one can perceive this – the columns always appear to be of uneven height and spacing. If one then adds motion to perspective, identical columns acquire elasticity, and begin to change kaleidoscopically – they shrink, grow, become closer, and then further apart.” This structural paradox is given musical life in the outer sections of Colonnade, while the long, arching middle section is inspired by the vaulted ceiling of one of the building’s largest rooms, enhancing the structure’s spacious openness and lightness.Colonnade is inspired by Albany’s majestic New York State Board of Education Building, and written on a commission from the Albany Symphony Orchestra. It was an intriguing task, in part because in order to accept the commission I had to agree to write a work “inspired by” a building I had not yet seen. Thisproblem was compounded by the fact that, for me, the very notion of extra-musical inspiration is a complex one, particularly with respect to literary or visual sources. I generally find ideas and abstracted notions more generative of musical ideas than specific ones (a poem, an experience, a painting). So when I went to seeand tour the building, I sought to identify fundamental formal aspects of the building which I could process into musical ideas, and would then be linked to the building through a sense of formal relationship. In theend, two characteristics of the building stood out as noteworthy and undiminished by time (compared with, for instance, the building’s rotunda, which contains a series of quaintly outdated allegorical paintings): theexterior colonnade and a beautiful interior vaulted ceiling, designed by Rafael Guastavino.For me, a colonnade acts as a metaphor for the tension between knowledge and perception. We all know, for instance, that the columns are of the same height and are equidistant from each other. Nevertheless, while the mind understands this fully, it is also the case that there exists no place – no standpoint or viewpoint – anywhere in the universe – from which one can perceive this; the columns always appear to be of uneven height and spacing. If one then adds motion to perspective – a walk along the colonnade, for instance – the fixed, even, rigidly identical columns acquire elasticity, and begin to change kaleidoscopically – they shrink, grow, become closer, and then further apart. Further, the detail of the building’s façade behind the colonnadeshifts into and out of visibility, with different portions obscured by the columns from each vantage point. These considerations underlie the outer sections of Colonnade, in which a continuously repeated, continuously varied rising figure – suggestive of a column – dominates. The iterations of this elastic, evolvingfigure are interspersed with other music – suggestive of the building’s façade. The second feature of the building that caught my attention was the vaulted ceiling, designed by Guastavino,of one of the building’s largest rooms. The ceiling enhances the spaciousness of the room, giving it an openness and lightness that is quite captivating. The middle section of Colonnade has this openness at its core, and is dominated by long, arching lines that, to me, suggest the refined beauty of this ceiling.World premiere March 8, 2003; Albany Symphony Orchestra conducted by David Alan Miller.
SKU: CA.328760
ISBN 9790007169824. Key: F major. Language: German. Text: Rafael, Ludwig / Kiesekamp, Hedwig. Text by Ludwig Rafael / Hedwig Kiesekamp.