Vox Novus Composer’s Voice: 15 Minutes of Fame Series, 4 awards, 2014-15 (short solo works for clarinet, tuba, oboe, organ)
American Prize 2014 for Chamber Music Composition, Finalist (Torn Curtain)
Contemporary classical works for solo instrument – a collection of modern solo pieces by composer David Avshalomov, including sound files and scores.
American Prize 2014 for Chamber Music Composition, Finalist (Torn Curtain)
Contemporary classical works for solo instrument – a collection of modern solo pieces by composer David Avshalomov, including sound files and scores.
Listen | Score | Title | Scoring | Dur. | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
UNACCOMPANIED | |||||
Archipelago | solo piano | 1'10" | 1982 | ||
Order This» | Short mood piece, AB(a), playing with a repeated pitch set, leading to a lyrical harmonized middle episode, brusque epigram ending on the first set. | ||||
Chiaroscuro II | solo piano | 1' | 1982 | ||
Order This» | Very short etude/prelude, my only exercise in 12-tone serial technique. A square, march-like expository statement leading to a foreboding mood. | ||||
Dali Halo | solo pipe organ | 1' | 2015 | ||
Order This» | Created for the Vox Novus Composer's Voice concert series event, Fifteen-Minutes-of-Fame: David Bohn. Recording: Premiere by Mr. Bohn November 1, 2015 at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. A very short impressionist sketch evoking a surreal sky filled with lovely clouds and translucent angels, like a hallucinatory canvas of Salvador Dali. | ||||
Dr. Death | solo bassoon | 1' | 2015 | ||
Order This» | Very short freeform aria/march for solo bassoon (with echoes of Prokofiev's Grandpapa). A study in projecting or suggesting, with a single instrument, two real parts/voices: the upper melody and the lower accompaniment notes and figures. Projects the stilted formality Dickinson's "Because I Could Not Stop for Death." | ||||
Fuga Semplice | solo pipe organ | 1' | 1996 | ||
Order This» | A very short, plain vanilla tonal fugue in middle Baroque style (hommage to Buxtehude). With all the correct elements, modulation to relative minor, short stretto, peroration on the dominant pedal and a little free melodic outburst. Handy when you need a short easy prelude with a full impressive cadence. | ||||
Video of Premiere >> | Ground Zero, 2:00 am | solo oboe | 1' | 2014 | |
Order This» | Created for the Vox Novus Composer's Voice concert series event, Fifteen-Minutes-of-Fame: Robert Botti, oboe and chosen from among over 70 submissions from around the globe. The call requested works on a New York theme. This is my first 9/11 memorial: a simple, slow, poignant melody starting with a quick arcing gesture also used to create the end cadence. Premiered by Mr. Botti of the NY Phil at the International Double Reed Society’s “New Music For Double Reeds” concert, August 6, 2014. [Also with Harp, see "Accompanied" below] | ||||
Lake Baikal Hoedown | solo violin | 3'35 | 1998 | ||
Order This» | Excerpted from The Last Poet's Farewell, the next-to-last variation as a lively encore with concert ending. | ||||
The Last Poet's Farewell | solo violin | 22' | 1998 | ||
Order This» | Written at the request of Rodion Zamourouev, Moscow, in sympathy with the plight of post-Stalinist Russia. Dances and tunes of powerless compassion. Chained suite of small vignettes across the society and the vast landscape, expressed by the last, bitter "poet -- the violinist. Modest movement elements, offstage/ onstage. (Vignettes for ind. mvts. in Notes) | Notes» | |||
Video of Premiere >> | MoonSong | solo clarinet | 1' | 2014 | |
Order This» | Created for the Vox Novus Composer's Voice concert series event, Fifteen-Minutes-of-Fame: Â Javier Perez Garrido, clarinet. Chosen from among over 60 submissions. Premiered by Mr. Garrido February 14, 2014 at the Conservatorio Profesional de Musica de Cartagena (Murcia), Spain. [Also with Harp, see "Accompanied" below] | ||||
Video of Premiere >> (at 16:56 in the video) | Petite Valse Romantique | solo tuba | 1' | 2014 | |
Order This» | Created for the Vox Novus Composer's Voice concert series event, Fifteen-Minutes-of-Fame: Kenyon Wilson, Tuba. Chosen from among over 40 submissions. Premiered by Mr. Wilson at the 2014 International Tuba/Euphonium Conference, Bloomington, Indiana, May 13, 2014 | ||||
