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Catalogue of the Music of Larry BellOpus number: 43Title: Mahler in Blue Light Instrumentation: alto saxophone, cello, piano; also arranged for clarinet, cello, and piano Date written: June 1996, Boston Length: twenty-two minutes Commissioner: World-Wide Concurrent Commissions and Premieres Premiere performances: Ken Radnofsky, saxophone, Pamela Frame, cello, and Larry Bell, piano, December 8, 1996, Jordan Hall, Boston. Members of the World-Wide Commissions and Premieres, thrity-five commissioning ensembles Clarinet version: North/South Consonance, Richard Goldsmith, clarinet, Jonas Tauber, cello, Max Lifchitz, pianist. May 23, 1999, Christ and St. Stephen’s Church, New York Important subsequent performances: March 13, 1997, Ken Radnofsky, saxophone, Pamela Frame, cello, and Larry Bell, piano, World-Wide Web Live broadcast sponsored by BBN, WGBH-FM, the National Schools Network, and New England Conservatory; Ken Radnofsky, saxophone, Pamela Frame, cello, and Larry Bell, piano; Valencia, Spain, September 30, 1998 International Saxophone Congress; January 6, 2002, Ken Radnofsky, saxophone, Eric Bartlett, cello, and Larry Bell, piano, New England Conservatory; January 17, 2002, Ken Radnofsky, saxophone, Eric Bartlett, cello, and Larry Bell, piano, Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall. Recordings: CD by Russell Peterson, alto saxophone, Dougland Schneider, piano, Diane Tremaine, cello, “American Breath” Barking Dog Records. Recorded March 13, 1997, at WGBH-FM Boston, premiere performers; tape at New England Conservatory library of Radnofsky Jordon Hall performance
Program notes: I. Fantasy and Fugue II. Intermezzo III. Variations on a Theme by Mahler IV. Rondo Finale “Mahler in Blue Light” was completed in June of 1996 for a commission by World-Wide Concurrent Premieres and Commissioning Fund, Inc. Kenneth Radnofsky, the executive director, suggested the instrumentation and facilitated dozens of simultaneous premieres on December 8, 1996. “Mahler in Blue Light” opens in the altissimo range with the highest note of the piece, concert F. This striking gesture returns at the end of the Fantasy, just before the introduction of the fugue; in the third movement prior to the introduction of the quote; and in the last movement before the coda. All four movements are an elaborate passacaglia (variations on a chord progression) based on a twenty-seven-bar instrumental fragment from “Der Abschied” movement of Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde. The only time the fragment appears in its original form here is toward the end of the third movement, called “Variations on a Theme by Mahler.” My goal was to present the quoted material in a stylistically seamless fashion, so much so that if you did not know the original beforehand, you would not recognize it as a quote here. The “Abschied” theme used as the basis of these variations consists of a chord progression whose principal bass notes are Bb, Cb, G, Ab, and F. These same notes are also a melody (one Mahler did not write) that acts as a original cantus firmus in each of these movements. It is also my fugue subject. The compositional objective was to make something new out of something old. I thought of this piece as my own portrait of Mahler’s music seen through the saxophone’s blue color. Review of first WGBH webcast: Score, New England
Conservatory News All music is published by Casa Rustica Publications, 73 Hemenway Street, #501, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 |
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