Pascal's Theorems

Pamela J. Marshall

About this work:
A major work in three movements. The basic motive of the first movement is reminiscent of the three corners of a triangle, hence the title. The movements are: 1. Preserving the Rough Road 2. Darkness - Frozen Comet 3. Skipping Stones Written for the Axiom Duo, cellist Emmanuel Feldman and doublebassist Pascale Delache-Feldman presented a bravura premiere performance in 1997. The composer writes: "The idea for the piece started with a triangle. The three notes of the opening motive are its corners. The first and third movements develop and extend this three-note idea. Both are gestural, aggressive, and full of dynamic contrast. "In contrast the second movement begins with long unmeasured notes. The tempo is "slow, outside of time". The score also tells the performers to let each interval settle in, listen to it, then move on. Just as the performers do, the audience can savor each harmony as if they were gazing at and hearing stars in a seemingly unchanging sky. When I was writing the piece in 1996, the comet Hyakutake was in the sky, and at the time of the premiere Hale-Bopp was visible. Available from Spindrift Music Company (www.spindrift.com)
Year composed: 1996
Duration: 00:16:00
Ensemble type: Chamber or Jazz Ensemble, Without Voice:Other Combinations, 2-5 players
Instrumentation: 1 Cello, 1 Double bass

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