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ARTICLE 6 – CONCERTOS revised December 2005

One of the biggest problems with any website is keeping it up to date. Apologies for any failures on this one. I discovered this problem when getting cross with a colleague in Singapore who plans to programme Adam Gorb’s Downtown Diversions and wanted to know the publisher. I recommended my Concerto file – but of course it is not there, it is way out of date. Many apologies, Singapore and everyone else.

Flute

Trombone

Oboe

Euphonium

Clarinet

Tuba

Bassoon

Piano

Saxophone

Percussion

Horn

Strings

Trumpet

Singers

 

Most of the scores in the table were programmed at the RNCM. Here is a revision with the following scores Needed to be added in at the next revision.

MEAT AND TWO VEG - A LOOK AT THE CONCERTO REPERTOIRE

Revised 20 August 2004

Clarinet

Stephen McNeff

Clarinet Concerto

Clarinet

Marco Pütz

Clarinet Concerto

Euphonium

Marco Pütz

Euphonium Concerto

Horns (2)

Lo Hau Man

Conversing with the Stars

Saxophone

David Kechley

Restless Birds

Saxophone

Zacharia Goh

Concerto

Saxophone 4tet

James Syler

Minton’s Playhouse

Saxophones (2)

Andy Scott

Dark Raindrops

Saxophone

Vicente Moncho

Music with a Touch of Tango

Soprano

Susan Botti

Cosmosis

Trombone

Adam Gorb

Downtown Diversions

Trumpet

Kent Kennan

Trumpet Sonata

Tuba

Rolf Wilhelm

Concertino for Tuba

I suspect that English cuisine is a byword amongst discriminating WASBE "foodies" as generally fairly appalling, though those of you who have visited Manchester for WASBE 1991 or our Annual Festivals in the last weekend before Easter will find solace in the Armenian Restaurant in Albert Square or in the dozens of excellent curry houses and Chinese food centres.

The traditional British meal can sometimes be satisfying, and so sometimes is the traditional orchestra concert programme. What would we give to be able to programme

Overture - Concert piece- Concerto - interval - Symphony

in our concert series, drawing on the last two hundred years of Western music, as well as pandering to our audiences knowledge and love of their favourite Hundred Best Tunes. On the one hand, it is exciting for us as conductors and players to be performing new or unfamiliar music most of the time, to be fighting to create recognition for a new medium, on the other we can hardly blame the public for staying away through their ignorance of new composers and new sounds. And do we really make good use of the incredible repertoire that is there?
Gunther Schuller in a recent letter on this very problem, writes that

Unfortunately the situation is worse … because of the social/professional context to which wind music is relegated. …as long as wind ensembles and bands are located primarily (almost entirely) in schools and academic institutions, the rest of the music world will never take wind and band music very seriously, no matter how good the music is and how well its performed. They see it as relegated to students and amateurs, and just ignore it, don't give the field any respect.

After recent meeting (on the internet) with Kamillo Lendvay, he sent recordings of his tremendous Piano Concertino (1959) which I first heard at WASBE, and of his Trumpet Concerto, premiered in WASBE 1991, conducted by Laszlo Marosi. Klaes Ryberg, until recently Manager of the Ostgota Musiken, was at our recent Manchester Festival and reminded me of his commissions from Mats Larsson of a Trombone Concerto, which made a great impact in WASBE Schladming; there is a Violin Concerto to follow.

INVOLVING THE “PROFESSION

This set me musing on how we best can involve the leaders of the music profession, that elite which dictates public taste in “serious” music, in what we are doing. One solution we tried in Manchester in the 80’s and 90’s was to use top international or national soloists in our programmes wherever possible. In our first two International Festivals we introduced Evelyn Glennie in the world premiere of an exciting new percussion concerto, Elements by Adam Gorb, Allen Vizzutti playing the Richard Rodney Bennett Trumpet Concerto, Steven Mead in the world premiere of Joseph Horovitz' own wind arrangement of his Euphonium Concerto, Bob Childs playing the new Euphonium Concerto by Nigel Clarke The City beneath the Sea and James Gourlay as soloist in an arrangement of the Vaughan Williams Tuba Concerto. We have in the past welcomed the late John Fletcher in the premiere of the wind version of Edward Gregson’s Tuba Concerto, Susan Milan playing Kent Kennan's Night Soliloquy, John Wallace playing the Husa Trumpet Concerto, Evelyn Glennie in the world premiere of Thea Musgrave's evocative Journey through a Japanese Landscape, George Caird in the Rimsky-Korsakov Oboe Variations, Trombonists Denis Wick as soloist in the Berlioz Symphonie Funčbre et Triomphale, Christian Lindberg in Derek Bourgeois’ Trombone Concerto and Ian Bousfield, now principal trombone with the Vienna Philharmonic in the Hoddinott Ritornelli for Trombone and Ensemble and Gunther Schuller's Eine Kleine Posaunemusik. Many will remember the young clarinet virtuoso, Michael Collins, playing the Dodgson Capriccio Concertante at the first International Conference in 1981.

