What’s On My Music Stand, Summer Edition

musicstandsummereditionHere’s a quick rundown on what I’ve been practicing this summer. Scheduling has been more of a challenge, but I’m finally settling into a decent (but flexible) routine. Some of them are old favorites, but there is also plenty of new (at least to me) and exciting repertoire. If you find yourself getting bogged down during the summer months, pick out some new pieces (solos, etudes, excerpts, chamber music, etc.) and get to work!

Old Stuff

  • Eurico Carrapatoso, Sete Melodias in Forma De Bruma Keeping these in shape for performance at the 45th International Horn Symposium in Memphis, TN.
  • Kopprasch Complete, ed. Corbin Wagner Hoping to record some more videos this summer, and right now I’m working on Nos. 51, 52, and 53.

New Stuff

  • Paul Basler, Etudes for Horn, Volume 2 A two-volume set of studies that will push your technique, range, and endurance. Not as difficult as the Verne Reynolds etudes, but just as stimulating! Read a review of them at Horn Matters.

I’m working on the next several pieces in preparation for a duo faculty recital this fall with my colleague, Dr. Mel Mobley, who teaches percussion, composition, and music theory here at ULM. There is some wonderful and challenging music out there for horn and percussion, and I’m really looking forward to this recital. If you are interested in finding out more about horn and percussion music, one excellent resource is a dissertation by Dr. Casey N. Maltese, A Performance Guide of Selected Works for Horn and Mallet Percussion, D.M.A dissertation, the University of Miami, 2011.

  • Daniel McCarthy, The Call of Boromir for Horn and Marimba Dedicated to Christopher and Leslie Norton, this brief piece is inspired by passages from The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien. Lots of fun writing for both instruments! Here’s a great performance by Brigette Hopkins (horn) and Justin Stolarik (marimba) at the University of Texas-Austin.
  • Verne Reynolds, HornVibes: Three Duos for Horn and Vibraphone Another substantial work for horn and mallet percussion, HornVibes was also composed for Christopher and Leslie Norton. The outer movements are sustained and atmospheric, and the central movement contains jazz influences. This piece is currently out of print, and is a bit tricky to get your hands on – more on this in a future post.
  • Mark Schultz, Dragons in the Sky for Horn, Percussion, and Tape Another Tolkien-inspired work, this time drawing on passages from The Silmarillion. I performed this piece in doctoral school, and I’m very excited about performing it again after several years. One of the most notable features in the horn part is the use of multiple extended techniques. Check out this recording by Thomas Bacon to hear them.
  • Steven Winteregg, High Veld Sunrise for Horn and MIDI I’m planning to round out the rest of the horn and percussion recital with a few solo works, this being one of them. This piece was commissioned by Dr. Richard Chenoweth, who, “having returned from a safari to the African veld…wanted a piece for horn and MIDI that evoked the sounds of Africa.” (composer’s notes). If you don’t know any of Steven Winteregg’s music, he has lots of great pieces for horn, including solos, chamber music, and horn ensembles. High Veld Sunrise is really fun to play, and is very accessible to audiences.

Recital Program: Music for Horn and Guitar

One of my favorite things about planning recital programs is getting to explore new repertoire.  There are always new pieces to perform, as well as fresh ways of interpreting the old standards.  On March 22nd, I’ll be joining fellow ULM faculty member Daniel Sumner in a recital of music for horn and guitar.  Although there isn’t much original repertoire for this unusual combination of instruments, between a few original works,  transcriptions, solo works, and a newly written piece, we will have enough music for a full program.  Two pieces on this recital were originally written for horn and guitar, Duo Concertante No. 1 and Duo Concertante No. 2 by one A. Corret, a horn player living in Paris during the first half of the nineteenth century.  I’ve found precious little information about the composer, except for the following brief statement (translated from German) from the publisher, Robert Ostermeyer Musikedition.

There is not much known about the horn player A. Corret. On his first duo, he names himself A.Corret jeune in order not to be taken for the musician L. Corret, who lived in Paris and had published something about musicology. A. Corret played the first horn in Rouen at the Grand Theatre 1815 – 1862. Perhaps, he studied horn in Paris, because he was known to Louis-François Dauprat. The 5th most virtuose horn concerto of Dauprat was dedicated to Corret (ROM 155).

We only know of chamber music by Corret. The first of these duos are dedicated to Mad. Adelle Lechevallier, the second to his friend Eustache Bérat (1792 – 1884, living in Rouen as painter, chansonniere and certainly also guitar player).

In 2004, the horn player Daniel Bourgue recorded these two duos on CD.

I was able to find the CD recording mentioned above, although it took a bit of searching online – it eventually turned up on WorldCat.  Both Duos are very well written, and quite idiomatic for both instruments.  The first Duo is laid out in a pretty straightforward three movement (fast/slow/fast) format, with plenty of chances for both instruments to shine.  The second movement in particular highlights the lyrical capabilities of the horn and the guitar.  The second Duo is more extended, consisting of four movements, the third being the typical minuet-trio usually found in Classic era symphonies.

