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Ronald Dellow  

8 Songs From The I Ching

Duration: 18' 00" Year: 1998
a cycle for high voice and oboe

Dorothy Buchanan  

Mary Magdalene and the Birds

Duration: 15' 00" Year: 1989
a song cycle for mezzo and clarinet

Claire Scholes  

Ophelia Songs

Duration: 16' 19" Year: 2006
for female voice, treble recorder, alto saxophone, bass clarinet, and a bowl of water

  • Instrumentation

    I. Ophelia Song 1 - voice, treble recorder, bowl of water
    II. Ophelia Song 2 - voice, alto saxophone
    III. Ophelia Song 3 - voice, bass clarinet
  • Programme Note

    I have seen several productions of Hamlet and have always been baffled as to why the actresses playing Ophelia invariably feel the need to show off their Broadway Musical-esque singing prowess. To my mind this is not the purpose of these songs! The settings I’ve created for Peter Scholes and myself are intended as raw illustrations of the angst, disturbance, sorrow, starkness, and obliviousness of Ophelia to her plight; as well as alluding to her eventual drowning. I like the words to not always be audible – after all, would Ophelia have been conveniently coherent? I think not!

    The first song employs gurgling bubbling sounds created by flutter tonguing on the recorder and the singer singing into a bowl of water. Two quasi-mediaeval stylised folk tunes overlap and gradually disintegrate.

    With the second song I’ve sought to juxtapose a burlesque style with a more sorrowful and slightly panicky motif, with the saxophone creating ‘gasping’ effects when not involved in the bluesy opening riff.

    In the third song, as in the first song, gurglings and rumblings are portrayed through multiphonics, flutter tonguings and trills in the bass clarinet. The frenetic pace of the opening subsides to vacant grief, while the bass clarinet creates ghostly sounds by fingering runs and blowing enough air so that tone can only just be heard.

    Claire Scholes

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