DE

Similar documents
What We Do. Founder Jack Price. Contact Info.

Concerts of January 9-11, Michael Stern, Music Director. Yefim Bronfman, piano. Debussy. Prélude à L après-midi d un faune (1894) Brahms

DE

Stravinsky Firebird Suite 1919

2017 International Keyboard Odyssiad & Festival, U.S.A. (IKOF)

Five Melodies for Violin and Piano, Opus 35bis SERGEI PROKOFIEV Born April 23, 1891, Sontsovka Died March 5, 1953, Moscow

SCHOOL OF MUSIC. Page 1 of 7

OKLAHOMA CITY UNIVERSITY DISTINGUISHED ARTISTS SERIES

Audition Information. Audition Repertoire

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

2018 ENSEMBLE CONNECT LIVE AUDITIONS

at least one work different to those offered in the preliminary audition. Scales, arpeggios and sight-reading may be tested.

DE

GRADUATE AUDITION REQUIREMENTS

Text page: 393 Workbook Packet: VII-1 Page: 111. An overview of cultural, artistic and political events of the twentieth century

Patrick Jee, cellist. Table of contents: Page 2... Page Review and Press Mentions

BMO Harris Bank. Featuring: William Hagen performing Mozart s Violin Concerto No. 4 June 15. Emily Bear performing Gershwin s Rhapsody in Blue July 4

Texas Music Festival Opens Cool & Classical 2015 Summer Season with. Celebrated Concertmaster Glenn Dicterow

Scene from Claude Debussy s Pelleas et Melisande. The escape from Romantic music.

Grant Park Music Festival

Postgraduate pre-admission and audition requirements

Trumpet Proficiency Levels

Concerto No. 1 in B-flat minor for Piano and Orchestra, op. 23 (1875)

Thursday 26 November, 1pm Wigmore Hall, London Recital Ludwig van Beethoven (arr. Franz Liszt) Symphony No. 3 in E flat major Op.

Virginia resident Adolphus Hailstork received his doctorate in composition from

CHARLIE ALBRIGHT, piano

YEFIM BRONFMAN. Pianist

LISZT: Totentanz and Fantasy on Hungarian Folk Tunes for Piano and Orchestra: in Full Score. 96pp. 9 x 12. (Worldwide). $14.95.

The Boise Philharmonic will launch its 46 th Concert Season in September

Included are program notes, information about the various orchestra instrument families and concert etiquette information.

Carnegie Mellon University School of Music Piano Literature & Repertoire IV, 20 th Century Spring Semester, Course Description

Audition Guidelines & Repertoire Lists Season

All Strings: Any movement from a standard concerto or a movement, other than the first, of a Bach sonata or suite, PLUS

CONTACT: Christina Kellogg Joe Yang

Orchestra Audition Information and Excerpts

Feu D'artifice, Op.4: Full Score [A2137] By Igor Stravinsky

Civic Orchestra Season Audition Repertoire. Note: Instruments marked with an * have only associate membership openings for the season.

Romantic is a term used to describe the music and art that was created from about 1810 to 1900.

(edited 11/19/2012) Civic Orchestra of Chicago Audition Repertoire VIOLIN. First movement of a major concerto Exposition

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

Reconstruction of Nijinsky s choreography: Reconsider Music in The Rite of Spring

Program Notes. Alexander Borodin ( ) Polovtsian Dances from Opera "Prince Igor" 31 May. 1 Jun. by April L. Racana

Classical Pianist Nikolay Khozyainov to Appear in Silicon Valley

ofmusic the GUEST ARTIST RECITAL GUSTAVO ROMERO, Piano Friday, September 26, and Sunday, September 28, :00 p.m. Lillian H. Duncan Recital Hall

Dmitry Kabalevsky ( )

California Subject Examinations for Teachers

Melinda Zak Harpist. Contents: Jack Price Managing Director. Michelle Rubin Founding Director N. 7 th St., Suite 134 PMB 533 Phoenix, AZ 85014

