Showing posts with label chamber music with guitar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chamber music with guitar. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Marek Pasieczny, SUSURRUS VI for Percussion and Guitar

Why wouldn't I share a piece for classical guitar and percussion.  The composer has pretty detailed notes about what his thought process and inspirations were for this piece. 


The second movement kicking off with the percussionist drawing a violin bow across a gong is fun stuff but the whole thing has an intriguing ambience.  It's got a very spatialized approach to contrasting sonorities of the kind I have usually heard from Takemitsu's work for the guitar but Pasieczny is a contemporary Polish guitarist and composer and I don't know enough about his influences to know of TT is in there or not. In any case, I dig the piece and wanted to share it. 

Monday, September 02, 2024

Cross Over Instead: a thought on Matanya Ophee’s Repertoire Issues since his passing--crossing over instead as the only viable path guitarists have after centuries of being marginal in the classical music mainstream

https://www.digitalguitararchive.com/2022/03/repertoire-issues/

 

From 1986 to 2000 the guitarist and music publisher Matanya Ophee gave variations of a lecture he called “Repertoire Issues”.  His core claims in the lecture were:

 

1) the guitar has never been taken seriously within classical music for the entirety of its history

2) this lack of regard manifested in the absence of guitarists from chamber music festivals across the world in what is colloquially known as classical music

3) this should not dissuade guitarists from doing their best to be taken seriously by not only audiences but other musicians within concert music. 

 

It is with that in mind I want to quote extensively from Ophee’s concluding remarks about what he saw in the classical guitar scene, particularly on the relationship guitarists (and their music) had in connection to the classical music mainstream.  Distinct from the chamber music mainstream scenes of classical music many guitarists were playing music influenced by (interacting with) non-classical genres and styles of music.  This was a phenomenon that has emerged since the 1970s or so and has been called “crossover”.  Ophee’s comments were as follows:

 

Repertoire Issues

Published by Legacy of Matanya Ophee on March 7, 2022

No doubt, attitudes have changed in the last ten years [the lecture was given in 2000]. There are more performances of chamber music with guitar today. I dare say though, that this activity have not yet resulted in a change of perspective in the general public. I read a lot of lofty pronouncements regarding chamber music with guitar in many interviews with guitarists. This is, for the most part, empty lip-service. I do not know of any leading guitarist-performer today who is willing and able to settle on a career which is dedicated to chamber music. There are no active professional chamber music ensembles today, which consist of more than two spouses and which include the guitar.

In my country, there are some 800 festival each summer dedicated to chamber music. You can see there the names of Itzhak Perlman, Yo-Yo Ma, Mstislav Rostropovich, Pinchas Zukerman, Rudolf Serkin, Murray Perahia, and scores of other leading instrumentalists and singers. I have never seen there the names of Andres Segovia, Julian Bream, John Williams or Alexander Lagoya. This unfortunate verity should not deter the leading guitarists to appear there on a regular basis. The inevitable question is: what do our virtuosi have to offer musicians and an audience who have been nurtured for generations on a steady diet of the Beethoven string quartets, the Brahms Clarinet quintet, and the Mendelssohn Piano trios, not to mention chamber music by Mozart, Haydn, Schubert and Dvorak?

Before we attempt to answer that, we must shed any inferiority complex regarding our repertoire and realize that even though the great masters of chamber music have not written for the guitar, we still have a great deal of valuable contribution to make. In evaluating chamber music for guitar, we must avoid judging it by reference to the guitar part alone. What matters in chamber music is the artistic worth of the composition as a whole, NOT the relative merits of the guitar part. Few guitarists are able to read a chamber music score, and few publications of chamber music with guitar, particularly those which date from the time of Heinrich Albert, not to mention the more recent spate of so-called “facsimiles,” actually have one. A guitarist who wishes to embark on a career of music making in public, and would like to achieve anything like the job security offered by professions such as the architects, engineers, doctors, airline pilots or college teachers, would better learn the tricks of the trade. Not memorization, but sight-reading, score analysis, and the ability to breath together, sometimes with total strangers. Look for those works who would offer your future colleagues something new and exhilarating. Even if this means that you have to go oom-pah-pah for a while. That too, can be a valuable and profitable contribution to your own economic survival and to the future of the guitar as a viable musical discipline. If we want to actually function “on the first rank, such as the violin, piano and cello,” we must break away from the restrictive mold of the solo recital, the guitar master-class, the guitar competition and the guitar festival and to propel our way into the general society of music.

