Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);

The work is rooted in the lyrical, dramatic, and voicelike character of the cello in concertato relationship with the orchestra, and merges an intense dramatic impulse with a particular vision of musical unity and shape. It unfolds in a manner like a play of Shakespeare--The Merchant of Venice in pa...

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Main Author: Mathis, Michael Robert
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1911/16853
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spelling ndltd-RICE-oai-scholarship.rice.edu-1911-168532013-10-23T04:07:47ZConcerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);Mathis, Michael RobertMusicThe work is rooted in the lyrical, dramatic, and voicelike character of the cello in concertato relationship with the orchestra, and merges an intense dramatic impulse with a particular vision of musical unity and shape. It unfolds in a manner like a play of Shakespeare--The Merchant of Venice in particular. It is in one movement with five main parts--Molto espressivo; Scherzando; Adagio; Scherzando--Cadenza; Molto espressivo. In the first section of the first part, the cello solo represents the thesis of the work and primary harmonic and motivic material and scales. In the next section, the orchestra is the main vehicle of the antithesis. A transitional and developmental section follows, which leads finally to a section of strongly percussive character. Each main part is articulated by a variant of the percussive section. The full implications of the antithesis are realized in the Adagio, where the technical climax occurs. The dramatic issues of the first developmental section are interrupted, or temporarily "abandoned" but are resumed in a section of like character following the Cadenza and leading to the dramatic climax. A full synthesis of the thesis, antithesis, as well as the percussive sections does not occur until the final part. The musical shape, structure, rhythms, harmonies, melodies, motives on all levels, the "new tonality" of the work, and, in fact, most expressive details, all grow out of the Grundgestalt of the work. Grundgestalt is Arnold Schoenberg's most fundamental compositional concept. It represents the basic shape on the deepest and most abstract level of an individual artwork, and according to Schoenberg himself, constitutes the link between the two Viennese schools and is even of more fundamental importance than his famous twelve-tone technique. The Grundgestalt of the Concerto is represented by the motive C sharp - F sharp - C natural, with F sharp as the tonal center and a primary conflict existing between the tritone and perfect fifth "dominants."2007-05-09T20:16:10Z2007-05-09T20:16:10Z1995ThesisTextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1911/16853eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Music
spellingShingle Music
Mathis, Michael Robert
Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);
description The work is rooted in the lyrical, dramatic, and voicelike character of the cello in concertato relationship with the orchestra, and merges an intense dramatic impulse with a particular vision of musical unity and shape. It unfolds in a manner like a play of Shakespeare--The Merchant of Venice in particular. It is in one movement with five main parts--Molto espressivo; Scherzando; Adagio; Scherzando--Cadenza; Molto espressivo. In the first section of the first part, the cello solo represents the thesis of the work and primary harmonic and motivic material and scales. In the next section, the orchestra is the main vehicle of the antithesis. A transitional and developmental section follows, which leads finally to a section of strongly percussive character. Each main part is articulated by a variant of the percussive section. The full implications of the antithesis are realized in the Adagio, where the technical climax occurs. The dramatic issues of the first developmental section are interrupted, or temporarily "abandoned" but are resumed in a section of like character following the Cadenza and leading to the dramatic climax. A full synthesis of the thesis, antithesis, as well as the percussive sections does not occur until the final part. The musical shape, structure, rhythms, harmonies, melodies, motives on all levels, the "new tonality" of the work, and, in fact, most expressive details, all grow out of the Grundgestalt of the work. Grundgestalt is Arnold Schoenberg's most fundamental compositional concept. It represents the basic shape on the deepest and most abstract level of an individual artwork, and according to Schoenberg himself, constitutes the link between the two Viennese schools and is even of more fundamental importance than his famous twelve-tone technique. The Grundgestalt of the Concerto is represented by the motive C sharp - F sharp - C natural, with F sharp as the tonal center and a primary conflict existing between the tritone and perfect fifth "dominants."
author Mathis, Michael Robert
author_facet Mathis, Michael Robert
author_sort Mathis, Michael Robert
title Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);
title_short Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);
title_full Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);
title_fullStr Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);
title_full_unstemmed Concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (Original composition);
title_sort concerto for violoncello and orchestra. (original composition);
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1911/16853
work_keys_str_mv AT mathismichaelrobert concertoforvioloncelloandorchestraoriginalcomposition
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