00:00
Streets and Inroads - Fantasy for Winds and Percussion

Streets and Inroads - Fantasy for Winds and Percussion Timothy Broege

Alternative Artikelnummer: MBM Stre1
Much of the sound-texture/open-form music composed during the last several decades has been intended for orchestra; Streets and Inroads tries to balance the scales, as it were, by providing materials for this type of music that are designed for bands, i.e., variously sized ensembles of winds and percussion instruments.

Many of the sounds called for in the piece are nontraditional: rattling of woodwind keys, playing of mouthpieces removed from instruments, unpitched glissandi, etc. Most of the sounds in the piece do not require specific pitches to be played; accordingly, the players have a great deal of influence on the various effects which the score contains. The composer has provided an overall shape and general structure, but many of the details of the piece are left to conductor and players. Such textures may be called aleatoric.

There are also aspects of aleatoric (or open) form in the piece: The conductor and players have options with regard to the order in which certain events of the score take place. It is thus likely that no two performances of Streets and Inroads will be the same. However, this is not to say that Streets and Inroads is an aleatoric work, per se, because, to a greater extent it does always have similar content, the same components, and a set (if variable) form. Therefore, although it contains aleatoric elements, it is not overall a 'chance' piece.

There are special educational and teaching opportunities. For example, for most players this will be the first time they get to see a full score up close. Their way of thinking about notation will be expanded, since in an open form piece such as this a player can go far afield from the notation. There is no one way that the music sounds best: Consider the notation to be a set of materials for improvisation.

There is also the question of contest use. Judges are accustomed to making determinations according to traditional criteria: intonation, ensemble accuracy, phrasing, and such. These criteria have less importance in a work such as this. How then to judge a performance of Streets and Inroads? I suggest these criteria: is it convincing? is it well done? is it performed with conviction? does it have expressive power? What should be demonstrated in performance more than anything else is versatility.

How is the listener supposed to react to such music as this? In most of the traditional ways of listening I would suggest that the audience concentrates on melody, harmonic change, counterpoint, and structure or form. In Streets and Inroads, melody and harmony are replaced by abstract sound. There are aspects of counterpoint in the piece, and, as mentioned, there is a perceivable form for the composition. So, despite the unusual sounds heard in this piece, the listener does not have to 'bring a different set of ears' to a performance of it. It is fun for performers and listeners to travel on some different musical avenues, at least once in a while.

Streets and Inroads was composed in 1975 for the Manasquan Elementary School Concert Band, Manasquan, New Jersey. The score was revised in 1980.

Variety
90,00 €
inc. tax
plus shipping
Availability *
in stock | delivery time 1-2 days
Product information
Order id: 113402
Difficulty: 3
Duration: 5:20 min
Pages: -
publisher id: MBM 42906
EAN: 4025511246736
Composer: Timothy Broege
Arranger: -
Publisher: Manhattan Beach Music
Instrumentation: Blasorchester Noten / Concert Band

Demos

Other Customers were interested in
The Light Stone - Daniel Muck

The Light Stone

Daniel Muck

The Wilderness - Rossano Galante

The Wilderness

Rossano Galante

Stone Ghosts - Thomas C. Duffy

Stone Ghosts

Thomas C. Duffy

* Information on availability is based on previous experiences. Prices and availability are subject to change without notice!
Rev. 4.118 - Time: 185 ms | SQL: -1 ms