I cannot leave this discussion without some words about the programming used by many guitarists today when they play solo recitals. The old Tarrega/Segovia type of programming has been replaced, for better or for worse, with a new type of programming which employs mostly music based on the cross-over phenomenon, that is to say, new compositions based on the popular genres of jazz, rag-time, tango, and country-western music. Thus, besides the leyendas and the Villa-Lobos pieces, we also get the Koyunbabas, the Sunbursts, the Usher Walses and the Piazolla pieces. In principle, all these pieces are actually very good music. But the number of times you get to hear them in the course of a guitar festival, makes them into hackneyed, unimaginative lollipops which might bring a good reaction from a guitar audience, and might even give pleasure to general public audiences. Many main line musicians do the same. Thus you get a cellist like Yo-Yo Ma playing Piazolla. But we must observe that main line musicians do cross-over, in addition to their normal serious repertoire. Guitarists do it instead. [italics original, bold added]

I have observed that in the last few decades the guitarists who made it to the top of the profession quickly, were those who came on the scene with a totally new repertoire, entirely avoiding the standards, the old and the new. There is a lesson to be learned here, and it is this: the main question the guitarist should place before himself is not what to play. It, what NOT to play. Think about it.

It has been just a few years since Matanya Ophee died and I have considered his ideas formatively influential.  I have spent decades writing chamber sonatas for the guitar in which it is paired up with woodwinds, bowed strings, plucked strings, piano, and brass.  I aimed to write a cycle of chamber sonatas using the guitar the way Paul Hindemith wrote chamber sonatas around piano accompaniment.  It turned out while I was tackling this compositional project over the last two and a half decades, inspired by Ophee’s “Repertoire Issues” that the Austrian composer (and pianist) Ferdinand Rebay had created a big cycle of sonatas for guitar with woodwinds and strings decades before I was born. This was a happy discovery at multiple levels, first of all because I have found I generally actually enjoy Rebay’s sonatas, and because it is a sign that Rebay, forgotten as he was in the last half century since his passing, has created a substantial body of work that merits further performance and study. 

 

Yet Rebay’s legacy highlights all the more Matanya Ophee’s observation that the great composers, or first-rate composers never wrote chamber music that included the guitar.  Sure, this could be a place to voice exception.  Don’t the Four Songs of Stravinsky include a guitar part?  They do and they are a blast but the point can still remain.  There could be an objection that Toru Takemitsu’s Toward The Sea for alto flute and guitar is a significant work for that pairing much the same way Astor Piazzolla’s Histoire du Tango for flute and guitar is a significant work.  But you don’t hear those works at festivals, do you? Ophee’s point has remained without substantial counter-examples and counter-arguments.

 

Let’s say for the sake of discussion the six-stringed classical guitar that was refined in Spain is only about 250 years old. That means that the instrument has been around for centuries and no works written for the guitar by guitarist composers have made it into the mainstream canon of concert music, often known as classical music.  The most significant canonical works for the guitar were either written for the instrument by non-guitarists (whether Rodrigo or Britten or Martin or Castelnuovo-Tedesco or Ponce or whomever) or were transcriptions of non-guitar music made by guitarists (Johann Sebastian Bach and Isaac Albeniz). 

 

For there to be no canonical works in chamber music or solo guitar in the classical music mainstream after no less than 250 years should force those of us who are guitarists to ask what it would take for a guitar work to gain canonical status in chamber repertoire.  If we decide the five-course guitar that anticipated the modern guitar counts as the guitar, too, then the history of the guitar can go back five centuries and this makes the situation worse rather than better.  If the guitar is half a millennium old and in all that time not a single work for the instrument and its variants has been regarded as worthy enough to become a canonical work of music theorists and historians consider important enough that non-guitarists have to know them the way singers and guitarists in music survey courses have to know who Mozart and Beethoven were, well, what are the odds the guitar and guitarist composers will ever buck the centuries long trend?  Ophee advised that we do not have an inferiority complex about our instrument and its repertoire and I do, frankly, agree.  At the same time, a case could be made that Ophee’s observation about the bias against the guitar as the companion of any Spaniard opens up the question of ethnic and racial biases within musicology and it’s not for nothing this was the topic of a recent book about the history of music theory and music history.

