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Fathers

Classical/Song • 2003 • Lyricist: Anne Ranasinghe, David Vogel
 
 
   
 

For baritone with flute, cello and piano

Title by uploader: Fathers — song cycle for baritone with flute, cello and piano


50.00 USD

Seller Lori Laitman
PDF, 9.24 Mb ID: SM-000581016 Upload date: 17 May 2023
Instrumentation
Piano, Flute, Cello, Baritone
Scored for
Quartet
Type of score
Full score, Parts
Publisher
Enchanted Knickers Music
Language
English
Difficulty
Difficult
Duration
12'0
Fathers (2002, rev. 2010) sets poems by the late Sri Lankan poet Anne Ranasinghe and the late Russian poet David Vogel. I had previously set their poetry in my Holocaust 1944 and Daughters song cycles and continued to be interested in their work. Fathers can be considered a sequel to Daughters, as it also focuses on the parent-child bond permanently altered by the Holocaust. Ranasinghe's father was murdered by the Nazis and David Vogel was arrested by the Nazis and perished at Auschwitz.

The dark subject matter and length of the poems “You, Father,” “Last Night I Dreamt,” and “I Saw My Father Drowning” created particular challenges. To balance the work structurally and psychologically, I created fragments from the short, hopeful last song, “Don’t Cry,” and “buried” them throughout the cycle.

“You, Father” underscores the idea of a camera capturing a moment in time with sections repeatedly coming to a close with a fermata. “Last Night I Dreamt” employs word painting and extremes of timbre to create a dreamy, surreal atmosphere. The motif for “I Saw My Father Drowning” is transferred between instruments and voice, and the piano’s sparkling upper register creates the effect for the “sky’s canopy” at the song’s close. The full version of “Don’t Cry” ends the cycle. The completion of this theme, with its soothing and repetitive nature, reinforces its use as a “healing balm.”

This cycle is available in several versions: baritone with piano trio or with flute, cello and piano; or mezzo-soprano with piano trio or flute, cello and piano.

The World Premiere took place April 27, 2003 at Benaroya Hall, Seattle, WA at Music of Remembrance’s Holocaust Remembrance Day Concert. The premiere recording can be heard on the Naxos CD along with the Vedem oratorio, also commissioned by Music of Remembrance.
  • Comments

For mezzo-soprano with flute, cello and piano

Title by uploader: Fathers — song cycle for mezzo-soprano with flute, cello and piano


50.00 USD

Seller Lori Laitman
PDF, 9.26 Mb ID: SM-000581017 Upload date: 17 May 2023
Instrumentation
Piano, Flute, Cello, Mezzo-soprano
Scored for
Quartet
Type of score
Full score, Parts
Publisher
Enchanted Knickers Music
Language
English
Difficulty
Difficult
Duration
12'0
Fathers (2002, rev. 2010) sets poems by the late Sri Lankan poet Anne Ranasinghe and the late Russian poet David Vogel. I had previously set their poetry in my Holocaust 1944 and Daughters song cycles and continued to be interested in their work. Fathers can be considered a sequel to Daughters, as it also focuses on the parent-child bond permanently altered by the Holocaust. Ranasinghe's father was murdered by the Nazis and David Vogel was arrested by the Nazis and perished at Auschwitz.

The dark subject matter and length of the poems “You, Father,” “Last Night I Dreamt,” and “I Saw My Father Drowning” created particular challenges. To balance the work structurally and psychologically, I created fragments from the short, hopeful last song, “Don’t Cry,” and “buried” them throughout the cycle.

“You, Father” underscores the idea of a camera capturing a moment in time with sections repeatedly coming to a close with a fermata. “Last Night I Dreamt” employs word painting and extremes of timbre to create a dreamy, surreal atmosphere. The motif for “I Saw My Father Drowning” is transferred between instruments and voice, and the piano’s sparkling upper register creates the effect for the “sky’s canopy” at the song’s close. The full version of “Don’t Cry” ends the cycle. The completion of this theme, with its soothing and repetitive nature, reinforces its use as a “healing balm.”

This cycle is available in several versions: baritone with piano trio or with flute, cello and piano; or mezzo-soprano with piano trio or flute, cello and piano.

