
Homepage 
Biography 
Calendar 
Music & CDs 
Works 
Contact
|
 |
|
Violin Concerto
Violin Concerto (2006)
Commissioned by Mr. and Mrs. Sid R. Bass for the Fort Worth Symphony
Orchestra, its Concertmaster, Michael Shih, and its Music Director,
Miguel Harth-Bedoya.
Premiere: Bass Hall, Fort Worth, Texas, April 20, 2007
Duration 22:00
2.2.2.2. - 4.2.3.1. - timp. 2 perc. hp. - str.
Solo violin
Miguel Harth-Bedoyas performance of several works by Puts over the past
few years led naturally to the idea of a residency during which the
composer would write a piece for the Fort Worth Symphony. Specifically
the work would showcase virtuoso concertmaster Michael Shih and the
amazing 1710 Stradivari violin he playson generous loan by Mr. and Mrs.
William S. Davis of Fort Worth. Puts began the present Violin Concerto
in the summer of 2006, completing it in mid-December. The composer says
that as a pianist, he particularly likes writing music for solo string
instruments because its still something of a mysteryhe revels in
finding idiomatic solutions for sounds he wants by consulting string
players.
Puts describes his Violin Concerto as a two-movement work, with a long
first movement and a short secondinitially conceived as a piece with
its own built-in encore. Says the composer, the first movement,
Meditation, begins with a contemplative rising four-note motive in the
strings and harp that grounds the entire piece, like a pendulum
regularly swinging back and forth. Over this ever-present pulse the
soloist plays a sweet, lyrical melody answered by the orchestral violins
in two-voice counterpoint. The soloist answers in turn, and the
alternation eventually leads to greater activity, all the while anchored
by the regular pulsing. Slowly, steadily the movement builds to a
virtuoso climax before ending quietly.
In contrast to the inward-looking tranquility of the first movement,
says Puts, the second movement, Caprice, is a nonstop, fast, virtuoso
showcase for the violin. The orchestral accompaniment is very light,
simply providing color and unobtrusive support. The tour-de-force
writing for the violin leaves the soloist no time to catch a breath and
blazes to a furious conclusion.
© Jane Vial Jaffe
|
|
|
|
|
|
|