 

Since I’m writing in 2024 and in the United States (citizen born and raised) I probably don’t need to even name the author and title.  But I liked the book, honestly, and I think guitarists should take Philip Ewell’s often polemical On Music Theory, and Making Music More Welcoming For Everyone very seriously.  It is possible for traditionalists and defenders of The Great Tradition version of classical music to just say that Ewell has a chip on his shoulder or that when he remarked on the functional erasure of Spanish and Spanish-language derived music from classical music theory and history that this is part of some sour grapes campaign.  For guitarists, however, the prospect of functionally expunging Spanish and Latin American music from any consideration pre-emptively wipes out even the slightest chance that many of the most beloved works of the guitar literature will ever be taken seriously.  How high and low do you have to look for a truly detailed analysis of the formal, rhythmic, melodic and harmonic materials of Five Preludes by Heitor Villa-Lobos that could compare to an analysis of Beethoven’s Hammerklavier? 

 

Even if Ewell is wrong about many things he doesn’t seem to be wrong about how marginal Spanish music (and its adjacents) have often been in music theory and music history.  Why discuss the harmonic language of Albeniz if he’s consigned to having accomplished pianistic feats of post-Lisztian virtuosity, as a Grove entry put it decades ago?  That Britten’s Nocturnal after John Dowland is a fine piece of music doesn’t mean that either Britten’s work for guitar or Dowland’s lute music has been discussed very much in mainstream classical music theory and history.  I can’t recall seeing a single extensive study of Takemitsu’s magnificent suite for solo guitar All in Twilight in the last thirty years.  Discussions of guitarists and their approaches to sonata form have largely revolved around Sor and Giuliani and, understandably, Ponce.  There is room for more work to be done and that work is being done but what seems unlikely to happen is for a guitarist to have composed a piece of music so significant to mainstream classical music theory and education as to merit that nebulous but sought-after status of canonization.  There’s no chamber work written by a guitarist composer that has canonical status unless we’re going to go out on a limb and remind people that Hector Berlioz played the guitar.  But how has the status of Berlioz’ music held up in the last century? 

 

So when Ophee said that mainstream classical musicians establish themselves in the standards like Yo-yo Ma on the cello and embrace cross-over in addition to the standards, and guitarists did cross-over instead, that seems to be true, but it also reveals a possible double-bind at the core of Ophee’s questions and concerns.  If the guitar has never made it into the classical canon over the course of centuries why would it now?  If in the wake of 250 to 500 years of guitars being around literally nothing has been written that fits into the chamber repertoire of music festivals is the problem with the guitar or with the chamber music festivals?  Is it possible that the aesthetics and norms of the long 19th century, often thought of as being the span between 1780 to about 1920, constitutes a set of standards the guitar could not possibly measure up to? 

 

After so many centuries maybe the wiser thing for guitarists to keep doing is to cross over instead. Don’t even bother with seeking mainstream acceptance within classical music in chamber festival settings.  It’s not that I didn’t hear guitarists at the Ice Breaker festivals in Seattle over the decades, I did hear chamber music featuring the guitar and I liked the pieces I heard, but the Ice Breaker festivals show that the guitar has some compelling music from the Baltic states but you have to search high and low for it.  There are niches within niches in classical music, which is itself a niche. 

