various artists compilation - New Piano Music
Excerpts from the liner notes:
RHAPSODIES by C.Curtis-Smith
RHAPSODIES uses heretofore unknown techniques for producing sounds from the instrument, including bowing of the strings. The quality of sound changes and builds from piece to piece, beginning with predominantly keyboard work in the first to inside-the-piano sounds in the fourth which sound almost electronically produced. The titles of the movements are extracts from the Sirens chapter of Joyce's Ulysses. They are I....a swift pure cry..., II. But Wait! Low in dark middle earth. Embedded ore., III. And a call, pure, long and throbbing. Longindying call., IV. Listen! The spiked and winding cold seahorn.
SOURCES IV by David Burge
written by Burge ...SOURCES IV was written originally as a small but organic part of a large work for theater; however, it may be used by itself as a concert piece, its nature being abstract and non-visual. "Each of the four pieces titled Sources derives pitch choices from a source series. SOURCES IV goes further than the others in utilizing these series not only for pitch choice but also to develop tonal emphasis and phrase structure (though just how this is done should be of no interest to the listener).
ETUDES by David Chaitkin
written by Chaitkin: The three ETUDES (1974), though clearly contrasting, are meant to be heard as bound together harmonically, as if by a single, continuous thread. The opening etude is quite compact, combining several varied, short gestures into larger gestures, which themselves evolve, often reflecting one another. After a single melodic line emerges from the sense midpoint, the piece then closes quietly. Here and in the third etude, extremes of the piano's register and dynamics are employed. The second etude has a very slow tempo, with primary interest on lines - essentially two or three voice counterpoint. The last combines the previous slow pace with the abrupt type of gesture found in the first piece. This results in a more relaxed harmonic and more spacious textural situation, in which (at two points) the sense of tempo is suspended entirely, and (also twice) where a particular harmony is reached, retained and made to change slowly by inflections of its parts, until it connects back into the more active flow of the music.
REFLEXIVES by Joe Hudson
written by Hudson: REFLEXIVES for Piano and Tape, was written expressly for David Burge under a project initiated by the Cleveland Composers Guild. With Mr. Burge's virtuosity in mind, the piece quickly took on a rather improvisitory, bravura style. This approach was sustained by a more rigorous formal scheme delineated by the recurrence of various important materials at specific time-intervals. Sometimes these reflections occur as exact reproductions, sometimes as transformations. The tape part was realized at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music center.
ORPHEUM (NIGHT MUSIC I) by Andrew Frank
written by Frank: ORPHEUM (NIGHT MUSIC I) was composed in 1970 and extensively revised during the summer of 1974 ... The work is in one continuous movement, structurally articulated by recurring images that unfold throughout the piece in a kind of cyclic variation. Motivically generated gestures are repeated, extended, and sometimes overlapped. Primarily it is a 'sound piece,' with fast figurations that turn around on themselves. Cadences function as links connecting one idea or group of ideas to another. In fact, conventional means of musical organization are often evident in ORPHEUM...
pieces performed by David and Lois Burge
Tracklisting:
side 1
1. C. Curtis-Smith - Rhapsodies I: ...a swift pure cry {3:12}
2. C. Curtis-Smith - Rhapsodies II: But Wait! Low in dark middle earth. Embedded one. {2:27}
3. C. Curtis-Smith - Rhapsodies III: And a call, pure, long and throbbing. Longindying call. {4:10}
4. C. Curtis-Smith - Rhapsodies IV: Listen. The spiked and winding cold seahorn. {4:08}
5. David Burge - Sources IV {5:34}
side 2
1. David Chaitkin - Etudes {8:52}
2. Joe Hudson - Reflexives {4:49}
3. Andrew Frank - Orpheum (Night Music I) {7:40}
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