Nocturne
NocturneMusic by American composer Brian Head, Swiss composer Hans Haug, and Canadian composer Jacques Hétu. Featuring a re-issue of the ‘world premiere’ recording of the Concerto for guitar by Jacques Hétu, solo guitar pieces by Swiss composer Hans Haug, and a unique miniature by American composer Brian Head (Chant found in Scott Tennant's popular guitar method Pumping Nylon). "Ses enregistrements de mes deux oeuvres, la Suite pour guitare Opus 41 et le Concerto pour guitare et orchestre à cordes Opus 56 révèlent chez l’interprète un sens solide de la structure et du phrasé allié à une grande sensibilité musicale, le tout soutenu par une excellente technique instrumentale."
CHANTBrian HEAD Composer Brian Head was born in Washington, D.C., in 1964. He presently resides in Los Angeles where he teaches both composition and guitar at the Thornton School of Music, University of Southern California. His works have been recorded and performed frequently throughout the United States and abroad. Chant was inspired by one of Head’s own orchestral compositions of the same name. A remarkable guitar miniature, hardly two minutes, Chant vacillates between moments of brilliance, lament, and quiet reflection. Throughout the piece, the composer draws upon the technique of tremolo, though his use of this often-employed guitar effect is quite unusual. In the method Pumping Nylon, guitarist/author Scott Tennant points out that the work “is unique in that the notes often change in the middle of the tremolo, thus creating a constantly fluid line.”[ i ] Head explains that:
PRÉLUDE, TIENTO ET TOCCATA – PRELUDIO – ALBAHans HAUG
Hans Haug (1900 – 1967) was born in Basel Switzerland on July 27, 1900. Throughout his career, along with composing, he was quite active as a conductor, teacher, and musical director. Appearing as guest conductor all over Europe, he also held several conducting positions in his native Switzerland, including the Basel Municipal Theatre (1928-1934), the Interlaken Kursaal, and for Swiss Radio in Lausanne (1935-8) and Zurich (1938-43). Though much of Haug’s teaching activities were done in Switzerland, he also worked as a guest lecturer/instructor throughout Europe. In 1961, the legendary Spanish guitarist Andrés Segovia invited Haug to teach some composition courses at the summer music academy in Santiago de Compostella, Spain. It is here that Haug completed his Prélude, Tiento et Toccata.[ii] Among Haug’s first compositions for guitar were Preludio and Alba, composed in the early 1950’s. In 1961, Segovia reversed the ‘implied’ order of the two pieces, recording them as Alba and ‘Postlude’.[iii] A very comprehensive catalogue, Haug's compositional output includes string quartets, various chamber works, vocal music, concertos, symphonic works, operas, oratorios, and film music. Though not best known as a guitar composer, his works for guitar are quite numerous, including: Concertino pour guitare et petit orchestre (quasi una fantasia) (1951), Concerto pour flûte, guitare et orchestre (1966), Fantasia pour guitare et piano (1957), and Capriccio pour flûte et guitare (1963).[iv] Recently, manuscripts of unpublished solo guitar works were found in the Segovia Archives, including Etude (Rondo fantastico) (1955), and Passacaglia (1956).[ v ] Though the Haug pieces on this recording may not exhibit the contrapuntal inventiveness evident in the guitar works of Jacques Hétu, there remains a beautiful expressive quality in these selections, and a wonderful sense of harmonic and melodic unfolding. In some ways, Prélude, Tiento et Toccata, Preludio, and Alba are written within a language that guitarists might refer to as ‘Segovian’ neo-romanticism, notably, the overall lyricism and autumnal melancholy of these works.
SUITE POUR GUITARE SEULE, OP. 41 -- CONCERTO POUR GUITARE ET ORCHESTRE À CORDES, OP. 56Jacques HÉTU
Jacques Hétu is one of Canada’s most respected and successful composers. His compositions have attracted interest from notable musicians such as Glenn Gould, Charles Dutoit, Pinchas Zukerman, and Kurt Mazur, who have performed, and recorded his music. His works are regularly performed within Canada, the United-States, Europe, Japan, and South America, and he has been composing commissioned works for nearly four decades. In 2000, Hétu retired from his teaching position at the Université du Québec in Montréal. He now resides just outside of Montréal and continues to maintain a very active composing schedule. Hétu’s compositions encompass many genres, including four symphonies, and concertos for bassoon, clarinet, flute, trumpet, trombone, piano, organ, guitar, and a double concerto for piano and violin. He has also composed several instrumental solos, chamber pieces, and works for voice and orchestra including Les clartés de la nuit, Les abîmes du rêve, an opera (Le Prix), a mass (Missa pro trecentesimo anno), and music for a film (Au pays de Zom). The elements of Hétu’s style have been defined as a combination of neo-classical forms and neo-romantic expression with a musical language of twentieth-century techniques.[vi] The Suite and Concerto are characteristic of Hétu’s treatment of melody, harmony, and form. It is music that is deep in its structure, outwardly dramatic, but also possessing a seemingly infinite amount of nuances and subtleties. The Suite pour guitare seule, Op. 41 was composed in 1986 and represents Jacques Hétu’s only work for solo guitar. The composition was commissioned in 1986 and recorded in 1991 by Uruguayan/Canadian guitarist Alvaro Pierri. In Soundboard [vii] David Grimes gives a brief but illuminating description of the Suite:
The Suite illustrates Hétu’s economical use of musical material as well as his tendency to present the primary melodic and motivic ideas of a piece within the introductory measures. In a 1988 interview with Renée Larochelle for Radio-Canada (ACM 31), the composer explains:
The first measure of the Prélude from the Suite pour guitare contains virtually all of the musical material to be used throughout the movement. To varying degrees, this type of germinal approach is evident in all five movements of the Suite. For example, in the Final, all the material used in the piece is derived from motives found in the first four measures. In the Rêverie, the interval of the perfect fourth, made apparent in the opening melody, is the movement’s primary interval melodically, harmonically, and in terms of form. Throughout the Suite and the Concerto, Hétu’s tendency to integrate musical material is evident. His use of motivic manipulation and development is a great example of tight, highly unified, organic writing. This quality in the music gives a performer many possible avenues to investigate. Glenn Gould[viii] used to say “To every man his own Bach”, suggesting that the music of Johan Sebastian Bach offered many possibilities to a performer, making various convincing interpretations possible. This sentiment rings true in regards to Hétu’s works. In a 2002 interview with Eitan Cornfield for the documentary Jacques Hétu-Portrait (CMC, 2002), Canadian flutist Robert Cram addresses this quality in Hétu’s music:
One cannot help being attracted to the many wonderful facets of Hétu’s music. And while trying to remain sensitive to these qualities, I must confess that in making this recording, I could not resist highlighting some of the unifying, and lower level structures at the foundation of the Suite and the Concerto. Though only a thin veil covers the musical background, the motivic/harmonic cyclical aspect of these works as a whole can easily go unrecognized. Perhaps it is fair to say that the framework is always heard, but often waiting to be noticed. Or as Mr. Grimes stated, “There is more here than is apparent to the casual observer…”
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