This brief survey of concerti which we have played in Manchester at the College or at BASBWE, plus a few others, fulfils a three-fold purpose, helping perhaps to bring national or international stars into touch with our medium, introducing their fans to an unfamiliar repertoire and ensemble, and also adding an international dimension to our programmes. In addition, these works gave valuable solo opportunities to many of our students who have now gone on to distinguished careers.

CONCERTOS & SOLO REPERTOIRE PROGRAMMED AT THE ROYAL NORTHERN COLLEGE OF MUSIC 1978 - 2003

WO = Wind Orchestra with full wind, brass and percussion and saxophones

WE = Orchestral wind

WORK

INSTRUMENT

COMPOSER

PUBLISHER

NATIONALITY

Concertino Pastorale

Flute WO

Philip Wilby

Maecenas

UK

Concerto

Flute 8tet

William Alwyn

Legnick

UK

Concerto

Flute WE

Henk Badings

Peters

Netherlands

Instant Music

Flute WE

Kurt Schwertzig

Boosey

Austria

Lindisfarne Concero

Flute WO

Philip Sparke

Studio

UK

Night Soliloquy

Flute WO

Kent Kennan

Fischer

USA

Concerto

Oboe WE

Ivan Tcherepnin

Peters

USA/Russia

Variations

Oboe WO

Rimsky-Korsakov

Boosey

Russia

Double Variations

Oboe/Fg WE

Edward Harper

OUP

UK

A dramatic Landscape

Clarinet WO

John McLeod

Griffin

UK

Capriccio Concertante

Clarinet WO

Stephen Dodgson

Novello

UK

Clarinet Concerto

Clarinet WO

Csaba Deak

STIM

HungarySweden

Concertante

Clarinet WO

Rimsky-Korsakov

Kalmus

Russia

Concerto

2 Clar WE

Krommer/Crusell

ms

Czech

Concerto

Clarinet WO

Philip Grange

Maecenas

UK

Concerto

Clarinet WO

Stephen McNeff

Maecenas

UK

Concerto

Clarinet WO

Marco Pütz

Bronsheim

Luxembourg

Il Covegno

2 Clarinets WE

Ponchielli

ms

Italy

Prelude, Fugue & Riffs

Clarinet JE

Leonard Bernstein

Schirmer

USA

Concertino

Bassoon wind 8tet

Juriaan Andriessen

Donemus

Netherlands

Concerto Grosso

Wind 5tet/WO

Robert Russell Bennett

Peters

USA

Concerrto

Saxophone WO

Michael Ball

Maecenas

UK

Concertino

Saxophone WO

Warren Benson

Carl Fischer

USA

Concerto

Saxophone WE

Yasuhide Ito

ms

Japan

Concerto

Saxophone WO

Graham Fitkin

composer

UK

Concerto

Saxophone WO

Karel Husa

AMP     

Czechoslovakia/USA

Concerto

Saxophone WO

Paul Creston

Schirmer

USA

Concerto

Saxophone WE/Str 5et

Dominic Muldowney

UE

UK

Concerto

Saxophone WO

Frank Ericksen

Bourne

USA

Concerto

Saxophone WO

Walter Hartley

Presser

USA

Concerto

SaxophoneWO

Ingolf Dahl

ACA

USA

Dream Dancer

Saxophone WO

Michael Colgrass

Carl Fischer

Canada

Star Edge

Saxophone WO

Warren Benson

Carl Fischer

USA

Distant Variations

4 saxophones WE

John Casken

Schott

UK

Urban Requiem

4 saxophones WE

Michael Colgrass

Carl Fischer

UK

Concerto

Horn WO

Mercadante

Molenaar

Italy

Concerto

Horn WO

Marco Putz

Bronsheim

Luxembourg

Concerto

Cornet WO

Dennis Wright

Chapell