Photo: Christian Steiner

  __________________________

 Thea Musgrave
  composer
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Threnody
(1996) For cor anglais and piano
Duration: 6'

See also Threnody arranged for clarniet and piano

Premiere:  18 June, 2004, Leicester International Festival, New Walk Museum
Nicholas Daniel, oboe, Julius Drake, piano

Publisher:  Novello & Co Ltd

Composer's Note:

This work is about the powerful emotions engendered by loss. The famous medieval chant "Dies Irae" about the Day of Judgement is used as a foundation of the work. This chant is incorporated into a series of chords played extremely slowly by the piano (these chords are actually taken from the composer's setting of a poem by Georg Trakl in her Wild Winter): thus the three sections of Threnody correspond to the three lines of one verse of the medieval chant.

In the first section the chords are loud and implacable and interspersed with a misty figure that rises like incense in a great gothic cathedral. The cor anglais, the "mourner," decorates the texture with an impassioned recitative.

In the second section grief erupts into turmoil and anger and this mood is echoed in the piano.

Eventually the music calms and the third section becomes a lament. This in turn merges into a coda where a quiet tolling bell-like figure in the piano and a softly rising scale in the cor anglais suggest that the mourner has found peace.

The work was written in response to a request from Victoria Soames Samek to commemorate the passing of her teacher, Roger Fallows.

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