Collateral Damage for Clarinet and Orchestra - II. Funeral for a Rock Star
Update: 2012-01-13
Description
Bearing the title "Collateral Damage," the Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra was composed for clarinetist and former colleague Håkan Rosengren. It was completed over a six week period during the months of February and March of 2000 and was premiered by Peter Wright (Principal Clarinetist) and the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra (Fabio Machetti, Conductor) on March 3 & 4, 2005 at the Times-Union Performing Arts Hall in Jacksonville, Florida. The work was also performed by Frank Cohen and the Cleveland Orchestra in July, 2005 at Blossom Music Pavillion.
The 20 minute work is somewhat eclectic and post modern in style and follows the traditional three movement form. The faster outer movements are a musical blend of both contemporary classical and Eastern European folk idioms. By contrast, the slower middle movement incorporates musical elements that characterize some of the popular music of the late 20th century. Inspired largely by the tragic events which surrounded the break-up of the former Yugoslavia during the 1990's, the work is dedicated to the civilian victims of all modern wars.
The second movement features the clarinet spinning out a continuously evolving and expanding melody over a series of recurring but shifting harmonic patterns. The title "Funeral for a Rock Star" is a concise description of the imagery and emotion that the music seeks to convey. The seemingly improvisatory and unrestrained clarinet solo evokes the image of a soul freely born aloft, while the heavy, plodding undercurrent of low brass and strings reveals a procession of loved ones bearing the weight of a casket and a profound grief whose consolation lies somewhere between memory and hope.
The 20 minute work is somewhat eclectic and post modern in style and follows the traditional three movement form. The faster outer movements are a musical blend of both contemporary classical and Eastern European folk idioms. By contrast, the slower middle movement incorporates musical elements that characterize some of the popular music of the late 20th century. Inspired largely by the tragic events which surrounded the break-up of the former Yugoslavia during the 1990's, the work is dedicated to the civilian victims of all modern wars.
The second movement features the clarinet spinning out a continuously evolving and expanding melody over a series of recurring but shifting harmonic patterns. The title "Funeral for a Rock Star" is a concise description of the imagery and emotion that the music seeks to convey. The seemingly improvisatory and unrestrained clarinet solo evokes the image of a soul freely born aloft, while the heavy, plodding undercurrent of low brass and strings reveals a procession of loved ones bearing the weight of a casket and a profound grief whose consolation lies somewhere between memory and hope.
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