Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra

abstract: Everyday Arias for soprano and orchestra was composed largely in Arizona and completed in February 2011. The text was taken from a small collection of the composer's own poetry referencing her memories of life in rural Mississippi. Everyday Arias endeavors to elevate these prosaic exp...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Page, Carrie Leigh (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9094
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-90942018-06-22T03:01:43Z Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra abstract: Everyday Arias for soprano and orchestra was composed largely in Arizona and completed in February 2011. The text was taken from a small collection of the composer's own poetry referencing her memories of life in rural Mississippi. Everyday Arias endeavors to elevate these prosaic experiences and settings to art, expressing the everyday as beautiful and worthy of artistic treatment. The primary compositional model for this work was Samuel Barber's Knoxville: Summer of 1915, but other influences included Charles Ives, Aaron Copland, Benjamin Britten, and Dominick Argento. Barber's and Argento's musical treatment of prose style seemed particularly appropriate to the goals of Everyday Arias. Ives and Copland used hymn tunes both to evoke certain associations of worship and as sources of interesting material. The vocal writing of all five composers was influential, but the orchestration techniques for winds are largely a product of studying Ives and Argento, while many string gestures are more obviously tied to Britten and - more historically - Debussy.The primary motive that weaves through the work features an ascending major second followed by a descending perfect fourth, in a long-short-long rhythmic pattern. As a melodic fragment, the motive is often inverted to a descending-ascending pattern, or distorted slightly by expanding the second interval to a perfect fifth, or used in retrograde. The motive was derived from the first measure of the melody "Toplady" (1830) by Thomas Hastings, better known as the hymn "Rock of Ages." In the first movement, the motive is used most frequently in sequences. The second movement treats the motive as a melodic element and as a unit in ostinati. The final movement humorously transforms it into a syncopated gesture to evoke ragtime. Dissertation/Thesis Page, Carrie Leigh (Author) Rogers, Rodney (Advisor) Demars, James (Committee member) Levy, Benjamin (Committee member) Oldani, Robert (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Music Performing Arts hymn orchestra populist song cycle soprano Toplady eng 100 pages D.M.A. Music 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9094 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Music
Performing Arts
hymn
orchestra
populist
song cycle
soprano
Toplady
spellingShingle Music
Performing Arts
hymn
orchestra
populist
song cycle
soprano
Toplady
Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra
description abstract: Everyday Arias for soprano and orchestra was composed largely in Arizona and completed in February 2011. The text was taken from a small collection of the composer's own poetry referencing her memories of life in rural Mississippi. Everyday Arias endeavors to elevate these prosaic experiences and settings to art, expressing the everyday as beautiful and worthy of artistic treatment. The primary compositional model for this work was Samuel Barber's Knoxville: Summer of 1915, but other influences included Charles Ives, Aaron Copland, Benjamin Britten, and Dominick Argento. Barber's and Argento's musical treatment of prose style seemed particularly appropriate to the goals of Everyday Arias. Ives and Copland used hymn tunes both to evoke certain associations of worship and as sources of interesting material. The vocal writing of all five composers was influential, but the orchestration techniques for winds are largely a product of studying Ives and Argento, while many string gestures are more obviously tied to Britten and - more historically - Debussy.The primary motive that weaves through the work features an ascending major second followed by a descending perfect fourth, in a long-short-long rhythmic pattern. As a melodic fragment, the motive is often inverted to a descending-ascending pattern, or distorted slightly by expanding the second interval to a perfect fifth, or used in retrograde. The motive was derived from the first measure of the melody "Toplady" (1830) by Thomas Hastings, better known as the hymn "Rock of Ages." In the first movement, the motive is used most frequently in sequences. The second movement treats the motive as a melodic element and as a unit in ostinati. The final movement humorously transforms it into a syncopated gesture to evoke ragtime. === Dissertation/Thesis === D.M.A. Music 2011
author2 Page, Carrie Leigh (Author)
author_facet Page, Carrie Leigh (Author)
title Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra
title_short Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra
title_full Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra
title_fullStr Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra
title_full_unstemmed Everyday Arias for Soprano and Orchestra
title_sort everyday arias for soprano and orchestra
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.9094
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