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

Anacréon (Ballet Music): Bassoon 1 Part (Qty 4) [A5311] By Luigi Cherubini

Approved Audition Material

SPECIALISATION in Master of Music Professional performance with specialisation (4 terms, CP)

Introduction to Music

Bela Bartok ( ). Sonata for Violin and Piano

Excerpts. Violin. Group A. Beethoven Symphony No. 3 Eroica 3rd Movement: Beginning to 2nd Ending

Robert Cole conducts with pianist Alexander Sinchuk and cellist Julian Schwarz

MUSIC FOR THE PIANO SESSION FOUR: THE PIANO IN VICTORIAN SOCIETY,

Three Artist Debuts, Two Solo Recitals, and an Albuquerque Performance Highlight Week 1 of the 2017 Santa Fe Chamber Music Festival

Program for Stories, Legends and Fairy Tales 11.30am, 25 October am, 27 and 28 October 2015 The Courier-Mail Pizza, South Bank Parklands

Feu D'artifice, Op.4: Tuba Part (Qty 3) [A2137] By Igor Stravinsky

Schelomo, Hebraic Rhapsody for Cello and Orchestra (1916) Matt

Minnesota High School Music Listening Contest Regional Contest Round 1, Excerpt Identification

Sergei Babayan, Piano

Concerts of Thursday, March 13, 2014, at 8:00p, Saturday, March 15, 2014, at 7:30p, and Sunday, March 16, 2014, at 2:00p.

El Paso Symphony Orchestra Audition Requirements April 29, 2018

NOTES ON BASIC REPERTOIRE

SYLLABUS 2019 INSTRUMENTAL Provisional Timetable Thursday 14 th February

Running Head: FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE: A STUDY OF RUSSIAN TRUMPET 1

Audition Packet

Music in the Baroque Period ( )

Daniel Wesley McCloud

Audition Requirements for SEASON 2018

Register for your audition at Questions: or

Michael Haydn Born in Austria, Michael Haydn was the baby brother of the very famous composer Joseph Papa Haydn. With the loving support of

FANTASIES I-XII. Sidney Forrest. For Solo Clarinet in Bb or A. G.P. Telemann TRANSCRIBED BY

Register for your audition at Questions: or

Chapter 22. Alternatives to Modernism

08 July, Handel - Sarabande OPENDATA > Kindle OKYL1HWT. 08 July, 2018 HANDEL SARABANDE. Document Filetype: PDF KB

International Graduate Application Procedures Academic Year

Symphony in C Igor Stravinksy

31. Stravinsky Symphony of Psalms: movement III (for Unit 3: Developing Musical Understanding) Background information and performance circumstances

TEXAS MUSIC TEACHERS ASSOCIATION Student Affiliate World of Music

CHECKLIST FOR APPLICATION TO THE UCO SCHOOL OF MUSIC

13 Name. Grout, Chapter 17 Solo, Chamber, and Vocal Music in the Nineteenth Century. 10. What solution was found?

To Do Today: Circle 6 nouns with red. Circle 9 verbs with blue. Circle 5 adjectives with green.

Suite III For Saxophone Solo By J.S. Bach READ ONLINE

Piano Concerto No.1, Op.1 (1919 Version): Full Score [A8062] [Sheet Music] By Sergei Rachmaninoff

Welcome. Preparing For Your musicurious Concert Experience. Christopher Dragon. Youth Concert Activities. 1 of 8

CHRISTOPHER HATTON Website: christopherhatton.com Telluride Lane Boulder, CO

Name: Class: Date: ID: A

Department of Music Audition Repertoire Percussion

Guidelines for Repertoire Selection

Music Study Guide. Moore Public Schools. Definitions of Musical Terms

Classical Seattle: Maestros, Impresarios, Virtuosi, And Other Music Makers (McLellan Endowed Series) By Melinda Bargreen READ ONLINE

SAN DIEGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA THE OPUS 2015 GALA CONCERT. October 10, AN-LUN HUANG Saibei Dance from Saibei Suite No. 2, Op.

