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Quartet for Brass
|
year |
1978
|
duration |
11 ½ minutes
|
instrumentation |
Two trumpets, French horn, and bass trombone
|
commission |
Metropolitan Brass Quartet
|
première |
April 20, 1979, Union college, Schenectady, New York,
Metropolitan Brass Quartet (Douglas Hedwig and Kristian
Solem, trumpets, William Parker, French horn and Bruce
Bonvissuto, trombone)
|
publisher |
GunMar Music, Inc.
|
recording |
“Vivian Fine,” American Masters Series,
CRI CD 692,
Ronald Anderson and Allan Dean, trumpets, David Jolley,
French horn, Lawrence Benz, bass trombone.
|
movements |
Variations: Poco lento, espressivo
Fanfare: Energico
Eclogue: Lento
Variations: Lively
|
program
notes |
Each of the Quartet’s four movements explores a
specific idea, and the brass ensemble is heard in
differing contexts. For example, in
“Variations,” the first movement, Fine
creates a stark intervallic texture which later becomes a
retrograde and then accumulates energy by doubling its
speed…The ensemble becomes more brasslike for the
second movement, “Fanfare,” in which the
listener hears various pairings of the instruments in a
contrapuntal texture that is meticulously shaped through
dynamics, attacks, and, at times, microtonal tuning.
“Eclogue” is quiet and sparse with solo
instrumental lines, ending with a prolonged C that is
colored by changes in dynamics and mutes.
The fourth movement, “Variations,”
becomes more lively as the ensemble presents individual
and unison lines that punctuate the rapidly changing
rhythmic patterns. ...“Variations” is
constantly dancing. Material is reused as canons,
retrogrades, and in augmentation, but the energy never
ceases, and the listener does not have time to register
the compositional manipulations.
--Heidi Von Gunden, liner notes to “Vivian
Fine,” CRI American Masters CD 692
|
reviews |
“…much fresh and truly innovative material.
Various unusual crescendo-glissando combinations, for
instance, and an occasional quasi-pointillist usage of
the brasses come as delicious surprises. This is a work
that should certainly be added to the repertory of the
university and professional brass ensembles emerging in
such numbers these days.
–Dale Shepfer, American Record
Guide, October 1982
“This is
spare but by no means unlyrical music….Vivian Fine
has written one of the most thoughtful and least showy of
brass-ensemble pieces in her 1978 quartet, a work which
manages to be as technically fascinating as it is
pleasurable.”
–John Ditsky, Fanfare,
1982
“It was
all striking, but Fine’s work captured my
imagination. In the third movement, trumpet and trombone
players took to the rear of the Greenwall Music Workshop,
where they echoed and responded to the notes being played
on stage. Fine drew a picture of a conversation and of
distance—and then of distance bridged. It was
beautiful, and very moving.”
–Wendy Severinghaus, Bennington
Banner, April 20, 1987
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audio
files |
first
movement
fourth
movement
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