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Ole Bull: La Melancolie

Per Nørgård: Three Scenes (Score)

Per Nørgård: Three Scenes (Score)

Preface / Programme Note (UK-TEXT TO FOLLOW)Slagtøjssolisten er den gennemgående skikkelse og hovedperson i musikkens?tre scener?.Begrebet ?scene? kan forstås flertydigt, både som det fysiske sted, platformen,hvor man optræder og spiller musik og drama ? og som betegnelsen for defortællende forløb og afsnit i en dramatisk forestilling.Mine musikalske ?scener? udfolder sig i tre forskellige sceniskefremtrædelsesformer og ensembler. Den første scene er præget af diskrete ogmelodiske slagtøjsinstrumenter, vibrafon og marimba, med modspil fra de trestrygere.I den anden scene er spotlightet på slagtøjssolisten alene, vi møder hovedpersonen/solisten i en monolog, fremført hovedsageligt på ?syngende sav?, der skal trakteresmed den yderste mikrotonale præcision. Vi hører også solisten spille på Kalimba,ligeledes et folkeligt instrument, men nu med afrikansk baggrund ? i modsætningtil den hjemlige gårdsangers ?musikalske sav? ? et ofte hørt lydbillede frakomponistens barndom på Nørrebro.I den tredje scene er det en blæsertrio, der indledningsvis spiller op til slagtøjetsforskellige kraftfulde trommer. Efter en tromme-kadence sætter alle syv musikereind sammen, for første og eneste gang. Værket afsluttes med en kort slagtøjssolo.I en ?programmatisk tolkning? kan de tre scener ses som repræsenterende tretilbagevendende stadier:det indadvendt/drømmendedet udadvendt/agerendedet daglige drama mellem os alle.Per Nørgård, februar 2010

SEK 915.00
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Per Nørgård: Three Scenes (Parts)

Per Nørgård: Three Scenes (Parts)

Preface / Programme Note (UK-TEXT TO FOLLOW)Slagtøjssolisten er den gennemgående skikkelse og hovedperson i musikkens?tre scener?.Begrebet ?scene? kan forstås flertydigt, både som det fysiske sted, platformen,hvor man optræder og spiller musik og drama ? og som betegnelsen for defortællende forløb og afsnit i en dramatisk forestilling.Mine musikalske ?scener? udfolder sig i tre forskellige sceniskefremtrædelsesformer og ensembler. Den første scene er præget af diskrete ogmelodiske slagtøjsinstrumenter, vibrafon og marimba, med modspil fra de trestrygere.I den anden scene er spotlightet på slagtøjssolisten alene, vi møder hovedpersonen/solisten i en monolog, fremført hovedsageligt på ?syngende sav?, der skal trakteresmed den yderste mikrotonale præcision. Vi hører også solisten spille på Kalimba,ligeledes et folkeligt instrument, men nu med afrikansk baggrund ? i modsætningtil den hjemlige gårdsangers ?musikalske sav? ? et ofte hørt lydbillede frakomponistens barndom på Nørrebro.I den tredje scene er det en blæsertrio, der indledningsvis spiller op til slagtøjetsforskellige kraftfulde trommer. Efter en tromme-kadence sætter alle syv musikereind sammen, for første og eneste gang. Værket afsluttes med en kort slagtøjssolo.I en ?programmatisk tolkning? kan de tre scener ses som repræsenterende tretilbagevendende stadier:det indadvendt/drømmendedet udadvendt/agerendedet daglige drama mellem os alle.Per Nørgård, februar 2010

SEK 686.00
1

Monodrama, Kopi

Monodrama, Kopi

Poul Ruders MONODRAMAMONODRAMA, dedicated to percussion virtuoso Gert Sørensen and commissioned by The Danish Radio, was written in New York in the early winter 1988 and makes the centre as well as the middle of the tri-part opus called The Drama Trilogy. All three works employ the word Drama in their title, Drama in the original meaning of the word: event. No specified event, but a premonition or omen rather, that something is afoot, a free Drama-offer from which anyone may populate the stage of his private, inner theatre.The first piece of the series DRAMAPHONIA for piano and chamber ensemble was premiered in London in the spring of 1988 by Lontano and Poul Rosenbaum. This piece is emotionally and rhythmically unstable as opposed to MONODRAMA (single-event) which is modelled from the archetypal idea of obtaining accomplishment from nothingness. The 31 instruments of the orchestra (no flutes and no violins or violas) are more or less wrapped around the solo-part to become one with that and thus emerge as one, gigantic percussion instrument. The rhythmical patterns of the orchestral part more or less follow those of the percussionpart, a single-event also on the rhythmical level.After 20 minutes climbing toward the peak of rage, the composition casts its slough and is reborn into a chorale-like march and the struggle between totally depopulated sound-scapes and ferociously roaring sub-oceanic storms begin and the piece paces toward the abyss; rage becomes despondency, New Rage as opposed to New Age, the spineless worshipper of beauty without pain.The third instalment of the DRAMA TRILOGY, the cello concerto POLYDRAMA will be premiered in Stockholm May 1990.MONODRAMA lasts aprox. 32 minutes.Poul Ruders

SEK 2193.00
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Per Nørgård: I Ching

