
Homepage 
Biography 
Calendar 
Music & CDs 
Works 
Contact
|
 |
|
Symphony No. 3 (Vespertine)
Symphony No. 3 (Vespertine) for orchestra (2003)
Commissioned by Kathryn Gould/Meet the Composer through the Magnum Opus project
Premiere: Marin Symphony Orchestra/Alasdair Neale, conductor, 2004
Duration 25:00
3.3.3.3. - 4.3.3.1. - timp; 3 perc; hp; cel - str
The inspiration for Symphony No. 3 came from Icelandic singer Bjorks
album Vespertine. I first became acquainted with her music and this
album in particular when I saw the video of the song Pagan Poetry (track
5 on the album) while watching television in Rome a couple of years ago.
Stunned initially by the intensity and great variety in Bjorks voice,
I also found myself drawn to the dazzling array of sounds supporting
her, the stark contrasts between fragile, transparent timbres and rich,
lush orchestral and choral textures. I was also impressed by the
delicate balance, in both the lyrics and the music, between eccentricity
and universality, between the quirkiness of personal experience and the
expression of themes to which we all relate. This balance is reflected
by the ever-changing quality of Bjorks voice itself, which can turn
from brittle, unstable and almost child-like to bold and powerful within
just a few notes. It would be impossible to accurately reproduce
Bjorks voice using orchestral instruments, and I thought it might be
somewhat gimmicky as well. But I wanted to create an impression of her
improvisatory, jazz-induced, and utterly distinctive melodic style as
filtered through my own aesthetic. While no quotations exist in my
piece, every melodic line reflects at some level the contours and
motives of Bjorks singing style.
Once I began composing, I realized I was thinking about the orchestra in
groups of instruments, or symphonies (to use Stravinskys term from
his Symphonies of Wind Instruments) which always play together. At the
opening, for example, I combine celesta, harp, vibraphone, and
orchestral bells to create the illusion of a music box, a sound so
ubiquitous in the Vespertine album that it could almost be considered
thematic.
The work is in three movements, and I was given permission to attach a
small quote from the lyrics of Vespertine to each. The first movement
(through the warmthest cord) combines elastic, lyrical melodies with
the mechanistic, bell-like nature of a music box which begins and ends
the movement. The second (I have a recurrent dream) is very quiet
and fast, lasting around three minutes. Its mercurial nature contrasts
the slow evolution of the outer movements. The elegiac third movement
is the longest and most substantial and was inspired by the song Undo
from which the quote its not meant to be a strife comes. It begins
with a boldly-stated melody in the strings, smeared acoustically by
the brass and winds. The melody gradually ascends to the violins
highest register, where it then splinters into two voices and cascades.
Much of the music in the third movement represents a development and
fantasy-like exploration of the melodies, motives and textures
introduced in the first movement. A passage for two solo cellos
introduced in Movement I essentially achieves fruition here and
culminates in an extended, unaccompanied cadenza. While the first
movement communicates intimacy and warmth, the vast, cosmic nature of
the last movement suggests letting go and giving over to ecstasy.
Symphony No. 3 was given its premiere in its original version (entitled
Vespertine Symphonies) on May 2, 2004 by the Marin Symphony under the
direction of Alasdair Neale. It was revised extensively thereafter, and
its current version was premiered by the New World Symphony on May 7,
2005 under Alasdair Neale.
Kevin Puts
|
|
|
|
|
|
|