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Rivers Rush
Rivers Rush for orchestra (2004)
Commissioned by the Saint Louis Symphony in celebration of the orchestras 125th anniversary
Premiere: Saint Louis Symphony/Leonard Slatkin conductor September 2004
Duration 10:00
3.3.3.3. - 4.3.3.1. - timp; 3 perc; hp; pno - str
It seems fitting that in fulfilling a commission from St. Louis, a city
that sits near the confluence of our nations two great rivers, Kevin
Puts drew inspiration from the movement of waterits glinting color
and texture, its surging energyas it courses downstream. I wanted
to convey a sense of great, rushing energy, the composer explained
about Rivers Rush, combined with a monumental, epic quality
throughout. Most of the 10-minute piece proceeds at a fast pace. Mr.
Puts observes that there is a lot of activity at any given moment, but
he adds that the intricacy of these moments contributes to a broader
sense of phrasing.
Rivers Rush begins with bustling arpeggios, from which a simple
two-note motif emerges from the orchestral bass and eventually blossoms
into two-voice counterpoint. This idea moves through many of the
instruments in the orchestra and culminates in a ruminative duet between
two clarinets. Of course, this brief summary hardly conveys the wealth
of musical activity the piece encompasses. There is a lot of variety
when it comes to texture and color in the work, the composer notes.
Maybe I was thinking of the Mississippi (or any river for that matter),
how its appearance can vary under different types of sunlight. Of course
this variety is achieved through the use of different combinations of
instruments, but it also has to do with the chords I use. I took a new
approach to harmony in Rivers Rush by combining major and minor chords
from different keys freely, almost as a painter would combine paints on
a canvas. Sometimes I create very complex sonorities using three very
different triads, sometimes only one major or minor triad is being used.
The result, I hope, is that
all the music feels like it comes from the same source. There is variety
but also economy.
Paul Sciavo
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