In addition to the Corret works, we’ll be performing selections from a set of Seguidillas by the Spanish guitarist and composer Fernando Sor (1778-1839).  Originally for voice and guitar, these pieces have been transcribed by Daniel Bourgue and are also included on his 2004 recording.  Though not very difficult for either instrument, these Seguidillas are wonderful pieces, full of style and beautiful melodies.  Quoting from this article by Brian Jeffery, here’s a bit more background on the seguidilla.

A seguidilla is a type of poem, which may be set to music. If it is set in such a way as to suit the dance known as the bolero, it is called a seguidilla bolera or seguidillas boleras (or simply, in the musical sources, boleras or voleras). This is the terminology used in Spain before the French invasion of 1808. However, outside Spain after the invasion, the one word that everybody knew was ‘bolero’, and this is why Sor called his article ‘Le Bolero’, why elsewhere he called his own songs boleros rather than seguidillas, and why Peña y Goni in 1881 also called them boleros. It is principally a later usage rather than the original one.

And from a later passage in the same article.

The text of a seguidilla usually had seven lines, and sometimes only four. The first four were called the copla, and the last three the estribillo. A strict metrical form was observed in which the lines always had alternately seven and five syllables. The rhyme-scheme, however, was looser than the metre: the second and fourth lines had to rhyme together, and the fifth and seventh, but either rhyme or assonance would do, and the other lines might or might not rhyme together. Here is an example:

Las mujeres y cuerdas
De la guitarra,
Es menester talento
Para templarlas.
Flojas no suenan
Y suelen saltar muchas
Si las aprietan.
(‘Women and guitar strings: you need talent to tune them. If they’re slack they don’t sound, and lots of them, if you tighten them too much, break.’)

Although our version will be purely instrumental, we will include the texts and translations for these pieces in the program as I think they will help the audience get into the music a bit more.  As in the above example from Brian Jeffery, seguidillas often contain evocative texts and titles.  In addition to  “Women and Guitar Strings,”  some of the other songs we’ll be playing are “Cesa Atormentare” (Cease Tormenting Me), “De Amor en las Prisiones” (Happy I Live in Love’s Prisons), and “Mis Descuidados Ojos” (My Careless Eyes).

To fill out the program Dan and I will also play some solo pieces – I’ve got two unaccompanied works in mind, but I haven’t completely settled on which one I’ll be doing yet.  I’m preparing both of them though.  Dan is also working on a transcription of the Nocturno, Op. 7 by Franz Strauss.  I’ve heard the work done with horn and harp, and it works beautifully, so I thought why not horn and guitar?  And finally we will be premiering a new piece for horn, guitar, and piano by Mel Mobley, Associate Professor of Theory and Composition here at ULM.  I like Mel’s writing quite a bit, and I’m excited to perform this new work.

Practice and rehearsals for the pieces are going well, although it took a couple of rehearsals for me to get used to some balance and intonation issues between the horn and guitar.  As you can imagine, it would be quite easy for the horn to overbalance the classical guitar, and we are still experimenting with some different techniques to address the balance.  For one, I am basically going for a light, woodwind-quintet type sound in most tutti passages, and dropping down even more when the guitar has the melody.  We are also planning to use a small platform for the guitar, similar to what solo cellists use, and possibly some minor amplification.  Horn and guitar is a unique sound, and if you’re looking for some unusual recital pieces give these a try.

Happy 2011 and an Inspiring Story

Although there are still a few days left before my semester begins, I am officially cranking the blog back up for 2011!  I hope everyone had a wonderful holiday season, and I wish you all the best in your endeavors for this year.  2011 promises to be an exciting and busy year, with a number of horn-related activities in the works.  Here’s a brief summary of some upcoming events, through the month of March.

January 15: Chamber Arts Brass Trio performance at the Big XII Trombone Conference, Texas Tech University

February 19: Horn Quartet Performance at Northwestern State University of Louisiana

February 22: Chamber Arts Brass Trio Recital

March 4-6: Southeast Horn Workshop, Appalachian State University

March 22: Faculty Recital, Music for Horn and Guitar

Additional performances with the Monroe and Rapides Symphony Orchestras.

I’ll be posting more about these events in the future, but two events which I’m particularly excited about are the Southeast Horn Workshop, where I’ll be performing a newly written piece for solo horn by William Withem, an old college classmate, and now an established composer.  Later that month I’ll be collaborating with guitarist Daniel Sumner for a recital of music for horn and guitar.  Horn and guitar is an unusual combination, and there is some really cool music for this instrumentation.  We also hope to premier on this recital a new piece for horn, guitar, and piano by Mel Mobley, Associate Professor of Theory and Composition at ULM.

To close out this first post of 2011 I’ll share an inspiring story I recently heard about on NPR.  The story, titled “Amid Unrest, Juarez Symphony Orchestra Plays On,” opens with this line.

It’s been a rough couple of years in Juarez. Known as the murder capital of Mexico, Juarez is plagued by drug-related violence and organized crime. A quarter of the population is estimated to have fled, and thousands of businesses have closed. This year, the city even canceled its Independence Day celebration for the first time ever.

But the Juarez Symphony Orchestra plays on to grateful audiences that choose violins as a refuge from violence.

The article is well written, and yet another testament to the power of the arts to uplift and empower in even the most difficult of situations.

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