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REPERTOIRE FOR LESS EXPERIENCED BANDS FROM THE CONFERENCE CIRCUIT A REPORT OF MUSIC AT SCHOOL BAND LEVEL Tim Reynish,
The conference season is over, and I am back in the throes of an English summer, with daily monsoons adding to the flood misery throughout the country. All four conferences, WASBE in Killarney and Stuttgart, BASBWE in Glasgow and CBDNA in Ann Arbor, were superbly organized, with a number of excellent bands playing some terrific music, but while it gets easier to find great repertoire for the professional, conservatoire or university groups, the search for similar repertoire for the less experienced is still a challenge. With up to fourteen hours a day listening to music or to composers, my choice of music for High School band may not always be rational, but there are works here which I think are worth exploring. Edwin Roxburgh was hailed by Nadia Boulanger as the new Stravinsky; he does not compromise, his musical language is tough and exacting, but his music repays study. Aeolian Carillons is a second piece for school band, following Time’s Harvest, and both need a Grade 4/5 group. In contrast, Fergal Carroll is a former school band director, and writes grateful music at about Grade3-4. If your students enjoy Song of Lir they will also enjoy Blackwater and Silver Winds, not played at any conferences but recently published also by Maecenas. He scores gratefully and writes user-friendly music with a touch of Irish rhapsody which will please your audiences. MARCO PÜTZ I have long been an admirer of Marco’s music; his large works for amateur, college or professional bands, Prae Monitio and Meltdown are both very exciting, as are his concertos including the most recent for Trumpet. The three works listed here from repertoire sessions and concerts are well worth tackling for a band at about Grade 4. Choralis Tonalis is an especially ingenious and sometimes taxing delve into keys which a Grade 3 band might prefer to avoid, very valuable. LYRICAL MUSIC FOR SCHOOL BAND While it is relatively easy to find exciting and energetic
music for the less experienced band, too many composers drop into sentimentality
all too easily. A movement which I found quite beautiful was the second movement
of What I really enjoyed from many of the composers at the
conferences was this lyrical side to their works. Steve Bryant’s Grade 3 piece
Dusk was
commissioned by Andrew Gekoskie of Timothy Jackson’s Passacaglia
was originally written for 32
horns; as soon as I heard it I invited him to rescore it for band, and the
result has a Brahmsian sweep though couched in a Second Viennese language and
yet packed with an emotion which will carry both players and audience. The band
which played it thought it was about Grade 5 – lack of ambition here. I would
think it is Grade 4, as is alsoBill Connor’s Sun
Low Over Water, a wonderfully evocative 13 minutes of sustained invention,
(well OK a tough Grade 4). Easier is Scott Boerma’s Poem, a moving elegy for a much loved teacher. Martin Ellerby celebrated the Hans Christian Andersen
centenary with a charming suite, Tales
from Andersen and has also reworked a couple of brass band pieces in the new
Accolade series from Maecenas; Natalis
is the most musical of this pair but if you enjoy brass band music, you will
probably enjoy Hampstead Heath. Finally, another work at Grade 3
which will be wonderful for introducing your students to exploring compositional
soundworlds themselves, with its scoring for home-made rattles, waterglass
chimes and whirlies. Jodie
Blackshaw’s Whirlwind was
the First Prize Winner of the Frank
Ticheli Composition Contest Category 1 – Beginner Band and she shows a
great imagination in this piece. It would be a wonderful starting point for
study of Bill Connor’s Tales aus dem Vood Viennoise which also employs whirlies and unusual
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