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Yvette Audain  

A Charleston Kick With Steel Caps

Duration: 06' 00" Year: 2011
for saxophone quartet

Yvette Audain  

A Charleston Kick With Steel Caps – alto sax quartet version

Duration: 06' 00" Year: 2011
for four alto saxophones

Graham Parsons  

An Overture in the French Style

Duration: 05' 00" Year: 2012
for recorder consort

Chris Adams  

Arianna's Dance

Duration: 00' 50" Year: 2010
for clarinet quartet

Dylan Lardelli  

Arrangements

Duration: 08' 00" Year: 2011, r. 2012
for saxophone quartet

Chris Adams  

Art Miniatures

Duration: 20' 00" Year: 2010
for flute and piano

Stephan Prock  

Baci sul vento (Kisses on the Wind)

Duration: 08' 00" Year: 2012
for solo flute

  • Programme Note

    ––“Kisses, even to the air, are beautiful” (Drew Barrymore)

    Of all the physical relationships between performers and instruments, that of flautist and flute most closely resembles that of the kiss. The shape of the embouchure itself, lips rounded in the shape of an “O”, ready to go to work, and the sometimes erotic, but always sonically evocative, use of the tongue in contemporary flute music thus became the initial inspirations for the composition of this work. The use of the “tongue ram” in the section “French Kiss”, for example, speaks for itself, whilst the lip pizzicatos and triple tongueing in “Vampire Kiss” are more abstract in suggesting the love bites of those creatures of the night with their sharp little canines. But, of course, kisses can also simply be fond, as in “Air Kiss” and “Peck,” or playful, as in “Butterfly Kiss” where I use fluttertongueing to mimic the tickling brush of eyelashes on a cheek. Kisses can also be completely chaste–even holy–as the quietly murmuring tremolos in “Kiss of Peace” suggest. Since many of my recent pieces employ symmetrical scales and symmetrically constructed background harmonies, I could not resist the impulse in the concluding section of the work to use those symmetries to create a musical parallel to that wonderfully symmetrical upside down kiss from the 2002 Spiderman movie in which Spiderman (inverted) and Mary Jane Watson (upright) share an iconic kiss in the rain. In the end, as the variety of kisses in my piece implies, the idea of the kiss reminds me of music in the kaleidoscopic flexibility of its meaning and how even the simplest of kisses or compositions might evoke the vastness of human experience. As Jimi Hendrix once said, one can even kiss the sky. For now I’ll just settle for kisses on the wind.

  • Availability

Robbie Ellis  

Banda Chiflada

Duration: 04' 00" Year: 2012
for saxophone quartet

  • Instrumentation
    SATB saxophone quartet
  • Programme Note

    Banda is a genre that sprang to life in the late nineteenth century when Mexican music collided with the polka of German immigrants. Traditional bandas are centred around the sousaphone and the tambora (a bass drum with a hi-hat on top). Beyond these, you’ll find further wind, brass and percussion instruments depending on the regional style: clarinets, saxophones, alto horns, trumpets, trombones, tarolas (snare drums) and more.

    A few months before writing this piece I’d seen a YouTube video of Chicago group Banda Sincera performing before a Mexican national team football match*. The atmosphere was party, the tempo was quick, the time was compound, the licks were virtuosic, and the pulse was always getting disrupted at the ends of sections. The band would pause, the tarolero and sousaphone dude would go off on a soloistic tangent, and then the band was back in for more of the same. They even stuck a conga-based cumbia in the middle! These guys were mental and I loved it.

    When I started on a piece for Saxcess I established the reasonably serious beginnings of Huff, but I kept getting pulled down this raucous Mexican garden path. I put the serious to one side, started a new score, took a few days to get this “banda chiflada” (crazy band) out of my system, and resumed composing Huff when I was done. They’re two very different pieces, but ultimately cut from the same cloth.

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Philip Norman  

Birthday Music

Duration: 07' 30" Year: 2010
for solo flute

Briar Prastiti  

Crunch Time

Duration: 03' 50" Year: 2011
for solo saxophone and fixed media