* my apologies for the missing artwork
various artists compilation - Opus One: Number 14
Barbara Kolb - Rebuttal
Performers:
Gary McGee, George Hirner - clarinets
The title for the duet, which Barbara Kolb describes as a dialogue, is the result of a wager made between the composer and a friend. It was her original intent to "disprove" proportional notation through this composition. She lost the bet, gained a respect for the "new" notation, and has been using it ever since.
Leo Kraft - Line Drawings
Performers:
Paul Dunkel - flute
Richard Fitz - percussion
"Line Drawings" was written for Paul Dunkel in January, 1972. The title suggested itself as the piece was being composed. In one sense it refers to the linear nature of the music, in which the melodic line of the flute maintains a sustained dialogue with the percussion instruments. In another sense, the title refers indicates the place of the piece within my oeuvre, which is analogous to the place of a drawing in the output of a painter; on a smaller scale and less formal, but with the essential qualities set forth in a few quick strokes.
Since Paul Dunkel is master of three members of the flute family, I built the overall shape of the music around the contrasts between flute, piccolo, and alto flute. Of the five pieces that comprise line drawings, the first, third, and fifth are written for flute, the second for alto flute, and the fourth for piccolo. The division of labor suggested groupings of tone color within the percussion array. The sounds that keep the alto flute company, for example; are unlike any of the other sounds in the piece, because instead of using drumsticks the percussionist plays with wire brushes. As in many of my recent works, tonal coloring is a point of departure, but only that.
I do enjoy virtuosity in instrumental performance, and, knowing that Paul Dunkel and Richard Fitz would be the performers, I felt quite free to write the most demanding music if that seemed to be where the musical idea wanted to go. I expected that no matter what I wrote, these two colleagues would be able to perform - and project - what I had written. My confidence was amply justified. (Leo Kraft)
Max Schubel - Moonwave
Performer:
Paul Dunkel - flute
In 1969, British flutist Averil Williams asked Max Schubel to compose a short encore piece for solo flute. "Moonwave" was first performed by Ms. Williams in Iceland in the Fall of 1969, and later in London. The composer intended a work that was not difficult, yet virtuosic. Use is made of double stops that can be articulated quietly, usually as consonances. The work is in free meter, leaving many interpretational decisions to the performer.
Ronald Perera - Reflex
Performer:
Ernst Wallfisch - viola; with electronically derived sounds
"Reflex" is a reflection on violist Ernst Wallfisch, who premiered the piece at a Composers' Forum in New York in the Fall of 1973. The title comes from the second section of the piece where the player is asked to play seven fragments of music, responding "as if by reflex" to seven tape cues. Actually the music is full of rather odd-angled reflections on itself, such that little elements of it keep getting re-combined in different ways with previously heard elements. A few details act as reference points: the diminished fifth e up to b flat, the gradually widening vibrato note, the high-pitched tape cluster, the upward four- or five-note pizzicato motif. These are the principal signals for brief forays, digressions and recapitulations which come in interchangeable timbral and gestural guises. The score, which is published by E.C. Schirmer, gives the performer's part in conventional metric notation and the tape part as a series of cues with timings. (Ronald Perera)
David Cope - Cycles
Performers:
James Martin - flute
David Cope - contrabass
"Cycles" (flute and contrabass) was completed in early 1969. The work derives its title from the overlapping 'cyclic' return of materials: motives, timbres, rhythms, dynamics and effects. These sometimes dovetailing and othertimes simultaneously treated materials are in no way 'serialized' but rather are treated intuitively and evolve one from another. This work is in no way graphic or indeterminate in notation but rather is composer-structured throughout.
Tracklisting:
Side A
1. Barbara Kolb - Rebuttal {4:24}
2. Leo Kraft - Line Drawings {12:00}
3. Max Schubel - Moonwave {3:46}
Side B
1. Ronald Perera - Reflex {5:01}
2. David Cope - Cycles {9:59}
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dear grey calx,
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