Amazon.com Widgets
September 11th, 2005

Trent Lott’s Porch

Filed under:

I hesitate to put a lot of political stuff here on the blog, but this is just too, too good.

http://trentlottsporch.com/

Care to comment?

September 10th, 2005

Details on the Budapest concert

Since the beginning of August, I’ve been working on a new piece for the Hungarian Chamber Symphony Orchestra. It will be a fifteen-minute piece for strings, and the title is Letter to Hungary. With this concert, the HCSO is launching their “American Composers’ Podium”, a series of concerts and hopefully other events that will help promote the work of American composers among Hungarian audiences.

The concert will take place on November 18th at the Italian Institute in Budapest. Other composers featured will be Malcolm Hawkins and Sara Doncaster. You can read full details on the American Composers Podium on the HCSO’s stunning new web site .

Care to comment?

September 8th, 2005

Sondheim Sings, Vol. II

Filed under:,

The track listing for the next volume of Sondheim Sings has been announced. More information at Playbill.com .

These volumes consist of selections from Sondheim’s private collection of home recordings he made of his own songs over the years. Volume I , which was released earlier this year, consists of recordings made between 1962 and 1972, so there is a lot of familiar material on it.

Volume II is comprised of much earlier work, including a Christmas greeting for Oscar Hammerstein from 1943 when Sondheim was 13 years old. Many of the tracks are from his student works of the ’40’s and early ’50’s that pre-date Saturday Night and West Side Story. Being a crazed Sondheim lunatic myself, I had an opportunity a few years ago to hear Track 9, “A Star Is Born”, which he wrote in 1954 for some friends when they had a baby. The lyrics are dizzying, and you can’t believe anyone could come up with this stuff, let alone a 24-year-old.

It can be ordered in advance from Amazon.com.

Care to comment?

September 7th, 2005

More on the First Movement

This is a follow-up to the last entry about the HCSO piece (still untitled). I outlined what the overall structure of the piece as it looked about a week ago, but there was little detail on each of the movements.

Last week, I really only had about 12 bars for the opening of the slow first movement, but now it’s nearly complete, and will be more than 5 minutes long. The result is a mainly contemplative opening movement that builds into a wild cs�rd�s (a fast Hungarian dance), and then recedes back to reprise the main slow theme of the beginning.

As described in the earlier entry, the movement opens with a pentatonic melody played by the two violin sections divided in five parts in the form of a homophonic choral. This original tune is interlocked with the opening phrase of the Mad�rka, mad�rka tune, which never manages to proceed beyond that. The interplay develops into a more contrapuntal texture with a few tense moments, giving way to a new theme.

The new theme is is an E minor tune with a slow, pulsating accompaniment. This is actually a tune I made up about a year ago, when I thought it would be fun write a Hungarian folksong. (I don’t know how convinced the Hungarian audience will be, but I like it.) The tempo increases and builds up to boot-slappin’ fast dance. I’m trying to imitate the string playing in Hungarian folk band music, but also trying not to sweat it too much; authenticity is not one of my goals. The E minor tune returns in the final movement in a major variation that is somewhat less Hungarian, but probably more interesting.

Yet to be worked out is the transition back to the contemplative opening chorale, which ends the movement.

Care to comment?

September 6th, 2005

Why ArkivMusic.com?

This is just to explain why the classical music links in my “stuff” department direct users to ArkivMusic.com, whereas links to other items will direct you to Amazon. (more…)

Care to comment?

September 4th, 2005

It’s come to this…

Filed under:

I just went to Safeway in my slippers. Just plain forgot to put my shoes on.

How pathetic is that.

Care to comment?

September 1st, 2005

Anatomy of an unfinished piece

Well, I’d promised myself that September 1st would be when I stop sketching and start fleshing out and orchestrating the HCSO piece. I was hoping to have an end-to-end sketch of the whole piece to work from by now. I almost do. Good enough, I guess.

The big outstanding question for me at the moment is whether this is a multi-movement work or just one big movement. I’m leaning toward four movements, some played attacca. The material isn’t quite unified enough to to hold one movement together. I have to come up with names for the movements, though, which is a bit of a drag.

Here’s what I seem to be working with now: (more…)

Care to comment?