Category Archives: violin

New@Noon 2: Can’t Help It

Tufts Composers presented their second concert of music by Tufts faculty and student composers on Friday, November 13, 2020 at noon

The concert, focusing on “spontaneous Sounds that necessitate response,” was streamed live from Distler Hall through Tufts Music YouTube channel.

Featuring John McDonald, piano; Julia Moss, viola; Katianna Nardone, violin;
Nate Shaffer, piano; Stephany Svorinić, voice and electronics.

Watch New@Noon 2: Can’t Help It.

Program

Caleb Martin-Rosenthal: Courses (2020)

Leia Levi: Monsoon (2020)
Bird Sounds—Close—Song—Monsoon

Stephany Svorinić: Justine Takes a Walk (2020)
A Hawk Assails a Squirrel at a Nearby Cemetery While Justine is on a Walk

Her reflection:
I am the squirrel.
If nature comes for me, then I can’t run.
I am the hawk.
If I am sent to do it, then it’s done.
I’m taken and sent.
What’s over has begun.
I’m the squirrel and the hawk.
I’m one.
[Justine Buckley]

C. Martin-Rosenthal: Blue Light (2020)

Joseph Rondeau: Swerve (Another Accident; Piano Poem No. 9 from Ten Piano Poems) (2020)

Katianna Nardone: Springtime in November (2020)

Max Luo: Largo And Waltz, Op. 15 (2020)

Nate Shaffer: Two or Three moments for piano (2020)
These short(er) pieces were written with an imagined piano, then revised in the midst of a real one.

N. Shaffer: Trace (2020)
Sometimes, they leave a big trace: an outline of – you

Brought to you by Peter Atkinson, Granoff Music Center Studio Manager, and the Musical Events Technical Staff. Publicity and Programs by Anna Griffis, Event Direction by Jeffrey Rawitsch, Granoff Music Center Manager

New@Noon #1: Add Or Remove A Stone: [Building and Re-Building Your Own Sonic Cairn]

Tufts Composers presented a concert of music by Tufts faculty and student composers on Friday, October 30, 2020 at 12:00 pm, featuring “vertically-organized” music by Tufts student and faculty composers suggested by cairn-building.

Featuring Asher Cohen, vibes; Iverson Eliopoulos, cello; Samuel Golub, guitar; Annie D. Kim, violin; John McDonald, piano; Julia Moss, viola; Doug Poppe, electric bass, voice, production; Nate Shaffer, marimba and electronics.

Watch New@Noon #1: Add or Remove a Stone

Program

Caleb Martin-Rosenthal: Cairn Song (2020) for piano

Niki Glenister: Zesty (2020) for viola, marimba, and piano

Claire X. Freeman: Crisscross (2020) for violin, cello, and vibraphone
Lost and found, but not necessarily in that order. A cairn of unbalanced stones that together hold, a lightless path that leads you home. (C.X.F.)

Samuel Golub: Sam’s Journey of the Cairn (2020) for solo guitar
Inspired by the harmonic stylings of the contemporary Japanese composer, Toru Takemitsu, this piece takes a literal interpretation of stacking rocks to form a cairn. One ever-present theme represents the base of the cairn and each chord is supported by this theme. As the rock stack grows, it becomes more unstable until it collapses and is restructured…This is the journey of the cairn. (S.G.)

Jacquelyn Hazle: Kenosis (2020) for mixed quartet
Kenosis, meaning “self-emptying” in Greek, explores the inspiration of a cairn and stacked musical structures through timbre and texture. The music begins with a single, strong unison attack that is “emptied”, then unfolds and reveals itself as the music progresses. Like Stonehenge, a great pyramid, or a simple garden cairn, its true sum is more than a series of stacked stones (or tones) and the total number of rocks. The music portrays the appreciation of a thing in observing both the smaller pieces that make it up and the object as a whole, especially in temporality. (J.H.)

Doug Poppe: Annelise (2020)
Annelise wasn’t written as a cairn piece per se, but I think it works well as one, with the imagery of a shaky tower of stones complementing the instability and nervousness of the song. I hope I don’t mess up! Just kidding, the song will be played as a pre-recorded track.

The wind in the courtyard is wrapped in the trees
The kids in the schoolyard all catch the disease
The sun isn’t racing across the blue sky
And time isn’t waiting but passing you by
Play on my team
Annelise, Annelise
To lie at a distance from farness away
Surpassing the difference and seeing the same
The ships in the dockyard are lost out at sea
The kids in the schoolyard learn days of the week
Play on my team
Annelise, Annelise
(D.P.)

Aaron Wong: Underpinnings (2019) for piano

Andrew Daetz: What’s Left Behind Never Stays the Same (2020) for piano
What’s Left Behind Never Stays the Same chronicles the arc of a journey away from home, what-ever “home” may mean. A broad, stable chord opens the piece, gradually fading in volume until it essentially disappears. As the piece unfolds, the home chord continues to return, but the top notes successively tumble down to the bottom, like the gradual collapse of an unsteady cairn. This symbol-izes the idea that when one sacrifices something comfortable for a new opportunity—perhaps this means giving up a relationship for a job or leaving childhood friends to go to school far away—the things left behind will continue to evolve and shift on their own. Relationships may change, or they may crumble altogether in ways which cannot be restored. There is no turning back the clock. (A.D.)

Nate Shaffer: Process for Marimba and Room 21 (2020) for video recording & live marimba
The product and the process are one. Time is an illusion, albeit a persistent one. What did you do with your time? What do you think you did? Who are they? Who plays the music? (N.S.)

