Format : Vocal Score
Cantata for string orchestra and chorus.Triptych represents the concatenation and re-orchestration of two extant works. Movement I was commissioned with funds from The RVW Trust for the inaugural concert of the Choir of London conducted by Jeremy Summerly in Christ Church Spitalfields on 18th December 2004; the work premièred as Threnody was subsequently toured by the Choir to Jerusalem and the West Bank from 19th-26th December 2004. Movements II and III commissioned by Portsmouth Grammar School with financial support from the PRS Foundation were premièred as And There Was a Great Calm in a contiguous version for lower strings and upper voices by thePortsmouth Grammar School Chamber Choir and the London Mozart Players in a concert at Portsmouth Anglican Cathedral on 13th November 2005 conducted by Nicolae Moldoveanu. The title of this latter section is taken from Thomas Hardy’s poem of the same name written at the signing of the Armistice on 11th November 1918; a couplet from which is set in a moment of tranquillity in the final movement.Relatively new to living in New York I am much more aware of the independent vibrant cultural plurality that exists today; it’s probably the single most dazzling facet of the City and is largely responsible for the infamous ‘edginess’ that pervades daily life there. With this in mind I set to work on Threnody (movement I here) in 2004; I wanted to write something that was relevant to the Israeli/Palestinian issue without losing that City ‘edge’. The texts in English are excerpted from a variety of sources: William Penn William Blake the Psalms of David and Muhammad Rajab Al-Bayoumi an Egyptian poet of the early twentieth-century. Fast and rhythmically influenced by the music of North Africa in its syncopations this movement was the first composition that evolved entirely from my New York perspective.From the moment that the commission for And There Was a Great Calm (movements II & III here) was offered I knew the piece I was