See on YouTube | Sonata for Solo Harp | solo harp | 14' | 1999 | |
Order This» | Written for my friend Maria Casale. A serious solo sonata for a fine artist. Darker than typical harp music. | Notes» | |||
I. Legend | 8' | ||||
Extensive modified developmental sonata form, more contrapuntal than chordal, modal d minor. Much ostinato accompaniment, themes like folk stories, long development, strong recap building tension to a stern, proud ending. | |||||
II. Meditation | 4' | ||||
Pensive, solemn, dignified meditation, in alternating oriental modes. Impressionistic middle episode (glissandi, tremolo), serious return, simple poignant ending. Dedicated to the memory of my paternal grandfather Aaron Avshalomoff. | |||||
III. Danza | 2' | ||||
Quick, dancy bagatelle on changing polymeters over a covert blues harmonic scheme. Quick microvariations on the opening tune, cheery surprise ending. | |||||
Variations on a Beethoven Theme | solo cello | 12' | 1989 | ||
Order This» | Tonal variations on the opening tune from Opus 59 No. 1 F major string quartet, from simple to virtuosic, cheery to moody. Showy ending. | ||||
Winter Mood | solo piano | 2' | 1964 | ||
Order This» | Dreamy sketch, slow and wistful, euphonious, easy to play. Tonal/impressionist harmonies suggesting snow on mountains. Also scored for wind quintet as part of Around the Year. | ||||
ACCOMPANIED | |||||
Elegy (solo vn) | solo violin, piano | 8' | 1990 | ||
Order This» | Arrangement of string orchestra Elegy | ||||
Ground Zero, 2:00 am (oboe, accompanied) | oboe, harp (or guitar or piano or marimba) | 1' | 2014 | ||
Order This» | My first 9/11 memorial piece: a simple, slow, poignant melody starting with a quick arcing gesture also used to create the end cadence. Version for oboe with simple added accompaniment for harp (or guitar, or piano, or marimba) | ||||
Ground Zero, 2:00 am (alto saxophone, accompanied) | alto saxophone, harp (or guitar or piano or marimba) | 1' | 2014 | ||
Order This» | My first 9/11 memorial piece: a simple, slow, poignant melody starting with a quick arcing gesture also used to create the end cadence. Version for Eb alto saxophone with simple added accompaniment for harp (or guitar, or piano, or 5-octave marimba) | ||||
(cello recording) | Meditation (alto sax) | 4' | 1997 | ||
Order This» | Transcription of the slow movement from the Sonata for Violoncello, for Eb Alto Saxophone | alto saxophone, piano | |||
(cello recording) | [Viola part] | Meditation (viola) | 4' | 1997 | |
Order This» | Transcription of the slow movement from the Sonata for Violoncello, for viola (uses the cello sonata piano part) | viola, piano | |||
MoonSong [with harp] | solo clarinet, harp | 1' | 2014 | ||
Order This» | Created for the Vox Novus Composer's Voice concert series event, Fifteen-Minutes-of-Fame: Â Javier Perez Garrido, clarinet. Chosen from among over 60 submissions. Premiered by Mr. Garrido February 14, 2014 at the Conservatorio Profesional de Musica de Cartagena (Murcia), Spain. | ||||
Sonata Breve for Oboe | oboe, piano | 15' | 2002 | ||
Order This» | Lyrical, light/dark, short sonatine, commissioned by my friends Aaron Neustadt and Amelia Russo Neustad, oboist; and dedicated to the memory of Amelia's father. (Also version with strings and harp, Concertino for Oboe) | Notes» | |||
I. Shifting Masks | 6'15 | ||||
Developmental, varied sonata form with strongly contrasting themes and moods, now sunny, now dramatic and gloomy, now lyrical, now rhythmic and restless. | |||||
II. Lament | 5'40 | ||||
Elegiac slow movement. Song form with lyrical folk-like melodies. Central sharp, passionate outburst of grief in a short, wild oboe cadenza; gentle varied reprise with short coda. | |||||
III. Hushabye | 4'40 | ||||
Simple, playful, childlike rondo in lyrical American folk vein; finally fades away to a safe, reassuring mood, like a lullaby on a child's music box. | |||||
Sonata for Flute | flute, piano | 28' | 2000 | ||
Order This» | Another serious sonata written for a talented artist-my friend Ellen Burr. Projects both melodic beauty and rhythmic vitality; exploits the wide timbral range of the flute. Chromatic-tonal mid-20th century pre-modern. Darker than most flute solos. The piano is a full partner. | Notes» | |||
