Archaeopteryx
David Taylor (bass trombone), Phyllis Bryn-Julson (piano), Cameron Grant (piano), Richard Moredock (piano), St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble, Charles Wuorinen (conductor)
To bring together two pieces by Charles Wuorinen with seminal works of Arnold Schoenberg is, in part, to underline a continuity. Wuorinen, exceptionally among his generation, has developed implications of Schoenberg's 12-tone method to his own musical ends with a strong awareness of the works of others of his predecessors, including Stravinsky, Webern, and Milton Babbitt. Wuorinen's two pieces date from the mid 1970s, a period during which Wuorinen was reconciling serialism with tonally-centered music. Schoenberg's work is represented by his pupil Webern's 1912 two-piano arrangement of the Five Pieces for Orchestra and Wuorinen's arrangement of the Variations. In these arrangements, the important details of pitch, rhythm and motivic relationships stand out in relief.
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Track Listing
Title | Composer | Performer |
---|---|---|
Hyperion | Charles Wuorinen | St. Luke' Chamber Ensemble, Charles Wuorinen, conductor |
Archaeopteryx | Charles Wuorinen | David Taylor, bass trombone, St. Luke's Chamber Ensemble, Charles Wuorinen, conductor |
Five Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 16 | Arnold Schoenberg /arr. Webern | James Winn, Cameron Grant, pianos |
Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31 | Arnold Schoenberg /arr. Wuorinen | Richard Moredock, Cameron Grant, pianos |
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