23042785
Book of Days
23042785
23042785
Book of Days Chamber Music scores gallery preview page 1
Book of Days Chamber Music scores gallery preview page 2
Book of Days by Daron Hagen Chamber Music - Sheet Music
Book of Days by Daron Hagen Chamber Music - Sheet Music page 2

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Book of Days by Daron Hagen Chamber Music - Sheet Music

By Daron Hagen
Chamber Music Clarinet, Piano, Viola

SKU: PR.704417840

Composed by Daron Hagen. This edition: saddle-wire stitch. Sws. Score and parts. Peermusic Classical #70441-784. Published by Peermusic Classical (PR.704417840).

UPC: 680160695393.

Commissioned by the Curtis Institute of Music, Book of Days is a trio for clarinet, viola, and piano. It’s a nostalgia-driven suite of seven thematically connected movements in a convivially conservative, mid-20th-century style inspired by Hagen’s years as a student and then as a teacher. .
"In 2010, my alma mater, the Curtis Institute of Music, commissioned a trio for clarinet, viola, and piano for the touring group called Curtis on Tour. The result was Book of Days, a nostalgia-driven suite of seven thematically connected movements in a convivially conservative, mid-20th-century style inspired by my years there first as a student and then as a teacher.I finished composing the first movement on a Monday; so, as a placeholder, and meaning nothing by it, I jotted that day atop the manuscript. Returning to work the next day, I began to think about the Babylonians, and how they named the days after the planets that they could see. I mused that nostalgia is a lot like looking out into space, and that feelings can be at once as close as one’s heart and as far away as the stars. I released myself from the burden of particularizing the emotions explored with descriptive titles by giving them the names of the days of the week. I soon realized that, by doing so, I was able to recall those feelings, both beautiful and stark, with more nuance.After the composing was done, I wrote a program note brimming with anecdotes and ideas that I thought were important. Words, words, words – so many words. Too many. Returning to the suite to prepare it for publication a decade later, I realized that all those words were an attempt to explain feelings I had shared more meaningfully in music. So, I threw the words out. Once again, I felt free; free this time to forget, because, in the end, it is music that remembers everything – the things we can see and those we cannot.—Daron Hagen".