No. 42

In the Alps - an animated concert

TVA incluse, Hors frais de port
disponible immédiatement
Télécharger immédiatement après la commande

Richard Ayres

No. 42

In the Alps - an animated concert

PDF voir

Richard Ayres

No. 42

In the Alps - an animated concert

  • Formation Voix
  • Compositeur Richard Ayres
  • Édition Partition à télécharger
  • Maison d’Édition Schott Musik
  • N ° de commande ED13705-DL
disponible immédiatement
Télécharger immédiatement après la commande
TVA incluse, Hors frais de port
  • Carte de crédit
  • La facture
  • PayPal
  • Sepa

Non disponible dans tous les pays. Apprendre encore plus

Description:

  • Langue: anglais
  • Pages: 192
  • Parution: 12.02.2020
No. 42 (In the Alps) could perhaps best be described as a melodrama. It combines many of the subjects that fascinate me: the relationship of text narrative and musical narrative, the history of opera, early cinema, the theatrical practices of the nineteenth century, along with the folk and popular music of the Alpine region. A girl (the soprano), stranded on top of an un-climbable mountain peak as a young baby, is taught to sing by the mountain animals. Young Bobli lives in the village far below the un-climbable peak. He was born mute and communicates with the world by playing the trumpet. Bobli hears the soprano's song drifting down into the valley. The soprano listens to Bobli's trumpet tunes blown up to her by the wind. They are both enchanted. The three acts are separated by interludes describing how three animals experience time passing in relation to a musical tempo. Like any self respecting melodrama the text and music combine to depict or imply a wide ranging theatrical adventure, in this piece starting at the Creation (or the big bang), a lonely existence, scenes of rustic village life, some carpentry, many mountain goats, unrequited love, and ending in a quest destined to fail. In a live performance the text [provided with the performance material] is to be projected on a screen behind the musicians in the style of silent movie intertitles. Richard Ayres