Concerto for Vibraphone & Percussion Ensemble

$80.00

Commissioned by Dr. Lisa Rogers of Texas Tech University, the two-movement Concerto for Vibraphone was inspired by two opposing poems by Pablo Neruda - one depicting a rainy night (Night's Song) and the other a bright & sunshiny day (Enchanted Light). The showy solo solo part may be performed with piano, percussion ensemble, wind ensemble or full orchestra.

Medium: Solo Vibraphone with Percussion Ensemble (8)
Publisher: C. Alan Publications
Composed: 2010
Duration: 15:00
Difficulty: Grade 5
Commission: Dr. Lisa Rogers

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Instrumentation
Solo Vibraphone (3-octave)

Percussion 1 (bells, crotales)
Percussion 2 (xylophone, chimes)
Percussion 3 (3-octave vibraphone)
Percussion 4 (4-octave marimba)
Percussion 5 (4.3-octave marimba
Percussion 6 (5-octave marimba)
Percussion 7 (4 Timpani, Bell Tree, Mark Tree (shared), Sizzle Cymbal (shared), Suspended Cymbal, Tambourine, Bass Drum (shared), Tam-Tam (shared)
Percussion 8 (Bass Drum (shared), Tam-Tam (shared), Suspended Cymbal, Rain Stick, Mark Tree (shared), Egg Shaker, Snare Drum, Sizzle Cymbal (shared)

Program Notes
Concerto for Vibraphone was commissioned by Dr. Lisa Rogers, Professor of Percussion at Texas Tech University. The two-movement work draws inspiration from two opposing poems by Pablo Neruda that depict night and day. The poems are full of rich & vivid imagery that I tried to capture in the music.

Ode to Nighttime by Pablo Neruda
I. Night’s Song – “El Canto de la Noche”
For the first movement, Night’s Song, I tried to depict this mysterious, starry night that gradually turns dark and rainy. The phrases that really spoke to me and shaped the music were “behind daylight,” “you thrash around the sky,” “you run wild over the savage flow of rivers,” and rain and darkness are the blade of a singing sword while stars, or jasmine petals, gaze from blackened heights.” I love how Neruda describes daylight as being born nighttime, so I decided to make the movements attacca so that the second movement, Enchanted Light, bursts forth out of the first movement.

Ode to Enchanted Light by Pablo Neruda
II. Enchanted Light – “La Luz Encantada”
The second movement is much more sparkly and bright, depicting the “light dropping from the top of the sky.” The “cicada sending its sawing song high into the empty air” even makes an appearance when the ensemble vibraphone player places pennies on the bars and then bows those bars with optional help from a sizzle cymbal. Motives and themes from the first movement return in several spots throughout the second movement helping to unify the work. The soloist gets a workout as well in the tour-de-force second movement, unlike the much more introspective first movement.

Performance

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