MASTER OF MUSIC PERFORMANCE

DO WHAT YOU LOVE MAKE MUSIC WITH THE TASMANIAN YOUTH ORCHESTRA IN 2019

How Great Thou Art. Words: Stuart K. Hine Music: Swedish Folk Melody

Lasted from approximately 1775 to 1825.

CONTENTS: Peter and the Wolf 3. Sergey Prokofiev 5. Consider This: Class Activities 6. Musical Terms 7. The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra 8

Biographical note: Charles Gray was a recording engineer who worked for the NBC (later RCA) recording company from late 1947 into the 1950's.

Transcription:

DE 1612 0 13491 16122 8

The Rite of Spring IGOR STRAVINSKY (1882 1971) THE RITE OF SPRING (LE SACRE DU PRINTEMPS) PIANO TRANSCRIPTION BY SAM RAPHLING Part One [14:45] 1. Introduction (3:27) 2. The Augurs of Spring (2:52) 3. Ritual of Abduction (1:19) 4. Spring Rounds (3:23) 5. Ritual of the Rival Tribes (1:36) 6. Procession of the Sage (:32) 7. The Sage (:27) 8. Dance of the Earth (1:10) Part Two [15:30] 9. Introduction (3:54) 10. Mystic Circles of the Young Girls (2:31) 11. Glorification of the Chosen One (1:17) 12. Evocation of the Ancestors (:57) 13. Ritual Action of the Ancestors (3:01) 14. Sacrificial Dance: The Chosen One (3:50) Dickran Atamian, piano TOTAL PLAYING TIME: 30:15 Dickran Atamian is a pianist of more than ordinary technical and interpretive gifts, wrote Peter G. Davis in The New York Times, as well as a performer of a highly excitable temperament. Of Armenian descent, he was born in Chicago and made his concert debut at the age of 12 in Phoenix. But it was at the University of Texas at Austin that his artistic roots were nurtured, in four years of study under John Perry. The young pianist continued his studies under Jorge Bolet. In 1975 Mr. Atamian won first prize in the 50th Anniversary Naumburg Piano Competition and was launched on a career that to date has taken him throughout the United States and to Mexico and the Soviet Union. He has given four recitals in New York alone two in Alice Tully Hall, one in the Distinguished Artists Series at the 92nd Street Y and one in Carnegie Hall at which he played the premiere of Sam Raphling s arrangement of The Rite of Spring. In 1977 he played the only major solo recital at the Library of Congress during the Gala Presidential Inaugural Week Concerts, and later that year he made a triumphant debut in Chicago s Orchestra Hall. In 1978 his performance of the Prokofiev Third Concerto with Lorin Maazel and The Cleveland Orchestra was broadcast on 62 affiliate stations in major cities in the United States, Canada and Europe; that same year he also received a grant from the Martha Baird Rockefeller Foundation for Music. His Russian tour, in December 1979, took him in recital and concert to Moscow and Leningrad and to Yerevan in Armenia. In addition to his career as a virtuoso, Mr. Atamian is Artistic Director of the Four Seasons Music Festival at Austin, and he has had a series aired on PBS television, which includes a performance of The Rite of Spring. Mr. Atamian is featured on another Delos recording (DE 3155), performing the Khachaturian Piano Concerto and the Prokofiev Piano Concerto No. 3, with Gerard Schwarz conducting the Seattle Symphony. Produced by John Pfeiffer Recording Engineer: Edwin Begley Recorded in RCA s Studio A. New York City Baldwin SD-10 Concert Grand Piano Atamian Photos: David Smith Creative Direction: Harry Pack, Tri-Arts and Associates Graphics: Mark Evans 7 W 1999 Delos Productions, Inc., P.O. Box 343 Sonoma, CA 95476-9998 (707) 996-3844 Fax (707) 320-0600 (800) 364-0645 Made in USA www.delosmusic.com