 

There may be a case to be made that crossing over instead is a more rewarding path for classical guitarists. You and I who play the guitar may have more in common with Blind Willie Johnson, Luigi Legnani, Heitor Villa-Lobos, Tampa Red, Lonnie Johnson, Bukka White, Lightning Hopkins, Fernando Sor, Wenzel Matiegka, Napoleon Coste, Nikita Koshkin, Dusan Bogdanovic, Angelo Gilardino, Bob Dylan, John Lennon, Leo Brouwer, Elizabeth Cotton, Joni Mitchell, Ida Presti, Nadia Borislova, Annette Kruisbrink, Rosetta Tharpe, and Bonnie Rait than we will have with Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Stravinsky, Schoenberg, Mahler, Webern, Handel, Buxtehude, Bach, Schutz, Albeniz, Schubert, Liszt, Brahms, Prokofiev, Shostakovich, Medtner and Scriabin.  We guitarists have more in common with each other that we all play the guitar than we may ever have with the canonized composers of classical music.  

 

John Williams the guitarist has to be differentiated from the John Williams who gave us soundtracks to the films Jaws, Star Wars and Superman.  A lot of people in the United States know who John “Star Wars” Williams is even if they can’t stand his music whereas far few people probably know John Williams as the guitarist who played Nikita Koshkin’s Usher Waltz, one of those works Matanya Ophee published and considered was in danger of being turned into a new lollipop in the guitar literature. 

 

Now I eagerly await the second half of Koshkin’s 24 Preludes and Fugues for solo guitar getting a commercially available recording! I have already written extensively about the first half of this formidable and outstanding cycle of contrapuntal works for solo guitar written by a guitarist.  To go by mainstream classical music theory and history it can seem as though after a few centuries pianists and organists regarded the usual suspects as having contributed all there ever was or is needed for fugues and consigned the genre to the school exam room and the dustbin of history.  Even if Koshkin’s work merits serious and continued study; even if his work is a substantial contribution to the tradition of preludes and fugues; I have not seen his cycle discussed very extensively in the realm of guitar scholarship, let alone in the “mainstream” of classical music.  Ewell is a Russianist by specialization so I can hope, at least, that maybe one day he could write about Nikita Koshkin’s cycle of preludes and fugues.  If Ewell did that I would so buy that book!

 

Which is why, in a way, I agree with Ewell but am ambivalent about aspects of his case.  As a guitarist with a fondness for the music of Wenzel Matiegka I know of literally no significant English-language writing on his roughly twenty solo guitar sonatas even if I count the helpful essays in the Stanley Yates edition.  The guitar has not only never been admitted into the musical mainstream it probably never will be.  This is why it may make sense for guitarists to not only keep crossing over instead but to make that path the new default moving into the future.  We have more to gain by taking seriously all the styles and forms and genres of music our guitarist peers have made and are making and will make than to hope after centuries that somehow one of us guitarists will write something that gains the status of Beethoven’s Hammerklavier sonata or his late B flat major string quartet.  Koshkin’s life and work may be instructive precisely here since scholars who have discussed his music and work have pointed out that he steeped himself in Stravinsky and Shostakovich but also listened to Led Zeppelin.  Crossing over instead is probably what we guitarists have been consigned to having no choice but to do within mainstream classical music history and theory.  If that’s the case, let’s just keep doing that. 

 

If the last few centuries have shown us how seriously non-guitarists in classical music have taken the guitar we have nothing to gain and everything to lose attempting to create musical works that don’t take seriously all the musics written on and for our instrument by our fellow guitarists in the quest to write something that could ever appear alongside Haydn string quartets and Beethoven piano sonatas.  By this I don’t mean to say “Don’t bother”, it’s more like Johann Gottfried Herder’s admonition to fellow Germans to trust in their own regional folk traditions for source materials rather than to continuously and continually make worse and worse knock-offs of the pinnacles of the arts in Greek and Roman antiquity.   


We may have a lot more to gain by taking all the music written on the guitar by and for guitarists seriously across all styles and genres since the birth of the modern guitar than we are likely to gain in the centuries that have elapsed without a single solo or chamber work for classical guitar making any notable appearance in any festival setting. It’s not that I wouldn’t love for chamber works including the guitar become staples in the classical music mainstream, it’s that Matanya Ophee died a few years ago and I read his lecture decades ago and here we are, and the guitar and guitarists are no less marginal to classical music’s mainstream than seemed to be the case back in the Reagan years.  Maybe crossing over instead is the only actual path forward we have not just due to anti-guitar prejudices but also because a whole lot of those canonized works from the long 19th century were running with Herderian ideas of being true to your people’s folk roots as the basis for making Art.  Guitarists may need to do more of that and not less before we collectively make something that “makes history”, and doing “more of that” may entail taking a whole lot more seriously the kinds of musics that have habitually been consigned to the influences that go into “cross-over”. 

