In order to read complete fullscores online,
subscribe to the online library
no  image found File 2

Sun of Orient Crimson with Excess of Light

Sun of Orient.

Winner of the IV category of the IX International Piano Competition Smederevo 2022.

10,00 €
Printed format (+14,80 € printing and shipping). Colissimo7-14 days aprox.
Digital version (+0,00 €) instant download
When you buy a score, you can contact the composer right here!
Specifications
Region
Europe
Estimated Duration
6 - 10min
Date
2020

ISMN : 979-0-2325-6281-0

Videos on this piece
Notes on this piece

Sun of Orient Crimson with Excess of Light (2020)

 

This piece for piano and electronics is one of a series of works inspired by the writings of the physicist and explorer John Tyndall (1820-93).Although remembered as a scientist, Tyndall was also a poet, inspired by his avid reading of Shelley, Keats, Byron, Wordsworth, Cowper, Campbell, Burns and, especially, Tennyson, Emerson and Goethe. Hisown forays into poetry writing started early in his career.

 

The particular inspiration for this piece is a passage from Tyndall’s poem A Morning on Alp Lusgenfrom the final section of his 1882 collection of essays and memoirs, New Fragments, evoking his sense of wonder at the majesty of the landscape; images of sheer, steep declines, the hot sun and lush vegetation.

 

The sun has cleared the peaks and quenched the flush

Of orient crimson with excess of light.

The tall grass quivers in the rhythmic air

Without a sound; yet each particular blade

Trembles in song, had we but ears to hear.

The hot rays smite us, but a quickening breeze

Keeps languor far away. Unslumbering,

The soul enlarged takes in the mighty scene.

 

The plummet from this height must sink afar

To reach yon rounded mounds which seem so small.

 

Musically, this suggested the idea of combining the conventionally played live piano against a range of sampled and treated “extended” piano sounds on tape, especially timbres obtained from inside the piano: plucked and muted strings, harmonics, bowed sounds

 

The piece was written for Isabelle O’Connell, who has made a speciality of works for electronics and piano, and who premiered it March 2020, at the Finding A Voice Festival, in Clonmel. My thanks to Directors, Roisin and Cliona Maher and to Sound Engineer Eoin Barry. 

 

 

It is dedicated to Isabelle O’Connell with grateful thanks and appreciation.

 

 

 

Gráinne Mulvey.

 

 

Instrumentation
Piano|Electronics
Recording
Recorded In Clonmel
Score Details
Format - A4 / US Letter
Pages - 22


Customers Who Viewed This Piece Also Viewed: