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Melbourne Concerto for Soprano Saxophone and Chamber Orchestra

RM1100e Melbourne Concerto
RM1100e Melbourne Concerto

Digital Download eScore

Composer: Barry Cockcroft
Composed: 2017 Duration: 16 mins.
Instrumentation: Sax Concerto
ISMN: 979-0-720137-24-7 Catalogue: RM1100
Level: E Country: Australia

Contains 210 pages - full score, orchestral parts and saxophone solo part.

Instrumentation:

Solo Soprano Saxophone

2 Flutes
2 Oboes
2 Clarinets
2 Bassoons

Trumpet
Horn 1
Horn 2

Marimba
Violin 1
Violin 2
Viola
Cello
Contrabass

 

 

aftertraces…

RM981e Aftertraces
RM981e Aftertraces

Digital Download eScore

Composer: Paul Stanhope
Composed: 2011 Duration: 17 mins.
Instrumentation: English Horn Chamber Music, Oboe Chamber Music
ISMN: 979-0-720129-15-0 Catalogue: RM981
Level: E Country: Australia

 

aftertraces... for oboe trio
Players 2 and 3 also double on English horn.
I: Mirage (3 oboes, 3rd player doubling English horn)
II: Air (duet for oboe and English horn)
III: Ephemeral Echoes (2 oboes and English horn)
IV: Shadow Dance (3 oboes 2nd and 3rd players doubling English horn)

Composer’s Note
Aftertraces... suggests ideas of the intangible: that which is transitory, immeasurable and perhaps ephemeral. Music is all of these things and, despite our best efforts to quantify and analyse it, music remains abstract and mysterious. This trio in four movements suggests different ideas of the intangible. It also attempts to play with the spatial elements of performance and sound by having the trio placed in different parts of the space, or not present at all, thus leaving the scope for solo, duo and trio textures.

Mirage suggests hallucination, illusion and fantasy, a figment of imagination opposite from reality. Part of the ‘mirage’ in this music is the illusion that a single instrument can sound like it is playing a complex chord, which is suggested by the use of various multiphonics, double harmonics and other extended techniques available (and now well- established in practice!) to the contemporary oboe player. Having moved through a veil of hazy sounds, trills and unorthodox devices, the music seems to enter another world, engendered by the chords and shapes set up by the various extended techniques at the beginning of the work but now more rhythmically-driven. The piece ends in a similar way to the beginning with the addition of the ghostly sound of a player offstage.

Air suggests various meanings: firstly the literal one of the breath wind instruments need to make their instruments sound and, of course, what we breathe in order to live. Secondly, an Air is an archaic English term used for Aria or song, and the song-like nature of this work for oboe and cor anglais is immediately apparent.The two instruments duck and weave in and out of each other’s way in long, occasionally decorated lines.
Ephemeral Echoes follows directly from the previous movement and plays with ideas of texture and space.The absent 2nd oboe emerges from the previous movement in an offstage solo. The long solo lines are passed around the trio in a series of echoes, as the lost oboist gradually makes their way back to the stage, embraced, so to speak, by the rest of the ensemble.

The echoes found in the third movement become more ordered and dance-like in Shadow Dance. The shadow is construed in terms of a canon (which can also be thought of as an echo) whereby one part plays exactly the same as another at the distance of a few bars later over a jaunty, circling bassline articulated by the cor anglais. Thus, there is always some sort of lead voice and another shadowing. The addition of a 2nd cor anglais part adds timbral variation and the possibility of canonic interplay between the two low instruments and in some sections a mensuration canon – which is where all parts play the same material but at different speeds.This Shadow Dance is bright in character and ends with a fleeting reference to the blurred edges of the first movement.

Aftertraces... was co-commissioned by Father Arthur Bridge for Ars Musica Australis and by Campbell Town Arts Centre.

It was premiered by and is dedicated to Sydney Oboes:Alexandre Oguey,Diana Doherty and Shefali Pryor. Paul Stanhope

Quintet for Alto Saxophone and Strings – SAX PART ONLY

RM577e Sax Part Only for Quintet for Alto Saxophone & Strings Goldstein ALTO SAX/STRING QUARTET
RM577e Sax Part Only for Quintet for Alto Saxophone & Strings Goldstein ALTO SAX/STRING QUARTET

Digital Download eScore Part Only

Composer: Perry Goldstein
Composed: Duration: 18 mins.
Instrumentation: Sax & Other Instruments
ISMN: 979-0-720083-83-4 Catalogue: RM577
Level: E Country: United States

This is for the saxophone part only. The full piece is available with parts and score here:

Quintet for Alto Saxophone and Strings

Program note:

Quintet for Alto Saxophone and String Quartet (2006) features three movements of wildly different character, all influenced by quite different kinds of music.  The first movement, “Bright and exuberant,” is simultaneously heroic and breezy.  Undulating near-minimalist figures in the strings accompany overarching melodies played by the saxophone.  The B section within this A-B-A’ form is more languid, while the outer A sections contain music that is buoyant and striving.

I think of the tune at the center of movement 2 (“Heartfelt and singing”) as an urban spiritual.  Though simple, it first finds itself in a bluesy if somewhat chromatically tortured chorale-like setting.  Four variations follow.  The first preserves the pace of the saxophone melody in a setting of pizzicato strings and short lamenting outbursts. The second variation poses quintuplet perpetual-motion arabesques against the melody while the cello plays with and against the quintuplets in rhythmic syncopation.  The third variation spins an uptempo jazz waltz out of the material while the fourth sets the tune lamentingly in surprising harmonies in the strings’ upper registers.  A cadenza for the saxophone brings the movement to a somber close.

The third movement is something of a middle-eastern dance, made rhythmically jagged by the everchanging meters.  Marked “Dancing, yet driving,” this movement emulates the A-B-A’ shape of the first.  However, the B section and the coda recapitulate the tune of the first movement, first in a melancholy mood and then in exuberant conclusion.

Quintet for Alto Saxophone and String Quartet is dedicated to saxophonist Kenneth Tse and the Escher String Quartet.