 

Music for Tone Stampede 4

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Tone Stampede 4

I joined Arthur Levering and Marti Epstein for the fourth edition of their new music series “Tone Stampede,” performed on September 26, 2016 at Distler Hall, Tufts University. The concert featured Don Berman on piano; Sarah Brady, flute; Gabriela Diaz, violin; and Rane Moore, clarinet, as well as me, on piano. As composer my offerings were the two below:

Trio About Smoking, Op. 558 (2014-2016)                                                                                              Performed by Rane Moore, Gabriela Diaz, and Donald Berman

  1. Trying To Quit
  2. I Don’t Want To Work—I Want To Smoke (After Poulenc/Apollinaire)
  3. Trailing Off…

Two Parts, Five Participants, Op. 604 (2016)                                                                                        Performed by Sarah Brady, Rane Moore, Gabriela Diaz, Donald Berman, and John McDonald

  1. Some Fifty-Finger Phrases
  2. Best Feet Forward (Faire De Son Mieux)

Trio About Smoking

Smoking breaks can be common occurrences for busy freelance musicians and music professors alike. The members of the Zodiac Trio, for whom the piece was conceived, are no exception to this observable habit. When we have worked together, many of our best ideas came about in conversation during smoking breaks just outside concert hall lobbies. I intend this piece as both a paean to musician/smokers’ tension-relaxation possibilities and a health warning! Thankfully, tonight’s performers—Rane, Gabriela, and Donald—are all non-smokers! And so quicksilver they needed smoking-break discussions.

Cast in three brief movements, a repetitive, industrious opening piece imagines a valiant habit-breaking attempt to get the trio underway. The second piece refers to the Poulenc song Hôtel, set to an indolent poem by Guillaume Apollinaire in which the last line declares “I don’t want to work; I want to smoke.” The music alludes to Poulenc’s cloudy harmony, and is inspired by baritone Pierre Bernac’s recorded performance with Poulenc at the keyboard; it takes bits of the song as source material for a melancholy rumination. The concluding piece of the trio attempts to paint the image of a curl of smoke trailing off. Not without conflict, the work nevertheless aims for a light touch.

Two Parts, Five Participants was composed specifically for tonight’s distinctive stampede. Its two movements are small appreciations made for this group of wonderful players and colleagues. I made the piano part a four-hand endeavor so I could join them!

Initially conceived as the entire piece, Some Fifty-Finger Phrases now works as the first of two parts. Since its conceit was to make music in which every phrase requires fifty fingers to complete (a total of fifty fingers is available for use by the total ensemble of five people), it got tiring to go on too long developing new phrase strategies with this unusual limit. It was fun while it lasted, and hopefully provocative for the listener. A second part, Best Feet Forward (Faire De Son Mieux) was first composed as a piano solo for presentation at the Tufts European Center in Talloires, France where I was a Scholar-in-Residence this past summer. With this re-composition of the piece for five musicians, I sought to provide a good companion to the fifty-finger enterprise, yielding a flow of music that shows the ensemble’s elegance and flexibility. I dedicate the work to our transcendent musicians Sarah, Rane, Gabriela, and Donald.

Stafford Diptych

Performed on November 7, 2015 by Sharan Leventhal, violin, and Patricia Ann Metzer, soprano, for the concert Chorus Pro Musica: With Strings Attached.

Stafford Diptich op. 417

  1. News Every Day
  2. Some Things the World Gave

Since first setting a poem by William Stafford in 1991, I have returned many times to this late poet’s direct and thought-provoking informal verses. When Adam Grossman invited me to compose something for The Master Singers, I quickly unearthed this pair of contrasting “Staffords,” attractive as much for playfulness as for their startlingly serious flashes.

I took it as a challenge to write for the choir with a sole violin as a performing partner; as a pianist, it is always hard for me to remove the keyboard from a conception. Here, the violin soloist is entrusted with many “stage settings,” creating, sustaining, and changing attitudes and directions according to the poems’ varying terrains.

Boston Classical Review says of the piece:
It was time again for something bracing, and choir and violinist Leventhal delivered in style with Stafford Diptych, Op. 417, by John McDonald… The chorus effectively intoned the wry, ironic texts by William Stafford in gently jerky rhythms and dry harmonies that favored the hollow sound of open fifths. Violinist Leventhal led the way throughout, alternating with the chorus in spiky, virtuosic, multiple-stopping violin solos, which backed off at times into affecting, dissonant laments. Her vivid playing provided the most arresting music of the evening, rivaled only by the exotic choruses of the Betinis piece.

I thank composer/conductor Adam Grossman, violinist Frank Powdermaker, and The Master Singers of Lexington for bringing this poetic pairing to initial musical life in 2004, and conductor Jamie Kirsch, violinist Sharan Leventhal, and Chorus pro Musica for performing the work anew in 2015.

CD: Airy – Music for Violin and Piano

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Airy: Music for Violin and Piano

CD of Airy: Music for Violin and Piano was released today on Bridge Records 9402. This recording includes compositions written by John McDonald over a 22 year span, with performances by virtuoso violinist Joanna Kurkowicz and the composer at the piano. Cover art is by Jan Kubasiewicz.

Lyrical Study, Op. 10, No. 2 (1985)
Poem, Op. 12B (1985)
Brief Pastiche Of A Theme By Schoenberg, Op. 15 (1985)
Four Single-Minded Miniatures, Op. 27 (1987)
Mad Dance, Op. 66 (1986/88)
Lily Events: A Suite Of Seven Little Studies, Op. 97 (1989)
Sonata For Solo Violin, Op. 219 (1994)
Suite of Six Curt Pieces, Op. 326 (1999-2000)
Lines After Keats, Op. 336 (2000)
Airy, Op. 436 (2007-2008)