Per Nørgård: I Ching

Per Nørgård I CHING Programme Note I CHING (1982) for Percussion Solo I. Thunder Repeated: The Image of Shock (hexagram no. 51) II. The Taming Power of the Small - 9 sounds (hexagram no. 9) III. The Gentle, the Penetrating (hexagram no. 57) IV. Towards Completion: Fire over Water (hexagram no. 64) I Ching (The Book of Changes), four movements for solo percussion, was written in 1982 and dedicated to the Danish percussionist Gert Mortensen. I Ching is the thousand-year-old Chinese oracle book, whose 64 combinations of six "Yang" or "Yin" lines (bright or dark) represent 64 different states of being for all living things including human beings. The 64 states of being should be thought of as an eternal, hidden cycle which lies behind everything that we do: for example the supreme, the enthusiastic, initiative (combination or "hexagram" no. 1, the creative) or the despair of the moment, the warm and friendly, and so on. The states of being exist on all levels - the official, the private etc. - at the same time in many speeds. From these I selected four, the sequence of which progresses from a situation from which there is apparently no solution, to a (temporary) relief. In the first movement ´Thunder repeated, the Image of Shock´, a vicious circle of claustrophobic, closed circuits is represented by the tom-tom part. This is followed by tam-tams and wood sounds, but returns full-circle to the tom-toms. The second movement ´The taming Power of the small´has its origins in the violence of the first movement, but this time lets it resolve in a long glide upwards which stars with voice sounds ´borrowed´from the Beatles´´Revolution no 9´which are then transmitted to the other instruments. The third movement is ´The Gentle, The Penetrating´in which lyrical poetry dominates with gentle bell-like sounds and delicate tunes. Finally the sovereign, many-layered world of rhythm triumphs in the fourth movement: ´Towards Completion. Fire over Water´, the main movement of the work. Over a period of six years, since 1975, I have in about 10 works worked with a percussion version of my "infinity series", which has since 1960 been the basis of my compositional method. Since it was precisely bright and dark sounds (yang and yin) that permeated these percussion pieces in a multitude of layers in tempo and texture, the concept of I Ching was a natural source of inspiration for me, when Gert Mortensen prompted me to write my second piece for solo percussion ("Waves" from 1969 being the first). Even if the composer recommends a total performance in the shown order, choice is left up to the musician in connection with performance of the four movements. Per Nørgård (1982)

SEK 583.00
1

Poul Ruders: Listening Earth - A Symphonic Drama for Orchestra (Score)

Poul Ruders: Listening Earth - A Symphonic Drama for Orchestra (Score)

Premiered at the festival 'Magma Berlin 2002' by the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by David Robertson, 29th November 2002.3 Flutes, 1st and 2nd also Alto Flutes in G, 3rd also Piccolo3 Oboes, 3rd also Cor Anglais in F3 Clarinets in Bb, 3rd also Bass Clarinet in Bb3 Bassoons, 3rd also Contra Bassoon4 Horn in F3 Trumpets in Bb3 Trombones1 TubaTimpani4 Percussion, four playersPlayer 1 - Vibraphone, Glockenspiel, Water Chime, Bell Tree, Japanese Wood Blocks, Cymbal (Suspended), TamTam (Medium)Player 2 - Triangle, Tubular Bells, Crotales, Marimba, Chinese CymbalPlayer 3 - TamTam (Large), Java Gong (Large, very low), Bell Lyra (Handheld), Sizzle CymbalPlayer 4 - Bass Drum, Glockenspiel, Xylophone1 Harp1 Piano, also CelestaStrings - 16/14/12/10/8All transposing instruments are notated in their relevant transpositions.Any accidental apply only to the note that it immediately precedes, except tied notes.Naturals appear occasionally 'for safety'."LISTENING EARTH" is a symphonic drama, a one- movement composition in four parts based on the work by two writers, Joseph Addison (1672-1719) and W.H.Auden (1907-1973). Joseph Addison is not particularly well known; he was English, a classical scholar, essayist, poet and politician, but one of his hymns was used by Benjamin Britten. in his setting of a Thomas Tallis canon.The hymn is singularly beautiful and being a composer always inspired by extramusical stimuli such as poems, nature, paintings, I was immediately convinced when I carne across the Addison hymn, that here was exactly what I wanted to use as my major source of inspiration for this piece, commissioned by and written for The Berlin Philharmonic. I don't refer to the hymn in its entirety, but have chosen the following 3 excerpts, all acting as mottos for the first three sections of the piece, thus turning the piece into a straightforward tonepoem in the classical sense:The spacious firmament on high,With all the blue ethereal sky,And spangled heavens, a shining frame,Their great original proclaim. The title of the piece presents itself in the following verse: Soon as the evening shades prevailThe moon takes up the wondrous tale,And nightly to the listening earthRepeats the story of her birth;The third part of the piece follows these dramatic lines: Whilst all the stars that round her bum,And all the planets in their turn,Confirm the tidings, as they role,And spread the truth from pole to pole. Then 11 September, 2001 happened and personally - and as an artist - I quite simply couldn't end the piece on such a happy and glorious note, however beautiful, so, when the American modem-music web site sequenza2I.com in the days following the attack on New York City and Washington D.C. brought W.H.Auden's poem "September 1, 1939", I found the appropriate text on which to base the fourth and final section of 'listening Earth", which now turns into "Angry Earth'. Auden wrote the poem on the eve of 1 September, the day Hitler and his hordes rolled into Poland:... Waves of anger and fearCirculate over the brightAnd darkened lands of the earth,Obsessing our private lives;The unmentionable odour of deathOffends the September night. (From Another Time by W.H.Auden, published by Random House. Co

SEK 1604.00
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