The World Premiere took place April 27, 2003 at Benaroya Hall, Seattle, WA at Music of Remembrance’s Holocaust Remembrance Day Concert. The premiere recording can be heard on the Naxos CD along with the Vedem oratorio, also commissioned by Music of Remembrance.
  • Comments

For baritone with piano trio

Title by uploader: Fathers — song cycle for baritone with piano trio


50.00 USD

Seller Lori Laitman
PDF, 9.29 Mb ID: SM-000581018 Upload date: 17 May 2023
Instrumentation
Piano, Violin, Cello, Baritone
Scored for
Quartet
Type of score
Full score, Parts
Publisher
Enchanted Knickers Music
Language
English
Difficulty
Difficult
Duration
12'0
Fathers (2002, rev. 2010) sets poems by the late Sri Lankan poet Anne Ranasinghe and the late Russian poet David Vogel. I had previously set their poetry in my Holocaust 1944 and Daughters song cycles and continued to be interested in their work. Fathers can be considered a sequel to Daughters, as it also focuses on the parent-child bond permanently altered by the Holocaust. Ranasinghe's father was murdered by the Nazis and David Vogel was arrested by the Nazis and perished at Auschwitz.

The dark subject matter and length of the poems “You, Father,” “Last Night I Dreamt,” and “I Saw My Father Drowning” created particular challenges. To balance the work structurally and psychologically, I created fragments from the short, hopeful last song, “Don’t Cry,” and “buried” them throughout the cycle.

“You, Father” underscores the idea of a camera capturing a moment in time with sections repeatedly coming to a close with a fermata. “Last Night I Dreamt” employs word painting and extremes of timbre to create a dreamy, surreal atmosphere. The motif for “I Saw My Father Drowning” is transferred between instruments and voice, and the piano’s sparkling upper register creates the effect for the “sky’s canopy” at the song’s close. The full version of “Don’t Cry” ends the cycle. The completion of this theme, with its soothing and repetitive nature, reinforces its use as a “healing balm.”

This cycle is available in several versions: baritone with piano trio or with flute, cello and piano; or mezzo-soprano with piano trio or flute, cello and piano.

The World Premiere took place April 27, 2003 at Benaroya Hall, Seattle, WA at Music of Remembrance’s Holocaust Remembrance Day Concert. The premiere recording can be heard on the Naxos CD along with the Vedem oratorio, also commissioned by Music of Remembrance.
  • Comments

For mezzo-soprano with piano trio

Title by uploader: Fathers — song cycle for mezzo-soprano with piano trio


50.00 USD

Seller Lori Laitman
PDF, 9.32 Mb ID: SM-000581019 Upload date: 17 May 2023
Instrumentation
Piano, Violin, Cello, Mezzo-soprano
Scored for
Quartet
Type of score
Full score, Piano-vocal score
Publisher
Enchanted Knickers Music
Language
English
Difficulty
Difficult
Duration
12'0
Fathers (2002, rev. 2010) sets poems by the late Sri Lankan poet Anne Ranasinghe and the late Russian poet David Vogel. I had previously set their poetry in my Holocaust 1944 and Daughters song cycles and continued to be interested in their work. Fathers can be considered a sequel to Daughters, as it also focuses on the parent-child bond permanently altered by the Holocaust. Ranasinghe's father was murdered by the Nazis and David Vogel was arrested by the Nazis and perished at Auschwitz.

The dark subject matter and length of the poems “You, Father,” “Last Night I Dreamt,” and “I Saw My Father Drowning” created particular challenges. To balance the work structurally and psychologically, I created fragments from the short, hopeful last song, “Don’t Cry,” and “buried” them throughout the cycle.

“You, Father” underscores the idea of a camera capturing a moment in time with sections repeatedly coming to a close with a fermata. “Last Night I Dreamt” employs word painting and extremes of timbre to create a dreamy, surreal atmosphere. The motif for “I Saw My Father Drowning” is transferred between instruments and voice, and the piano’s sparkling upper register creates the effect for the “sky’s canopy” at the song’s close. The full version of “Don’t Cry” ends the cycle. The completion of this theme, with its soothing and repetitive nature, reinforces its use as a “healing balm.”

This cycle is available in several versions: baritone with piano trio or with flute, cello and piano; or mezzo-soprano with piano trio or flute, cello and piano.

The World Premiere took place April 27, 2003 at Benaroya Hall, Seattle, WA at Music of Remembrance’s Holocaust Remembrance Day Concert. The premiere recording can be heard on the Naxos CD along with the Vedem oratorio, also commissioned by Music of Remembrance.
  • Comments
 
 
   
 
 
   
 
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