 

If guitarists, even classical guitarists, take this approach, it will also be taking up one of the main points of Ewell’s book and his aims, making music theory more welcoming to everyone

 

If guitarists who love to listen to and play John Lee Hooker meet a classical guitarist who respects that tradition rather than insisting the only guitar music worth talking about are old recordings by Segovia and Yepes that would be better public relations for our instrument, particularly if we are guitarists who love both the classical guitar literature and blues.  There may be more guitarists like that among us even in the realm of classical guitar than there are guitarist composers who are ever going to have works that show up in the chamber music festival circuit.  Crossing over instead has been what we're stuck with but we don't have to act as if that's actually a bad thing.  If he Norman Lebrechts and Roger Scrutons  and Kimballs keep saying classical music is dying and with it whatever passes for "civilization", crossing over would be how a small part of "classical music" survives because its practitioners (classical guitarists) choose to take more than their own repertoire to be the be all and end all of good music.  It's also the more neighborly attitude to boot. 

Wednesday, March 13, 2024

a new performance of Five Dances for double bass and guitar, a composition by Annette Kruisbrink


I have the score for this set of pieces and hope, one day, to write about them.  They are works I consider core to contemporary chamber music for classical guitar and bass.  There are a lot of other works written for this pairing of instruments but Five Dances are the pieces I think any and every guitar and bass duet really ought to know.  

If you haven't heard Kruisbrink's album Cirex go check it out.

Monday, October 16, 2023

a playlist: Chamber music featuring the guitar in duos (or ensemble) with everything from the piccolo down to tuba

I've been meaning to create a list like this for some time.  Another guitarist once told me that it seemed that no matter what obscure combination of instrument X with classical guitar he could name I seemed to know at least one piece written for that combination.  Well, I can hope so. 

Let's start with woodwinds ...

Saturday, August 05, 2023

Karl Goepfert- Sonata for Bassoon and Guitar

It's been a while since I've put up a post about a niche work of chamber music including the guitar. Guitar and bassoon is a worthy combination that I hadn't gotten around to, I think, before this post.

So here we go.
Carl Andreas Göepfert (1768~1818) who wrote a Sonata for Bassoon and Guitar you can hear over here
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zlVe_d1on0

also here
the Ferrara Duo (Annina Holland-Moritz and Stefan Conradi) have recoreded a commercially available version of this piece through Antes Edition

you can find the score at IMSLP but I gotta warn you it's parts only.  But it's clear enough you can work out a fair bit reading one part at a time listening to the whole piece. 

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Tolgahan Çoğulu: I Vrisi Ton Peyiotisson for microtonal guitar and string quartet

We haven't featured microtonal guitar in a while at Wenatchee The Hatchet.  So this little piece is something you can listen to, an arrangement of a Greek tune for microtonal guitar and string quartet
My first microtonal guitar performance with a string quartet! We played anonymous Greek tune I Vrisi Ton Peyiotisson with Anadolu Quartet. String quartet arrangement is by Ahmet Tirgil Microtonal guitar arrangement is by Benjamin Barbaric


Thursday, April 13, 2023

Dusan Bogdanovic "Roundabout (Variations on `Round Midnight' by Thelonious Monk" for guitar and string quartet

 I know Bogdanovic has experimented over the last forty to fifty years with fusions of classical guitar and jazz but I did not know until this week he'd composed a quintet for guitar and string quartet on a theme by Thelonious Monk.  So here you go.

musicians are:
Benjamin Schmid,violin Kirill Kobantschenko,violin Benedict Mitterbauer,viola Florian Eggner,cello Edin Karamazov,guitar

movements are listed as follows:

00:00-02:36 1.Introduction 02:37-05:47 2.Prelude and Fugue 05:48-08:31 3.Nocturne 08:32-09:53 4.Scherzo improvisando 09:54-12:14 5. Danse 12:15-14:00 6.Ricercare 14:01-16:07 7.epilogue

Clearly we're listening to a set of variations where the core musical material is filtered through forms and character variations rather than the continuous variation form that tends to be the default in jazz. So think more "Goldberg Variations" or "Diabelli variations" than one long continuous jam.

