Fanfare For Five Sopranos by Shulamit Ran Chamber Music - Sheet Music

By Shulamit Ran

This text of this piece use four languages - English, Hebrew, Italian, and French - to express joy and give thanks. Except for the word 'joy' which is presented simultaneously in all four languages at the outset of the work, the rest of the composition was composed initially without words.In 1981, WFMT Radio in Chicago commissioned twelve composers to write short fanfares in celebration of the station’s thirtieth anniversary.xa0 For one month at a time, each composer’s Fanfare was heard every day at a previously unannounced time slot.xa0 Because of my special fondness for the human voice as an instrument, I decided to make my Fanfare a vocal one.xa0 “My” month in this series being the month of November, the idea of giving thanks naturally suggested itself.xa0 Though the work can be performed live by a minimum of five female voices, I really wanted to limit timbre differentiation to a minimum — hence the idea of pre-recording two singers and multi-tracking them.xa0 And, in any event, it seemed especially appropriate to compose a work of this nature for the radio, a medium that is certainly quite distinct from the concert-hall. For a text, I put together a series of words in English, Hebrew, Italian and French, all concerned with joy and giving thanks.xa0 Except for the word joy which is presented simultaneously in all four languages at the outset of the work, the rest of the composition was composed initially without words.xa0 In a process akin, perhaps, to the orchestrating of music already composed, the words were then strung together by me to fit the sounds and the rhythms (a reversal, at least for me, of the usual process of combining text and music).

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Details

Ensembles:
Chamber Music
Genres:
Contemporary
Composers:
Shulamit Ran
Publishers:
Theodore Presser Company
Series:
Women Composers and Arrangers
UPC:
680160003372
Format:
Performance Score
Item types:
Physical
Artist:
Shulamit Ran
Usages:
School and Community
Number of Pages:
16
Size:
9.5 x 13 inches
Shipping Weight:
1.03 pounds

Chamber Music soprano 1, soprano 2, soprano 3, soprano 4, soprano 5

SKU: PR.111401770

For Five Sopranos. Composed by Shulamit Ran. This edition: saddle-wire stitch. Sws. Contemporary. Performance scores. With Standard notation. Composed 1981. 16 pages. Duration 0:04:00. Theodore Presser Company #111-40177. Published by Theodore Presser Company (PR.111401770).

UPC: 680160003372. 9.5 x 13 inches.

This text of this piece use four languages - English, Hebrew, Italian, and French - to express joy and give thanks. Except for the word 'joy' which is presented simultaneously in all four languages at the outset of the work, the rest of the composition was composed initially without words.
In 1981, WFMT Radio in Chicago commissioned twelve composers to write short fanfares in celebration of the station’s thirtieth anniversary.xa0 For one month at a time, each composer’s Fanfare was heard every day at a previously unannounced time slot.xa0 Because of my special fondness for the human voice as an instrument, I decided to make my Fanfare a vocal one.xa0 “My” month in this series being the month of November, the idea of giving thanks naturally suggested itself.xa0 Though the work can be performed live by a minimum of five female voices, I really wanted to limit timbre differentiation to a minimum — hence the idea of pre-recording two singers and multi-tracking them.xa0 And, in any event, it seemed especially appropriate to compose a work of this nature for the radio, a medium that is certainly quite distinct from the concert-hall. For a text, I put together a series of words in English, Hebrew, Italian and French, all concerned with joy and giving thanks.xa0 Except for the word joy which is presented simultaneously in all four languages at the outset of the work, the rest of the composition was composed initially without words.xa0 In a process akin, perhaps, to the orchestrating of music already composed, the words were then strung together by me to fit the sounds and the rhythms (a reversal, at least for me, of the usual process of combining text and music).