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Symphony No. 2: Island of Innocence
Symphony No. 2: Island of Innocence for orchestra (1999)
Commissioned by the Cincinnati Symphony and the Utah Symphony through the Barlow Foundation
Premieres: Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra/Paavo Jarvi, conductor and
Utah Symphony/Keith Lockhart, conductor, 2002
Duration 21:00
3.3.3.3. - 4.3.3.1. - timp; 3 perc; hp; pno - str
In the September 24, 2001 issue of The New Yorker writer Jonathan
Franzen wrote, In the space of two hours we left behind a happy era of
Game Boy economics and trophy houses and entered a world of fear and
vengeance.
My second symphony, while by no means a memorial, makes reference to
this sudden paradigmatic shift. During the first eight minutes of the
work, a slow orchestral build describes the unsuspecting climate pre
9/11, a naïve world aptly described by my mother as a metaphorical
island. After a brief passage for solo violin, an upheaval of sorts
effectively obliterates this opening sentiment and initiates another
gradual crescendo which makes use of the same material as the opening,
cast this time in darker and more ambiguous harmonic colors. Once the
entire orchestra reaches the climax of the work, the solo violin returns
in a more extended passage than before and subdues the turbulent
orchestra. This leads to a reflective epilogue in which a clock-like
pulse creates a mood of expectancy and uncertainty, interlaced with
hope.
The work was commissioned by the Barlow Endowment for Music and
premiered in April 2002 by the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra with Paavo
Jarvi conducting.
Kevin Puts
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