BRAIDED BAGATELLES

BRAIDED BAGATELLES

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Scoring & Instrumentation
Piano
Alternate Title

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Year Authored (or revised)
Duration (min)
15
Movements
1. Marking the Field
2. Stretching
3. Marching
4. Floating
5. Flying

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Description

Composer's Note:

Braided Bagatelles is a solo piano work that consists of an interlocking chain of variations on a theme, and related dances. There are several processes at work in the piece:

---The variations and dances alternate, playing off common material between them, creating a flow of constantly mutating ideas.

---These sections are designed to grow both shorter and more frequent in their appearance as the piece progresses, so that the rate of change between them is at its most dramatic at the end of the work. The combined processes of interlock and compression suggest the structure of an actual braid.

The work is fanciful and athletic, as its subtitle implies. In its often primal motivic materials, it pays homage to the great variation sets of Beethoven (especially the 32 Variations on an Original Theme in C Minor), and in its elements of theater and sonic invention, the music of such modern German composers as Mauricio Kagel and Helmut Lachenmann.

Special Techniques:

In the fourth movement, “Floating”, the pianist must make a light stroke over the flat front of the piano keys with his/her fingernails. The stroke is done with the right hand in mm. 200-209. In mm. 209-214 the white keys are stroked in a more precise rhythmic pattern, first by the right hand, then both. Then, in mm. 215-219, the pianist concludes the movement by continuing the brushing motion in the left hand, with “normal” playing in the right, but all the music in these measures is mimed just above the keyboard in the pattern indicated by the notation.

Finally, the performer may open with work with an optional improvisation based on the entire piece to come, no longer than two minutes. If done, this should be like a phantasmagoric summary of the work to come, a dream of the piece. The performer should do this only 1) if s/he feels comfortable doing so, 2) can project the material musically and virtuosically, and 3) after having absorbed the notated music fully.

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First Perfomance

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Recording

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Text Language - Non English

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Text Source/Author

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Title Number
Ensemble Type
solo keyboard
Genre/Theme

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Instrument
piano
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$19.50 score
ACA-CARL-105