BOLCOM: Music for Two Pianos
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William Bolcom (b. 1938) Music for Two Pianos William Bolcom was born in Seattle, Washington. He studied composition with Milhaud at Mills College in...
William Bolcom (b. 1938)
Music for Two Pianos
William Bolcom was born in Seattle, Washington. He
studied composition with Milhaud at Mills College in
Oakland, California from 1958 to 1961, continuing with
him and Messiaen in Paris. While teaching at Queens
College in New York City in the late 1960s, he
developed an interest in ragtime piano performance that
helped spur a renewed interest in the music, leading to
the composition of rags such as Graceful Ghost. Since
1973 he has taught at the University of Michigan.
Bolcom is best known for his many recitals and
recordings of historical American popular song with his
wife, mezzo-soprano Joan Morris. His early
compositions are serial, reflecting Boulez, Stockhausen
and Berio. With his discovery of ragtime, he found his
mature style that melds popular and classical idioms in a
distinctively American eclecticism.
Perusing a collection of late nineteenth-century
Latin American dances inspired Recuerdos
(Reminiscences). Bolcom saw the continuity between
American ragtime and the larger world tradition of light
piano music, writing his own tribute and evocations of
that era. Chôro, the genre of Brazilian street folk-song,
is in the style of Ernesto Nazareth, its creator. Paseo
reflects the melding of Latin and North American
musics in Civil War-era New Orleans in the music of
America's first classical virtuoso pianist Louis Moreau
Gottschalk. Valse Venezolano is a Venezuelan waltz in
the style of Ramon Delgado Palacios. It makes use of
many of the stylistic elements of Palacios, including
unexpected leaps, modulations and phrase lengths as
well as excursions into 5/8 metre. Recuerdos was
written for and first given at the Murray Dranoff Two-
Piano Competition in 1991.
Frescoes is one of Bolcom's most powerful works
in its scope and colours. In the detailed preface, Bolcom,
inspired by the brief sketching, rapid painting and grand
vision of fresco technique, wrote Frescoes in similar
style. The pianists also double on harpsichord and
harmonium. The score itself, typical of many works of
the late 1960s and early 1970s, is visual "eye music"
incorporating aleatoric improvisation, unsynchronized
playing, tone clusters and plucking of the strings. The
work is in two movements, War in Heaven and The
Caves of Orcus. It was first performed in 1971 in
Toronto by Bruce Mather and Pierriette LePage.
The Sonata for Two Pianos in One Movement
displays the focus resulting from the condensation of a
three-movement form into a single movement. The first
movement Gaia, the earth mother creatrix and sustainer
of life on Earth, explores a nearly orchestral range of
colours through a sonata-form structure of themes in
which a lyrical third theme, in Bolcom's words, "set(s)
up a conflict that proves to be irresoluble except by
continuing into the other two movements". Night
Diversion uses two pedal tones from Gaia which leads
to a third (B flat); this note brackets two quotations, the
first from Schoenberg's Harmonielehre and the second
the first ten notes from Debussy's Brouillards. Ancient
Dances grew from an early Bolcom fragment. The
conflicts of the previous two movements return to be
resolved in a clear D major with the lyrical third theme
of the first movement in apotheosis to end the work.
Bolcom combines ancient Greek rhythms with a
dancing blues, creating unforeseen connections. The
Sonata was commissioned for the Paratore brothers'
piano duo who gave the première in 1994.
Interlude dates from the early 1960s and the
composer's "total chromatic period", which took place
in Paris and at Stanford and includes the first dozen
piano etudes and works such as Decalage for cello and
piano.
Bolcom's suite The Garden of Eden, originally for
solo piano, uses the ragtime idiom to tell the biblical
story of the Fall from Genesis. It consists of four
movements, each a self-contained "rag". Bolcom
arranged the third and fourth rags, The Serpent's Kiss
and Through Eden's Gates, for two pianos in 1994 for
their première recording by Richard and John Contigula.
The Serpent's Kiss uses various ragtime effects such as
heel stomping and knocking on the wood of the piano in
addition to aptly appropriate tongue clicking. Through
Eden's Gates, in Bolcom's words, "conjures the image
of Adam and Eve calmly cakewalking their way out of
Paradise".
David Ciucevich
Recuerdos (more info)
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I. Choro - Homage to Nazareth - 3:28
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II. Paseo - a la memoire de Louis-Moreau Gottschalk - 5:23
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III. Valse Venezolano - a la memoire de Ramon Delgado Palacios - 4:31
Frescoes (arr. for 2 pianos) (more info)
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I. War in Heaven - 13:24
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II. The Caves of Orcus - 14:55
Sonata for Two Pianos in One Movement (more info)
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Sonata for Two Pianos in One Movement - 15:40
Interlude (more info)
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Interlude - 4:03
The Garden of Eden (excerpts) (more info)
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III. The Serpent's Kiss (Ragtime)(1994 version for 2 pianos) - 5:37
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IV. Through Eden's Gates (Cakewalk)(1994 version for 2 pianos) - 5:13