|
Kleemation
for flute and piano (2003)
Navona CD #5884 & iTunes mp3
Noteworthy Sheet Music, 17 minutes
"highly abstract yet accessible" (WRUV Reviews)
"Vercoe musically renders Klee's drawings with all the humor, fear, and reality
that make each one leap from its canvas..." (IAWM Journal))
"The music and musicianship live up to the master." (Samuel Jay Keyser)
Kleemation for
flute and piano is in five short movements based on five drawings
by Paul Klee
titled:
Goodbye to You, Please!,
Afraid on the Beach, More Will Be Marching Soon, and Woman Sowing
Weeds. The music was written on commission for flutist Lisa Vanarsdel
and pianist Patricia Halbeck
while the composer held the Acuff Chair of Excellence
in the Creative Arts at Austin Peay State University in Tennessee. Kleemation received
its premiere at the university on the Dimensions New Music concert
series in 2003.
It was
first performed in New England in 2004 by "2" with flutist
Peter H. Bloom and pianist Mary Jane Rupert at the Duxbury Art Museum
in Duxbury, Massachusetts. Subsequently, "2" has performed
the piece many times on tours in the U.S., Thailand, Australia and New Zealand.
Program Notes:
The first short
movement, "Goodbye
To You," incorporates the title into the rhythm of the music, both
in the opening piano phrase and toward the end. This is a
goodbye said in a matter of seconds and viewed later with a certain
wry humor.
“Please!” draws
on the vernacular tradition of a kind of swing music with striding
bass line and laid-back
melodic line, but the music becomes more strident and complex
before it reverts to a more tense version of the easy-going
opening.
“Afraid on the Beach” is the longest
of the five, with a flowing piano part intended to evoke the
relentless
pounding of waves with a soaring flute line high above. There are two breaks
for quiet and reflection and a final return to the beginning
music.
“More Will
Be Marching Soon” incorporates the hymn Onward Christian
Soldiers into the flute and piano parts, reflecting the anxiety
of both Klee’s situation in Germany as a member of the
Bauhaus School (which was eventually closed down by the Nazis)
and our own
uncertain
times.
The “Woman Sowing
Weeds” is probably subversive, scattering weeds
instead of flower or vegetable seeds. Whatever her intent, her action
is sure. The flickering flute gestures are like the flicks of the scattering
hand
over a staccato piano raining down tiny seeds.

Goodbye
to You mp3
|
|

Afraid
on the Beach mp3 |

More
Will Be Marching Soon mp3
|
Woman
Sowing Weeds mp3 |
 |

Austin
Peay premiere
Patty Halbeck, Elizabeth & Lisa Vanarsdel

flutist
Peter H. Bloom & pianist Mary Jane Rupert
|
|