The Old Chevalier

The Old Chevalier

IVA incluido., Más gastos de envío
disponible en 3-4 semanas

The Old Chevalier

The Old Chevalier

The Old Chevalier

disponible en 3-4 semanas
IVA incluido., Más gastos de envío
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  • Publicado en: 01.01.2013
  • ISBN: 9788759817803
The Old Chevalier (2005) - A Gothic Tale for Tenor Trombone and Ensemble.

Piano reduction/Solo Trombone part: WH30940

Version for Bass Trombone: WH30942

Programmenote

The Old Chevalier for Trombone and Ensemble is the second of a series of seven compositions named after Karen Blixen's collection of short stories Seven Gothic Tales.

My musical gothic tales are written for very different ensembles - THE SUPPER AT ELSINORE is a saxophone quartet - but they all share musical material in a criss-cross of contextual references reminiscent of Blixen'snarrativecomplexity: Themes and motivs
from one piece appears in others in new and surprising shapes and combinations.

Karen Blixens The Old Chevalier begins with an old man talking to a youth about obl igation andpassion. The old man tells a story about a beautiful woman who wanted tomake her husband jealous and cheated on him with a young man who admired him. After
discovering the truth the young man meets a prostitute on her veryfirst job. The girl is an innocent, trading favors for shelter. The young man falls in love, but she remains oblivious
to his passion. She leaves after their encounter, without emotional involvement. Many years later theyoung man - the old man telling the tale - recognizes the girl in a beautifulskull he's holding in his hand.

The Old Chevalier isn't 'about' anything. The music is inspired by the artistic content ofBlixen's short story - it's emotionalism, dramatic construction, atmosphere, period and setting - but unfolds in time and musical space in ways that are completely
independent of the story's narrative progression... exceptone might say that the trombone makes love to the piano and at the very end - just like the old man in the story is left contemplating its remains.

The piece is written for the trombonist Jens Vind.