Peter Maxwell Davies' chamber opera The Lighthouse (1979) is based on a real incident in 1900 when three keepers of an Outer Hebrides lighthouse disappeared in unexplained, Marie Celeste-like circumstances. The opera's exploration of the inter-personal tensions and paranoia of the three men is one possible version of what may have happened. A prologue moves between a court of enquiry into the incident and flashbacks to the arrival of the relief boat. The boat's three officers answer questions posed by a solo horn, with small discrepancies emerging in their three stories. Watch an excerpt of Maxwell Davies The Lighthouse from a performance featuring Andrew Slater, Paul Carey Jones and Sean Clayton . . . one of this week's FEATURED NEW MUSIC VIDEOS.
Composer Alice Shields talks about her electronic piece The Transformation of Ani (1970): "The text of 'The Transformation of Ani' is taken from the Egyptian Book of the Dead, as translated into English by E. A. Budge. Most sounds in the piece were made from my own voice, speaking and singing the words of the text. Each letter of the English translation was assigned a pitch, and each hieroglyph of the Egyptian was given a particular sound or short phrase, of mostly indefinite pitch. Each series, the one derived from the English translation, and the one derived from the original hieroglyphs, was then improvised upon to create material I thought appropriate to the way in which I wanted to develop the meaning of the text, which I divided into three sections. Listen to Alice Shields' The Transformation of Ani . . . it's our SOUND ART for the week.
New York based composer David T. Little wrote his piece Spalding Gray (2008) in memory of the writer Spalding Gray, and it was premiered December 9th, 2008 by the NOW Ensemble at Princeton University. The music of American composer David T. Little has been described as "dramatically wild ... rustling, raunchy and eclectic, and "showing "real imagination" by New York Times critic Anthony Tommasini. Little’s highly theatrical, often political work draws upon his experience as a rock drummer, and fuses classical and popular idioms to dramatic effect. His music has been performed throughout the world - including in Dresden, London, Edinburgh, LA, Montreal, and at the Tanglewood, Aspen, MATA and Cabrillo Festivals - by such performers as the London Sinfonietta, eighth blackbird, So Percussion, ensemble courage, Dither, NOW nsemble, PRISM Quartet, the New World Symphony, American Opera Projects, the New York City Opera, the Grand Rapids Symphony and the Baltimore Symphony. Little has taught music in New York City through Carnegie Hall’s Musical Connections program, served as the inaugural Digital Composer-in- Residence for the UK-based DilettanteMusic.com, and is currently the Executive Director of New York’s MATA Festival. Listen to a performance of David T. Little's Spalding Gray (2008) played by the NOW Ensemble . . . it's one of our PYTHEAS EARFUL for the week.
Philadelphia born composer Vincent Persichetti was the recipient of three Guggenheim Fellowships and grants from the National Foundation on the Arts and Humanities, and the National Institute of Arts and Letters. His Night Dances, written in 1970, was commissioned by the New York State School of Music Association and was introduced during that organization’s meeting at Kiamesha Lake, New York, on December 9, 1970, by the All-State Orchestra under Frederick Fennell. Persichetti has said of this work (which he considered a companion piece to his Symphony No. 9): "Lines of poetry, floating about in my head, seemed to suggest a kind of music that flourished in the fertile climate of the Symphony. I believe these two companion pieces are linked spiritually, but subconsciously. As in my three volumes of Poems for Piano (1939), each of the seven sections of this work reflects, or parallels, the mood of a single line recalled from a poem. After the last page of music in the score, I have listed the titles of the seven poems from which these lines came, but the music is a parallel of these specific lines only, and has nothing necessarily to do with the respective poems in their entirety (though my choice of title may have been influenced by that of the Sylvia Plath poem quoted in the penultimate section). These Night Dances do have to do with what we all dream in a different reality from that of our waking thoughts. In dreams things appear, bidden or unbidden, as an underside of something made of a fabric that will hold together because it is part fantasy. These seven pieces form a crystal created by a melodic pair of dewdrops." [notes from "Recorded Anthology of American Music, Inc."] Listen to a performance of Persichetti's Night Dances, op. 114 (1970) played by the Juilliard Orchestra, James DePriest conductor . . . this week's FROM THE PYTHEAS ARCHIVES.
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