NOTES ON THE PROGRAM The transcription presented in this album was made in the early 1970s by the American composer and pianist Sam Raphling. The Rite of Spring-Complete Ballet for Piano Solo (published by Lyra Music Company) had its world premiere in Carnegie Hall on November 19, 1979, performed by Dickran Atamian. Sam Raphling (born 1910, Fort Worth, Texas) studied piano with Rudolph Ganz at the Chicago Musical College. As a pianist he played with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under Arturo Toscanini, Frederick Stock and Sergei Rachmaninoff. Essentially self-taught as a composer, Mr. Raphling has written several operas; four symphonies; five piano concertos; concertos for harp, trumpet, timpani, marimba, and violin; a Rhapsody for Ondes Martenot and Orchestra; eight piano sonatas and many other piano works; sonatas for almost every instrument with piano, numerous songs, Fantasy for Piano, Woodwinds and Bass, and a one-act opera, La Diva. The following is excerpted from a tape-recorded conversation between Phillip Ramey and Sam Raphling. Why transcribe Stravinsky s Rite of Spring for solo piano? To add something to the solo piano repertory that hadn t previously existed. In our century, aside from Debussy and Ravel, there is very little programmatic music for piano, and I think the piano needs programmatic literature. In 1921 Stravinsky himself arranged portions of another of his ballets, Petrouchka, for piano, for Arthur Rubinstein, under the title Three Scenes from Petrouchka. His aim, he said, was to provide piano virtuosi with a piece having sufficient scope to enable them to add to their modern repertory and display their technique. That was my goal with The Rite of Spring: a virtuoso piece. I was also aware that a solo piano version could be useful for conductors and music students conductors because being able to play it through at the piano at whatever level of proficiency would be a great learning aid; students because playing at it would be a good way to get the feeling of the music, to become aware of its construction and melodic lines. I think the four-hand piano version of The Rite of Spring that was made by Stravinsky is thick and unwieldy. It seems too much like orchestral music played on the piano which is exactly what it is. (Stravinsky s other piano music, except for the Petrouchka suite, is not virtuoso music, and pianists seldom play it. The rhythmic aspect of The Rite of Spring is so spectacular and, in its day, was so revolutionary that it has tended to obscure the fact that this music is really intensely melodic. That s quite true. I think the melodic part is clearer to the

listener in this piano transcription than in either the original orchestral version or the four-hand version, because the music is stripped to its fundamental elements, and there is always a discernible line. Do you, then, think of your transcription as being leaner than the orchestral score? Not when it s played all-out by a gutsy yet poetic pianist like Dickran Atamian. In that kind of performance it sounds as if it s all there, and yet the lines seem clear. The real advantage is that a virtuoso pianist can interpret the music with considerable flexibility and rubato, which is difficult for an orchestra to do because it seldom has enough rehearsal time. Considering how complex Stravinsky s orchestration often is in The Rite of Spring and the fact that a pianist has only two hands, you must sometimes have found it necessary to make judicious excisions. I kept as much as I could of the orchestral score, but yes, there were a few places where I had to leave out things. For instance, at the opening there is a lot of counterpoint that was just not possible to fully transcribe. What I did there was to suggest a line, then leave it for another line in such a fashion that the ear has the impression the first line is still going on. Creating that kind of illusion is a device that can work on the piano but, of course, would not work in the orchestra. But writing for piano is a form of orchestration, and transcribing orchestral music for piano is even more so, for you have to think in terms of colors, registers, creating accents through register changes, and so on. Anyone who did such an arrangement would almost of necessity have to be a pianist himself, to know all the little details that make the piano sound. Piano transcriptions, especially the sort of paraphrases and elaborations that Liszt and Busoni did, have been out-ofvogue for some time now. But my transcription of The Rite of Spring is quite literal every measure of the ballet is there, almost exactly as originally written, with, as far as possible, the some chord-spacing. You know, in the old days, when an oil painting was finished, it often happened that someone would make a black-and-white engraving which would facilitate the general public s understanding of the contents of the original work of art. Although I certainly don t consider my transcription a black-and-white version of the music, I think there is an analogy because musicians always like to get behind the notes of a score to see what makes it tick. To expose the bones, so to speak. Exactly. After all, Stravinsky s Rite of Spring is one of the most innovative musical works of this century, so there is real value in being able to do this. However, more than anything else, I wanted to create here a virtuoso piano piece for concert performance. Phillip Ramey