The German Hills
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Performed by Ensemble Offspring |
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Programme Note
The German Hills was written for Ensemble Offspring as part of the 2008 Sibelius Emerging Composer Commission and represents the 'Adelaide Hills' district in South Australia. This area has a very distinct German/Australian quality, due to the many Prussian immigrants that settled in the area after escaping political uncertainty and discrimination during the 1830s.
To represent this German/Australian fusion, the work's pitch material is based on a 9-note motif from Beethoven's Kakadu Variations op. 121a. This 9-note motif is used in a series of drones or fundamentals and is also the foundation of the work's harmonic material. The motif is split into a group of 4 and 5 pitches with the intervals of these 2 groups used to create chords over each fundamental. To open the work, these pitches appear as harmonic partials of the fundamentals, with some pitches also using microtonal alteration to give the work a spectral veneer. As the work progresses, these pitches are brought down from their original registers and used in lower registers to thicken the harmony and transform the textures.
Instrumentation: Cl, 1 Perc, Vln, Vc
Performances of this work:
24 Oct 2008: Sibelius Composer Awards Concert, Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Featuring Ensemble Offspring and Roland Peelman.
Programme Note
The German Hills was written for Ensemble Offspring as part of the 2008 Sibelius Emerging Composer Commission and represents the 'Adelaide Hills' district in South Australia. This area has a very distinct German/Australian quality, due to the many Prussian immigrants that settled in the area after escaping political uncertainty and discrimination during the 1830s.
To represent this German/Australian fusion, the work's pitch material is based on a 9-note motif from Beethoven's Kakadu Variations op. 121a. This 9-note motif is used in a series of drones or fundamentals and is also the foundation of the work's harmonic material. The motif is split into a group of 4 and 5 pitches with the intervals of these 2 groups used to create chords over each fundamental. To open the work, these pitches appear as harmonic partials of the fundamentals, with some pitches also using microtonal alteration to give the work a spectral veneer. As the work progresses, these pitches are brought down from their original registers and used in lower registers to thicken the harmony and transform the textures.
Instrumentation: Cl, 1 Perc, Vln, Vc
Performances of this work:
24 Oct 2008: Sibelius Composer Awards Concert, Sydney Conservatorium of Music. Featuring Ensemble Offspring and Roland Peelman.