Paul Neubauer / Joshua Roman / Royal Northern Sinfonia / Rebecca Miller AARON JAY KERNIS Dreamsongs - Three Concertos
While Dreamsongs is a concerto for cello and chamber orchestra,
it doesn’t take on the forms of older concerti. Rather than the almost
ubiquitous three movement layout—Fast-Slow-Fast—it has only two
movements, both of which mix slow and fast with dramatic and lyrical
sections. The first, 'Floating Dreamsongs' is mostly slow and airy, and
is built as a group of continuously developing variations on the
intimate music from its opening and 1st variation with strings, harp and
vibraphone. The consonant harmonies become spooked and furtive,
building into tremulous marimba and vibraphone rolls with large
orchestra chords, and only much later returns to a mostly peaceful
character.
Much of the 2nd movement, 'Kora Song', is inspired
by music of the African kora, a plucked gourd almost similar in sound to
the harp and pizzicato cello combination that opens the movement and is
often featured in it. I don’t know of many cello pieces that
concentrate on pizzicato playing as much as this movement, and the
playing style was developed in close collaboration with the soloist. The
music frequently changes direction and features a number of cello
cadenzas of smaller and larger size, sometimes with the West African
djembe drum. Overall it has a gentle exuberance and is lighter in tone
and more energetic than in the opening movement.
Dreamsongs
is written for the generous and virtuosic playing of cellist Joshua Roman, who I’ve known for a number of years, and has been my neighbor in
New York City until recently. It is dedicated to him. It was
co-commissioned for him by the San Francisco Chamber Orchestra, the
ProMusica Chamber Orchestra of Columbus, Ohio, and the Bellingham
Festival in Washington State.
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