It would take a formidable jazz band to go sixteen continuous minutes on just a single song. One of the things I've suggested here at my blog is that one of the challenges for jazz after more than a century is a cultural default to continuous variation form. Jazz composers have somewhat broken out of the confines of continuous variation but with mixed results. I think Wynton Marsalis' violin concerto written for Benedetti actually works. It's never going to be my favorite violin concerto but I liked it enough to listen to it a few times when it got released a few years ago. I'm not sure I'd go back to it like George Russell's Living Time but that's a different kind of musical thing and Russell revisited that work almost from the ground up later.

I think for we guitarists in the early 21st century variation form has its own separate set of challenges because while Ponce's "variations and fugue on La Folia" is cemented in the repertoire it takes a fantastic guitarist to make the work compelling for me (Marcin Dylla, for instance). For me there are too many firm cadences across each of the variations for it to win me over most of the time. Besides, given my historic sympathies for Bream repertoire I'm not sure any guitarist composers can top Benjamin Britten's reverse-variations/cumulative setting approach to variations in Nocturnal after John Dowland.

But I love the idea of a multi-movement chamber work including classical guitar based on a theme by Thelonious Monk. I would be inclined toward a sonata form using two different Monk themes as a first movement and then probably a cumulative form fugue derived from mutated elements of another Monk standard to get a sonata-prelude and fugue work because I love playing with sonata forms and fugues. Counterpoint inspires me. Your mileage may vary. I think when it comes to syntheses of classical music and jazz traditions we're collectively only just getting started. There have been a lot of failures that in some way or another fall between two stools, but the musical path seems worth pursuing.

I've made no secret I'm interested in developing practical and theoretical approaches that can span the often scholastically constructed gaps between forms, styles and vocabularies. If there are "enemies" (and I hate to have to put it this way) they are not among musicians trading ideas and experimenting, but ideologues who are style purists, genre purists, or formal purists who don't want their "real" music sullied by impurities from fusions. Many fusions have stunk, there's no denying it, but I think in the last half century Dusan Bogdanovic is one of he guitarist composers whose work offers very promising steps toward jazz/classical guitar synthesis. Some pieces I like more than others but he's always been an intriguing and inspiring composer to me.

POSTSCRIPT 4-15-2023

I've been thinking about this piece a bit and I think that while I like the idea of a set of character variations in multiple movements there's something I miss from Monk's song as performed in the jazz tradition. To use a term Ethan Hein has used, there are fun character moments but none of the movements is long enough for a listener to really savor the groove in each movement. In jazz we usually get the head theme, jamming variations and the reprise. Bogdanovic did a good job of exploring contrapuntal and harmonic possibilities dormant in Monk's tune but I personally feel as though four longer movements getting to sixteen minutes would give listeners more room to savor the grooves of different variations than seven smaller movements. I love the idea of a fugue based on a Monk theme but I wanted that fugue to have been longer. I also lean toward cumulative form. I mean, a fugue based on an inversion of the incipit of "Let's Cool One" that slowly built up to the arrival of the entirety of "Let's Cool One" as Monk played it would be more what I would want to do, speaking just for myself. The thing Charles Ives used to do was write complex fantasias where he'd have countermelodies to distorted forms of well-known American popular songs and he'd only reveal that all his musical material was building up toward the presentation of that pop song at the end. I think something like that would be fun to do with Monk.

Or, alternately, just building an entire fugue on the melody of Stevie Wonder's "Ordinary Pain" would be a dream come true. But I digress. I get to at my blog.

Friday, February 03, 2023

Annette Kruisbrink: Five Dances for double bass and guitar (1986)

I've got the scores for these and hope to eventually blog about them in a bit more detail.  But as there's a new film up on Youtube with all five dances played together, I can't resist linking to it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwdIag88jd0

I know I've been saying this for years but these Five Dances and Cirex should serve as a foundation stone in the repertoire for double bass and guitar. Of course there are other works for this pairing but I keep coming back to this set of dances and Cirex because I just love hearing them. 

