There are several performances coming up this week for me, and I’m looking forward to all of them. Tonight things will kick off with a performance by the Black Bayou Brass, in our annual faculty recital. As usual, we have a varied and exciting program, ranging from the Renaissance through the 21st Century. We performed many of the works programmed on the first half on tour last semester, but for the second half we’ll be playing a new work for us, Anthony Plog‘s Triple Concerto (cover image linked from the Editions Bim website). Plog is an internationally known composer and trumpet performer (though he retired from performing in 2001), with many fine works for brass instruments. In addition to the Triple Concerto (1995), he also has two horn concertos and several chamber works with horn. Originally for brass trio (trumpet, horn, trombone) with orchestra, his Triple Concerto also exists in versions with wind band accompaniment and piano reduction. Pianist Dr. Richard Seiler will join us for the version of the piece with piano accompaniment. For those familiar with Plog’s style this concerto is consistent with his other works for brass. If you are new to Plog’s music, his writing is full of big contrasts – melodic, rhythmic, and dynamic. Often within a single movement long arching melodies are quickly replaced with angular, disjunct ones, and vice versa. Each of the three brass instruments gets plenty of solo lines, along with some nice ensemble passages as well. One of the most challenging things for me about Plog’s music is his use of what I call “semi-familiar” patterns – patterns which look like things I’ve seen before, but with enough twists to make things interesting. As an example, here’s a short excerpt from the horn part in the final movement. Notice that the passage looks mostly chromatic at first glance, but there are some whole steps and larger intervals in there as well (World Copyright 1995, Editions Bim). The tempo here is approximately quarter=132.

These kind of passages can be a nightmare to sight read, but thankfully after plenty of practice they become more familiar.
Tomorrow I’ll be joining soprano Claire Vangelisti to perform a movement of Vitaly Bujanovsky’s Evening Songs for soprano and horn. To hear a recording of the movement – and the entire piece – check out this YouTube video featuring Sofia Kapetanakou (soprano) and Antonis Lagos (horn). It’s a wonderful piece, and great for adding variety to either a horn or vocal recital. One of the most striking things about the movement we’ll be performing (“Evening Vocalise”) is the variety of timbres the composer gets out of just two instruments. For example, one passage is marked a due corni, meaning “as in [the style] of two horns.” The singer is meant to imitate a horn sound, as used in the famous “horn fifths” pattern so common in Classical era works. And later in the piece the hornist is asked to produce multiphonics by playing one note and humming another. If you don’t know this work be sure to check it out.
To cap off the week I’ll be playing 3rd horn with the Rapides Symphony on a program titled “Love and Loss.” Works will include Wagner’s Siegfried Idyll and Prelude to Act III of Lohengrin, Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from West Side Story, and Strauss’s Tod und Verklärung (Death and Transfiguration). It’s a big program, with plenty of great brass writing. My Lohengrin part says that it has the “concert ending as recorded by Arturo Toscanini,” and includes all the customary transposition changes found in the part – horn in G, E, D, A-flat, and F. I’m not as familiar with Tod und Verklärung as with other tone poems by Strauss, but needless to say there are the usual sweeping melodies and intense counterpoint found in many of his other orchestral works. The Bernstein is also a standard in the repertory, with its own share of cool horn parts.
Here’s to a busy week!
[…] those who might be interested, here are a few recordings from a recital given by Black Bayou Brass last Monday evening. We felt good about our performance, and put together a pretty challenging […]
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