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"Symphonic Aphorisms"for OrchestraProgram Listing:Symphonic AphorismsMohammed Fairouz (2007)
Premiere Performances:February 5th 2008 (World Premiere) Composers' Series Orchestra Nathaniel Chase, Conductor The New England Conservatory's Jordan Hall, Boston MA March 7th 2009 (New York Premiere) Mimesis Ensemble John Page Conductor Symphony Space, New York City Program Notes:
Symphonic Aphorisms is composed of four movements and based on the
idea of the aphorism as a flexible and serviceable form for the concise
expression of ideas. This idea of the aphorism was exploited by Goethe
in his Maxims and Reflections and, to radical effect, by Adorno in Motifs
or in the Minima Moralia. The aphorism may be added to the many
forms, including the essay, that, having their foundations in prose, have
inspired musical forms.
![]() In the second movement, which is a scherzo in character and title, the slow pace, sobriety, and elegiac character of the first movement is dispelled in favor of a quick, sarcastic scorrevole which, in its rushing stepwise gestures, is not unlike a courante movement from a dance suite. The third movement functions as an intermezzo. Titled "Remembrances of Things Played" after Proust and, later, Said, the movement invokes the immediate musical past: that of the modernism currently embodied by Babbitt, Boulez, Perle and Schuller among others. Although the third movement is not an attempt to mirror the personal styles of those composers, the flute "cadenza" (with Tam-tam and Claves) remembers the sounds of Le marteau sans maître. The form of the fourth movement: "Homage to a Belly-Dancer", can best be characterized as a modified Tahmila. The opening material, as in a traditional Tahmila, presents a motivic exposition of the maqam: in this case, flute line which modulates from octatonic to maqam Hijaz. This movement sees the use of the Darabuka for the first time in the piece. As a percussion instrument, the Darabuka is very commonly used in the accompaniment of belly-dancers and is often an integral member of the Arabic orchestra. The "call and response" relationship between the Darabuka and the rest of the orchestra as well as the recurrence of the opening material at the end of the movement further link this music to that of traditional Tahmilas. The presence of the Darabuka is also used, along with the general orchestration of this movement, to, at times, evoke the sound of the takht: the type of Arabic orchestra that most often compliments Belly-Dancing. The subversive use, and transformation, of these traditional musical devices was inspired by the music (and friendship) of the senior Egyptian composer, Halim El-Dabh to whom the movement is dedicated. The musical materials of Homage to a Belly-Dancer also take, as their point of departure, Said's description of the Belly-Dancer Tahia Carioca in his essay of the same title. Mohammed Fairouz, September, 2007 Symphonic Aphorisms was commissioned by the New England Conservatory Composers' Series Orchestra |
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