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Toru Takemitsu "Toward the Sea" for alto flute and guitar (video w score)


This is pretty much the greatest work for alto flute and guitar any composer has ever written as far as I'm concerned.  The balance seems a bit wonky in the audio but you can read along with the score. 

I was introduced to Takemitsu's music by a friend of mine in college who was from Japan and said that he was a national treasure, to be sure, but she thought some of his music was actually pretty weird but she wanted to know what I thought of his work.  I fell in love with this piece.  I later realized I had heard the astonishing "All in Twilight" a few years earlier and, well, I've been a fan of Takemitsu's music for guitar for pretty much my whole adult life.

It's probably easier to hear the influence of Messiaen in this piece than George Russell. ;)


Monday, January 02, 2023

Atanas Ourkouzounov: Broken Concerto for flute, guitar and chamber orchestra (video w score)

Ourkouzounov - Broken Concerto (2017) for flute,guitar and ensemble - YouTube 

Mie Ogura and Atanas Ourkouzounov are the soloists and if you care the least bit about contemporary chamber music for flute and guitar you owe it to yourself to seek out every single recording these two have ever made together!  I am not overstating things. :)  They're the most exciting and interesting flute and guitar duo I have ever heard in my life.  Call it personal taste or prejudice but a blogger gets to do that.  

Micelanea Guitar Quaret performs "Cinq illusions sonores" by Atanas Ourkouzounov (video w score)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcPv6GuDFYY


Atanas Ourkouzounov: Codex Bulgaricus (guitar sextet) performed by Guitarra a Seis (video w score)

the ensemble has a new CD out through Naxos that shouldn't be too hard to find.  

Tuesday, October 04, 2022

Astor Piazzola: Histoire du Tango (for flute and guitar) [because I got Bob Seeger'ed one too many times this week]

Bob Seeger doesn't want to hear `em playin' tango?  Oh, yeah.
Well, here ya go Bob, Histoire du Tango (1985)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slrCsvifsAY

Heard "Old Time Rock `n Roll" one too many times this week and had to do a little post highlighting one of the better-known composers of tango as contemporary chamber music.  I think the second movement (1930 Cafe) has a good claim to being one of the best slow movements in a cyclical work for flute and guitar anyone has written. 

Not wanting to hear tango is the loss of rockists. To everything there is a season, after all. 

Sunday, August 14, 2022

Trio Ralchenitsa - Merry-Go-Round of Life [Joe Hisaishi arranged by Mie Ourkouozunov)

I've been following them and their music for years but this, man, has to be a post. :)

They've done an arrangement of Joe Hisaishi.

This trio is flute, accordion and guitar.
Petar Ralchev (accordion) Mie Ogura-Ourkouzounov (flute) Atanas Ourkouzounov (guitar)


For those who don't already know all the named names, the music is one of the key themes in Hayao Miyazaki's film Howl's Moving Castle.

Saturday, October 02, 2021

Radames Gnatalli's Sonata for Guitar and Cello, movement 1 with video and score

I feel fortunate I got the score for this lovely work back when it was still in print!  Radames Gnattali's Sonata for Cello and Guitar deserves to be in the top ten pieces ever written for this combination of instruments.

Theme 1 takes up the first 1:08 and is in E minor, kinda.  There's a gorgeous dorian element to the soaring cello line and the guitar gets a magnificent 2/4 and 5/8 alternating groove. There's a lovely transition and Theme 2 kicks in (I think) at 1:09 but gets a clearer gestural identity at 1:34.  This second theme is developed across the space of the Theme 2 place in the "exposition". Gnattali veers from E minor into G# minor via sequential development of the Theme 2 gesture.  Theme 2 develops more by languid fantasia that fades out into a preparation for the return of Theme 1 than some kind of Beethovenian "drive" to the dominant pedal point that sets up a big syntactic climax.  This kind of "winding down" development is pretty common in Ferdinand Rebay's solo guitar sonatas which I shall have to write about later.