Trilogy

Jonathan Newman

About this work:
Trilogy is a setting of a small work by the wonderfully evocative poet, Octavio Paz. I approached the problem of working with two soloists (which, at first, was a paralyzing problem) by separating the piece into three continuous parts: the first, for baritone solo and orchestra, which sets the Paz text in the English translation; the second, for violin solo and orchestra; and the last for both soloists, setting the same poem in the original Spanish. The first part is somewhat minimal in harmonic and rhythmic motion. It features the baritone singing over an almost constant repeating 16th note pattern. Harmonically it is based on triads and perfect intervals. The second part is a "loose" chaconne, where a harmonic progression, consisting of six 7-note chords repeat throughout the section. The violin solo plays through, over, under, against, and with this repeating progression. The harmonic language is quite different from the first section. The last and shortest section concentrates on modal harmonies, thin textures, and duo lines, setting the poem as if both the violin and the baritone are "chanting" the text together. Trilogy utilizes the same instrumentation as the Mozart Violin Concerto which shared the program in the premiere performance, and is dedicated in gratitude to Gary Peterson and Danica Mills. The first performance was 1/20/97 by Sinfonia Calcania of Boston.
Year composed: 1997
Duration: 00:12:45
Ensemble type: Orchestra:Chamber Orchestra with Soloist(s)
Instrumentation: 2 Oboe, 2 Horn in F, 1 Strings (General), ,1 Violin soloist(s), ,1 Baritone soloist(s)
Files:
MP3  Trilogy

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