I. Myth | 8'30 | ||||
Like a mythical story. Mysterious quasi-modernist prologue, series of brooding melodies, wild rhythmic middle, slow denouement. | |||||
II. It Ain't Necessarily Jazz | 6'45 | ||||
Candy-cane jazz waltz in varied-rondo-sonata structure with flute improv passages over harmonic changes, and wry Gershwin quotes. (May add bass and light drumset/brushes to perform separately.) | |||||
III. Star Fire | 5' | ||||
Dedicated to the memory of our first cat Sadie. Slow music to mourn her in the mountains under a midnight sky bursting with stars. Begins in low murky gloom, then a chain of pure melodies in oriental modes, a hysterical high climax, and a full elegiac reprise. | |||||
IV. Quarrel | 7'15 | ||||
Dramatic chromatic dialog playing out an increasing nasty domestic quarrel, with yelling and tears at the end. Bitter limp ending. | |||||
Sonata for Violoncello | cello, piano | 28' | 1997 | ||
Order This» | Elegant, formal sonata reflecting Russian and East European art-music influences. Heroic writing for the cello. Written for Howard Colf of the LA Philharmonic. | Notes» | |||
I. Andante | 9'20 | ||||
Tight sonata form with varied reprise and strongly contrasting thematic sections, romantic/rhapsodic overall. | |||||
II. Lento | 4' | ||||
Prayerful meditation in simple slow one-theme song form. Melody in cello, over a low bell-like descending piano ostinato with tinkling rising punctuations. Sweet end. Also versions for Viola, Eb Alto Sax. | |||||
III. Finale (Ghost Riders) | 13'45 | ||||
Driven, extended, mock-heroic finale with Soviet-modern flavor. Offhand ending. | |||||
BUY CD» | TORN CURTAIN suite | viola, piano | 32' | 1991 | |
Order Score/Set» | Written for my brother Dan in resonance with Eastern Europe and Russia 1989-90. Suite on original tunes that sound Roumanian, Hungarian, Russian, Czech, songs of empathy and powerless compassion -- from a stranger. Heroic writing for the viola, the piano a substantial partner. (Accompanying descriptive vignettes.) RECORDING: Albany CD "Three Generations" (Avshalomov/Pamela Pyle). Finalist, American Prize 2014 for Chamber Music Composition | Notes» | |||
I. The Old Tunes | 7'40 | ||||
Dramatic sonata form, fresh new melodies replacing development, varied returns replacing the recapitulation. A lopsided arch: ABCDEFED_BA, crowned by a free, passionate, whirling duo-cadenza. Blunt, stoic ending. | |||||
II. Menuetto | 3' | ||||
Crude old-fashioned minuet/trio (baroque shapes in an Oriental mode, ornamented repeats). High viola harmonics in the trio like tears of trapped children. Fattened return, the cadence pure resignation. RECORDING (premiere of this movement): Patricia McCarty/Cary Lewis in concert 2015, University of Oregon School of Music, Eugene | |||||
III. Ballade | 4'10 | ||||
Clear ABA' form. The viola offers dry, solemn, phrases in baroque-dance rhythm; the piano gives bittersweet answers. The viola gives a high, sad, old-fashioned romantic love tune, the pianist pounds to the climax, winds down, they repeat the starting dance. Gentle ending. | |||||
IV. Incident (in the Town Square) | 1'45 | ||||
Sneaky little scherzo, over before you know it. Fast meters of 5, 7, and 9 establish a busy theme built on repeating cells, interrupted and resumed. Things get violent; the viola emits squeals over crashing clusters in the piano. | |||||
V. Night Prayer (in the Web) | 9' | ||||
Anguished nocturne, tracing pain, worry, prayer, release, resignation, with a glimmer of hope at the end. (ABA form) High bells, a writhing melody over a plodding bass line, the open space of a sanctuary, a quiet priestly intonation, then huge bells and "choir," releasing intertwined spinning anxieties. Return to high bells and a final lullaby with a bitter-sweet cadence giving rest. | |||||
VI. Dance it Away (Rondo-Finale) | 5'' | ||||
Varied rondo of rustic dance tunes, with pseudo-virtuoso touches, like a klezmer or gypsy band, a Jewish-sounding extension, fast reprise of the opening prologue from Movement I, crazed coda on the rondo tune, wild-eyed, splashy end. Life's a struggle, we've got trouble, let's dance it away. |