学位论文详细信息
Cello Concerto.
Music;Music Composition;Cello Concerto;Concertos;Music and Dance;Arts;Music: Composition
Davis, Daniel ThomasKuster, Kristin P. ;
University of Michigan
关键词: Music;    Music Composition;    Cello Concerto;    Concertos;    Music and Dance;    Arts;    Music: Composition;   
Others  :  https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/77899/dtdav_1.pdf?sequence=2&isAllowed=y
瑞士|英语
来源: The Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship
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【 摘 要 】

I imagine this piece as a kind of instrumental opera, in which the solo cello assumes the lead role amidst a cast of supporting characters – i.e. the eight other players. In the first movement, ;;Prologue,” various combinations of the ensemble serve as a Greek Chorus that precedes the main drama of the work. At the piece’s beginning, the solo cellist acts as an accompanist to this chorus. Gradually, as the movement unfolds, the cello emerges as the soloist, culminating in a cadenza or ;;soliloquy” at the end of the first movement. In the episodic second movement, ;;Act One,” I envision a series of short, unfolding arias compacted into a span of six minutes – culminating in a melodic passage full of nostalgic associations. The third and shortest movement, ;;Dances and Interludes” is a light and casual jaunt featuring pizzicato cello, double bass, and bassoon. I think of it as a dramatic foil between the weightier second and fourth movements. The fourth movement, ;;Act Two,” is the work’s core. Here, an increasingly fraught and virtuosic cello solo is underpinned by call-and-response gestures between the accompanying strings and woodwinds. Fast and unrelenting, the movement builds through a series of climaxes, with an enflamed cadenza halfway through the movement. Before the final and most violent crescendo, a lone bassoon recalls a frail and fleeting fragment of Act One’s nostalgic ;;aria.” In the fifth and last movement, ;;Epilogue and Processional,” the cello takes on a meditative and lyrical character – with a slow, simple ostinato rolling forward in the piano and bass. I imagine this movement as both a love scene and ritualistic procession. Several narrative threads run throughout the course of the five movements. For example, overall, the general thrust of the piece is from the lowest registers to the highest – as embodied in the solo cellist’s move from the lowest C in bar one to the highest E in the penultimate measure. Another narrative strand is the reoccurrence and reorchestration of unisons throughout the piece – most obviously in Movements I, III and V.

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