Music for String Trio

Music for String Trio

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Scoring & Instrumentation
vln, vla, vcl
Alternate Title
Music for String Trio
Year Authored (or revised)
Duration (min)
15
Movements
6

Files & Media

Audio
Voulez Vous Que Je Vous Chant.mp3
Audio file
Shir Ha-Shirim.mp3
Audio file
Video

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Sample Pages

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Detail

Description

1.
Hore Cerny; 2. La Pesadilla; 3. Talencourt; 4. Voulez-vous que je vous
chante?; 5. Mache dich mein geist bereit (Marcia - "Pseudo-Adagio"); 6.
Shir Ha-Shirim  

While no Lyric Suite,
this is my most ambitious composition to date, combining multiple
musical cultures dating over the past 1,000 years. It is dedicated to my
wife, Shayna. The first movement owes something to the world of
Janacek, and is even based upon a Czech folk tune (which one hears
partially disguised at one point).

The
second (no jokes about “La Quesadilla,” please), is based upon music I
have heard played by South Mexican street bands. A simple melody becomes
more fragmented until it distorts into this nightmarish scherzo.

Talencourt
starts with direct transcription of a Quebecois folk melody as
originally played in the 1920s by “Villeneuve and Bouchard” a violin and
accordion duo – later released on the 1985 album You Can Tell the World About This
(Morning Star Records). It is then given short variation treatment in
the styles of Bartók, Stravinsky, Prokofiev, and Rachmaninov, in that
order. The rest of the work is a mirror image of itself right back to
the very beginning.

The fourth movement only lasts around a minute, and is a setting of the medieval melody (anonymously written) of the same name.

Mache Dich Mein Geist Bereit
is a setting of a chorale melody, in quickly contrasting alternating
sections of a March and a “Pseudo-Adagio” (which is at the same speed as
the march, but the notes are obviously held much longer). Mahler
probably would have hated this piece, but I don’t care, I will always
love Mahler’s music.

Shir Ha-Shirim is a toccata-like distortion of a medieval Jewish setting of a text from the Song of Songs, III
/ 1, “By night on my bed I sought him whom my soul loved; I sought him,
but I found him not.” The Song of Songs is a love-song from God to
Israel and vice-versa and it is read at Passover. After a short reprise
of Hore Cerny the melody returns to the toccata, thereafter quietly dispersing.

Comments

PDF available / Recording available on TALENCOURT (Capstone Records)

First Perfomance

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Recording

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Text Language - Non English

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Text Source/Author

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Title Number
Ensemble Type
instrumental trio
Genre/Theme

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Instrument
violin , viola , cello
Purchase Options
PDF License & Download
PDF Price
Print & Ship
$29.95 score with parts