DAUGHERTY: Philadelphia Stories / UFO
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MICHAEL DAUGHERTY (b. 1954) Philadelphia Stories for Orchestra UFO for Solo Percussion and Orchestra Philadelphia Stories (2001) for orchestra was...
MICHAEL DAUGHERTY (b. 1954)
Philadelphia Stories for Orchestra UFO for Solo Percussion and Orchestra
Philadelphia Stories (2001) for orchestra was
commissioned by the Philadelphia Orchestra. The world
première was given by the Philadelphia Orchestra under
the direction of David Zinman at the Academy of Music
in Philadelphia on 15th November 2001. A musical
travelogue of the sounds and rhythms of Philadelphia,
my third symphony is divided into three movements:
the first movement begins at sundown, the second
movement after midnight, and the third movement at
sunrise. In Sundown On South Street, I recreate the
groove of people cruising down one of the most popular
streets of Philadelphia, where one finds nightclubs and
musicians from all walks of life. The many generations
of musicians who lived in Philadelphia and walked
down this musical street include Sun Ra, John Coltrane,
Fabian, Mario Lanza, and Patti LaBelle. In the 1980s I
too was a frequent visitor to South Street, playing jazz
piano and performing experimental electronic music in
various nightclubs. Not only is Philadelphia said to be
one of America's most haunted cities but it is also
where Edgar Allan Poe penned The Tell-Tale Heart,
one of his most famous tales of horror. In his lyric
poetry Poe also often invoked the lute and the lyre. Tell-
Tale Harp is an arabesque for two solo harps and
orchestra. Arranged stereophonically on the stage, the
solo harpists play obsessive rhythms, rolling chords,
and ghostly echoes in a periodic heart-like pulse. To
quote Poe himself, we hear "spirits moving musically,
to a lute's well-tuned law". In Bells for Stokowski I
imagine Leopold Stokowski (1882-1977), one of the
most influential and controversial conductors/arrangers
of the twentieth century, visiting the Liberty Bell in
Philadelphia at sunrise and listening to all the bells of
the city resonate. As maestro of the Philadelphia
Orchestra (1912-36) he created a sensation by
conducting world premières of orchestral works by
composers such as Stravinsky and Varèse, and enraged
classical purists by conducting his lavish Romantic
orchestral transcriptions of J.S. Bach. In my rousing
tribute to Stokowski, I have composed an original
theme in the style of Bach that is modulated through a
series of canonic tonal and atonal variations in my own
musical language. Later I also introduce my own
transcription of Bach's C major Prelude from The Well-
Tempered Klavier. In the coda I evoke the famous overthe-
top "Stokowski sound," by making the orchestra
resound like an enormous, rumbling gothic organ.
UFO (1999) for solo percussion and orchestra is
inspired by unidentified flying objects and sounds. The
concerto was commissioned by the National Symphony
Orchestra through a grant from the John and June
Hechinger Commissioning Fund and written for Evelyn
Glennie. The world première was performed by Evelyn
Glennie, solo percussion, and the National Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Leonard Slatkin, at the
Kennedy Center, Washington D.C. on 10th April 1999.
The concerto begins with Traveling Music where the
percussion soloist, in the guise of an alien from outer
space, mysteriously enters the concert hall playing a
waterphone and mechanical siren. The second
movement, Unidentified, refers to the famous UFO
crash in 1947 near Roswell, New Mexico. Large scraps
of unidentifiable metal were discovered in the desert
and quickly moved by the U.S. military to Area 51 in
Nevada, where its secret base was reputed to be the
repository for alien objects. What happened to those
scattered scraps? They resonate on the concert stage, as
the percussion soloist plays on xylophone and eight
pieces of unidentified metal. In Flying, the third
movement, we hear a virtuoso performance by the solo
percussionist on vibraphone, mark tree, and cymbals
that hover and shimmer in the air like flying saucers. In
the fourth movement, the percussion soloist performs
sleight-of-hand improvisations with strange sounding
percussion instruments accompanied by a
contrabassoon soloist and the percussion section, which
is located in the balcony. This movement, entitled ???,
may leave the listener wondering: is this another UFO
sighting? Pulsating with rhythms in 5/4 time, the final
movement is entitled Objects. It features virtuosic
drumming by the percussion soloist at warp speed to
suggest the outer trappings and inner machinery of a
fine-tuned alien aircraft.
Michael Daugherty
Philadelphia Stories (more info)
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Sundown On South Street - 7:28
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Tell-Tale Harp - 7:38
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Bells for Stokowski - 13:44
UFO (more info)
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Traveling Music - 2:12
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Unidentified - 4:06
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Flying - 14:44
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??? - 4:17
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Objects - 10:20