23042786
Suite for Piano
23042786
23042786
Suite for Piano Chamber Music scores gallery preview page 1
Suite for Piano Chamber Music scores gallery preview page 2
Suite for Piano by Daron Hagen Chamber Music - Sheet Music
Suite for Piano by Daron Hagen Chamber Music - Sheet Music page 2

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Suite for Piano by Daron Hagen Chamber Music - Sheet Music

By Daron Hagen
Chamber Music Piano

SKU: PR.704425010

Composed by Daron Hagen. This edition: saddle-wire stitch. Sws. Full score. Peermusic Classical #70442-501. Published by Peermusic Classical (PR.704425010).

UPC: 680160695409.

Suite for Piano has four thematically related movements. The first movement, Toccata, is a virtuosic rondo whose first theme is a fugue subject I wrote as a student at Juilliard during the early eighties and always wanted to have some fun with, and a jazzy little riff based on an octatonic scale. The second movement, Sarabande, is written in the spirit of Leonard Bernstein’s Anniversaries and is a musical portrait of my mother. Aria began as the very first sketch for my opera Amelia; in the story, a little girl sings this music as an apostrophe to the stars. The final Medley takes a fragment of the traditional Irish ballad The Croppy Boy and subjects it to some brutal compositional chiaroscuro as it is intercut with ideas from the previous movements. I am a pianist, so I set myself specific challenges for each movement: the first highlights touch and velocity, the second voicing, the third a long singing line and pedaling, and the last dramatic shifts in color, tempo, and dynamics.—Daron Hagen.
"Suite for Piano has four thematically related movements. The first movement, Toccata, is a virtuosic rondo whose first theme is a fugue subject I wrote as a student at Juilliard during the early eighties and always wanted to have some fun with, and a jazzy little riff based on an octatonic scale. The second movement, Sarabande, is written in the spirit of Leonard Bernstein’s Anniversaries and is a musical portrait of my mother. Aria began as the very first sketch for my opera Amelia; in the story, a little girl sings this music as an apostrophe to the stars. The final Medley takes a fragment of the traditional Irish ballad The Croppy Boy and subjects it to some brutal compositional chiaroscuro as it is intercut with ideas from the previous movements. I am a pianist, so I set myself specific challenges for each movement: the first highlights touch and velocity, the second voicing, the third a long singing line and pedaling, and the last dramatic shifts in color, tempo, and dynamics.—Daron Hagen".