| |
|

|
Rhythm Stand
by Jennifer Higdon
Published
September 15, 2004
Ordering
information:
Score and parts: $50 (HL04002285)
Conductor
score: $5 (HL04002286)
|
Rhythm
Stand, by Jennifer Higdon,
pays tribute to the constant presence of rhythm in
our lives, from the pulse of a heart beating to the
rhythmic sounds of the world around us. Celebrating
the "regular order" we all experience, Higdon
incorporates traditional and non-traditional sounds
within a 4/4 meter American style swing to heighten
student awareness and enhance their creativity.
Organized in unique compositional and rhythmic patterns,
this work invites students to explore multiple ways
of organizing sounds and making music.
In
the composer's own words: "Since rhythm is everywhere,
not just in music (ever listened to the tires of a
car running across pavement, or a train on railroad
tracks?), I've incorporated sounds that come not from
the instruments that you might find in a band, but
from 'objects' that sit nearby...music stands and
pencils! Music stands are played with pencils,
which are both 'objects' at hand. Not only that,
but some of the performers in this piece get even
more basic...they snap their fingers. Because
music can be any kind of sound arranged into an interesting
pattern, I decided to add sounds that yuo wouldn't
normally hear coming from band instruments, sounds
which are created out of ordinary things that might
be sitting nearby. Composing is merely the job
of combining interesting sounds into interesting patterns.
And interesting patterns create cool rhythms.
So...I'm making a STAND FOR RHYTHM!"
About
the Composer
Jennifer Higdon (b. Brooklyn, NY, December 31, 1962)
is active as a freelance composer. She has received
awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American
Academy of Arts & Letters (two awards), the Pew
Fellowship in the Arts, the International League of
Women Composers, Composers Inc. (the Lee Ettelson Prize),
the University of Delaware New Music Competition, the
Louisville Orchestra New Music Search, the Cincinnati
Symphony's Young Composer's Competition, NACUSA, and
ASCAP. In addition she has received grants from the
National Endowment for the Arts, Meet-the-Composer,
and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. She has served
as Composer-in-Residence with the Music From Angel Fire
Festival, the Norfolk Chamber Music Festival, the Walden
School, the Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco, and
the Prism Saxophone Quartet. Most recently she was named
Composer-in-Residence with the Philadelphia Singers.
Her work, Shine, was named Best Contemporary Piece of
1996 by USA Today in their year-end classical picks.
Upcoming commissions include works
for the Cypress String Quartet, the Ying Quartet, eighth
blackbird, the Gilmore Piano Festival, the Philadelphia
Singers, the Vail Music Festival, the Brooklyn Philharmonic,
the Pittsburgh Symphony, the Baltimore Symphony, and
National Symphony. Recent commissions come from groups
that are as diverse as the The Philadelphia Orchestra,
The Atlanta Symphony, The Minnesota Orchestra, The Oregon
Symphony, The Curtis Institute of Music Symphony Orchestra,
the American Composers Orchestra, the Women's Philharmonic,
St. Lukes' Chamber Ensemble, pianist Gary Graffman and
the Lark String Quartet, the Verdehr Trio, The American
Guild of Organists, The Network for New Music, The National
Flute Association, the DaVinci String Quartet, ZAWA!
and flutist Carol Wincenc.
Ms. Higdon's works have been performed
extensively around the country, including performances
at the White House, Weill Hall, Merkin Hall, Alice Tully,
Carnegie Hall, and by such performers as Carol Wincenc,
Jeffrey Khaner, Marc-Andre Hamelin, the Cassatt String
Quartet, the Miami String Quartet, the Lark Quartet,
The Pacifica String Quartet, The Prism Sax Quartet,
Synchronia, Earplay, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the
Cleveland Orchestra, the Virginia Symphony, the Dallas
Symphony, the American Composers Orchestra, the Atlanta
Symphony, the Minnesota Orchestra, the Cincinnati Symphony,
the Louisville Orchestra, the Oregon Symphony, the New
England Philharmonic, and the Knoxville Symphony.
Her works have been recorded on
two-dozen CDs. During 2003, Telarc will release her
work blue cathedral on a recording with the Atlanta
Symphony, Robert Spano, conducting. The year will also
see the release of half a dozen other works on various
labels. As a flutist, she is recorded on the Access
and I Virtuosi labels and as a conductor on CRI.
She holds a Ph.D. and a M.A. in
composition from the University of Pennsylvania, a B.M.
in flute performance from Bowling Green State University,
and an Artist Diploma from The Curtis Institute of Music
in Philadelphia. Her teachers have included George Crumb,
Wallace DePue, James Primosch, Jay Reise, Ned Rorem,
and Marilyn Shrude (composition), Judith Bentley and
Jan Vinci (flute), and Robert Spano (conducting).
Ms. Higdon is currently on the
composition faculty of The Curtis Institute of Music
in Philadelphia. She formerly served as conductor of
the University of Pennsylvania orchestra and wind ensemble
and has served as Visiting Assistant Professor in music
composition at Bard College. She is published by Lawdon
Press.
Instrumentation
8-Flute
2-Oboe
2-Bassoon
5-B
flat clarinet 1
5-B
flat clarinet 2
2-B
flat Bass Clarinet
4-E
flat alto saxophone
2-B
flat tenor saxophone
2-E
flat baritone saxophone
6-B
flat trumpet
4-F
horn
6-Trombone
2-Baritone
BC
2-Baritone
TC
4-Tuba
1-String
Bass
1-Timpani
2-Percussion
1: maracas, cowbell, sus. cym.
2-Percussion
2: B.D., glock
2-Percussion
3: claves, tambourine, triangle, whip
2-Percussion
4: S.D., xylophone
2-Percussion
5 (optional): bongo, glockenspiel
1-Piano
(optional)
|