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John Rimmer  

Anzacs Remembered

Duration: 04' 00" Year: 2010
for baritone and standard brass band

Robbie Ellis  

Beatrice

Duration: 01' 00" Year: 2010, r. 2012
a short orchestral feature for cor anglais

  • Instrumentation
    solo cor anglais, flute, horn in F, strings
  • Programme Note

    In 2010, I co-wrote The Lover’s Knot with playwright Renee Liang as part of the 2010-2011 Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra Composer Workshops, which led to a performance with actor Stuart Devenie and conductor Kenneth Young. Stuart played the role of Walter Bolton, the last man given the death penalty in New Zealand, in the hours before his execution.

    Various instruments represent various characters in this story – clarinet for Bolton’s flighty paramour Florence, contrabassoon for the stench of death, and harmon-muted trombones for the justice system. Bolton’s ailing wife Beatrice is represented by extensive solos for the cor anglais. At the request of Lee Martelli, Education Manager of the APO, I excerpted one of these into a demonstration piece for an education concert.

  • Availability

Graham Parsons  

Changing the Clocks - Trials of the Digital Age

Duration: 02' 20" Year: 2010
for small to medium sized TTB choir with optional accompaniment

Graham Parsons  

Changing the Clocks - Trials of the Digital Age

Duration: 02' 20" Year: 2010
for small to medium sized SATB choir with optional accompaniment

Graham Parsons  

Changing the Clocks - Trials of the Digital Age

Duration: 02' 20" Year: 2010
for for small to medium sized SAB choir with optional accompaniment

Graham Parsons  

Changing the Clocks - Trials of the Digital Age

Duration: 02' 20" Year: 2010
for small to medium sized SSA choir with optional accompaniment

Natalie Hunt  

Compass

Duration: 04' 30" Year: 2011
for full orchestra

David Hamilton  

Hine e Hine

Duration: 02' 10" Year: 2011
arrangement of the lullaby written by Princess Te Rangi Pai, for solo soprano, SATB choir and piano (based on the unaccompanied SATB version)

  • Instrumentation
    solo soprano, SATB choir and piano
  • Programme Note

    The original version of this arrangement was one of several made in 1987 for my choir Opus at Epsom Girls Grammar School. They were intended as straightforward arrangements of well-known Maori pieces for treble voice choirs. A version for mixed-voice choir (SSATB) was made in 1996 for the New Zealand and Australian tour by the St. Olaf Choir of Minnesota (conductor: Anton Armstrong).

    The Maori people were the earliest settlers in New Zealand, arriving in the country about a thousand years ago. This piece belongs to the more recent “concert party” tradition of Maori music, rather than the traditional pre-European musical forms and styles. Before European contact, the music of the Maori people consisted largely of monophonic chants with a very limited range of pitches. The early missionaries brought with them their own musical styles which were soon taken over by the Maori people. Many well-known Maori songs are really a mix of European and early Maori forms.

    Hine e Hine is a gentle lullaby. It was written by Fannie Rose Howie (1868-1916) who performed under the stage name of Princess Te Rangi Pai. Born in the Gisborne area of Maori and European parents, she showed early interest in singing, and after marrying undertook study in Australia and England. Her fine contralto voice, and natural stage presence, lead to a significant recital career both in England and in New Zealand on her return in 1905. Illness dogged the last years of her life, and she is now best remembered for this song.

    The text, with a close translation of the Maori words, is:
    E tangi ana koe, hine e hine
    You are crying my daughter
    Kua ngenge ana koe, hine e hine
    You are tired my daughter
    Ka ti to puiri ra, noho i te aroha
    Stop your sadness, rest in love
    Te ngakau o te matua, hine e hine.
    The heart of the father, my daughter.

  • Availability

Peter Willis  

Plight of the Flightless

Duration: 01' 00" Year: 2010
for clarinet quartet

Ryan Youens  

Wild Daisies

Duration: 02' 40" Year: 2010
for SSA choir

  • Programme Note

    Commissioned for Euphony, a girls choir from Kristin School, for their 2010 repertoire. As soon as I found this text I knew that’s what the piece would be about.

    Bub Bridger – Wild Daisies

    If you love me
    Bring me flowers
    Wild daisies
    Clutched in your fist
    Like a torch
    No orchids or roses
    Or carnations
    No florist’s bow
    Just daisies
    Steal them
    Risk your life for them
    Up the sharp hills
    In the teeth of the wind
    If you love me
    Bring me daisies
    That I will cram
    In a bright vase
    And marvel at

    Ryan Youens

  • Availability