ZZCD 9813 |
SUN MOON and STARS
Alan Hacker Tony Coe |
| 1 | ONE STAR AWAKE - Irish - Arranged Alan Hacker, improvisation Tony Coe | 4.34 |
| 2 | MADRIGAL I - Henri Pousseur | 5.25 |
| 3 | SOUSEDSKA - Czech - arranged Alan Hacker, improvisation Tony Coe | 1.30 |
| 4 | MOON - improvisation Tony Coe | 1.45 |
| 5 | BAVORÁK - Czech - arranged Alan Hacker, improvisation Tony Coe | 1.36 |
| 6 | TAKSIM - Turkish - Transcribed Alan Hacker | 3.50 |
| 7 | BLUES I - Improvisation Tony Coe | 2.14 |
| 8 | PLAYTHING - James Wilson | 1.11 |
| 9 | BELL RINGING IN THE EMPTY SKY - Ancient Japanese - transcribed Alan Hacker | 6.46 |
| 10 | HYMN TO THE SUN - Mesomedes (130 AD) | 3.20 |
| 11 | ICARUS - Improvisation Tony Coe | 2.48 |
| 12 | L'HOMME
ARMÉ - Early renaissance - arranged Alan Hacker, improvisation Tony Coe |
1.51 |
| 13 | URLAR - Harison Birtwistle | 3.00 |
| 14 | STARK PASTORAL - Harison Birtwistle | 1.36 |
| 15 | FANFARE WITH BIRDS - Harison Birtwistle | 1.19 |
| 16 | SEANG
NEUNG THEO - Quick Variations form Thailand - Luang Pandit Phiro |
3.00 |
| 17 | POLKA - Czech - arranged Alan Hacker, improvisation Tony Coe | 3.00 |
| 18 | SONATA - John Cage | 3.56 |
| 19 | PARA SUBIR - Wiliam Sweeny | 4.26 |
| 20 | BY MYSELF ALONE - Irish - Arranged Alan Hacker | 2.37 |
DDD Total Time = 60.13
The oldest piece is from Crete, written by Mesomedes around 130 AD. Originally written on papyrus it can be found in a well known anthology. To have such an ancient piece is such a gift either to a singer (it has words) or to an instrumentalist; the problem is when, where and how to play it. I first played it in the stone circle of Arbor Low high up in the Derbyshire Peak District. A remarkable friend (artist/philosopher) Keith Critchlow was showing Royal Academy of Music and Royal College of Art students where the sun would have risen in the distance. Yes, it was in the 60s(!) but I can assure you that Hymn to the Sun was by far the most affective piece of music played there. Moreover, the cows stood still, the rain stopped and the sun came out.
We begin and finish with an Irish tune. The first is, of course, She Moves Through the Fair but with a title from the words that fits in with our title! Chodsko is a District in Bohemia well known for is clarinet and bagpipe music. Our three tunes (which I play on the Eb clarinet) were collected in the late 19c. Moon: although my original idea was connected with the discovery of water, Tony chose to base his solo on all the "moon" popular songs. The two Blues that Tony plays are partly on this recording to show the connection between the early jazz style of clarinet playing and Greek and Turkish styles. You will notice that I play Hymn To The Sun in the Greek way; the Turkish Taksim is not far removed. The clarinet was introduced to the Ottoman Empire by Donizettis brother, the Imperial Band Master. Taksims which are also played on metal clarinets in low G are reminiscent of the Arabic flute, the Ney. Many years ago a musical scholar, James McGillivray, told me that at the beginning of this century there were records of Eastern European players on sale in New Orleans....
Besides Icarus Tony improvises to the late medieval tune Lhomme Armé. Henri Poussers Madrigal I, written in 1958 to celebrate a birth which I play like the Hymn to the Sun on the C clarinet, has an improvisatory side. Many of the durations, dynamics and rhythms are left open to the performer. John Cages Sonata also has a degree of freedom. This and its general style are all the more remarkable since the piece was written in Los Angeles in 1933. An artist friend guessed from its character that it was from that time. The three Birtwistle Duets for Storab were written on the Island of Raasay off the West Coast of Scotland. Its obvious that William Sweeneys Para Subir is written by a Scotsman. He was the first of current Scottish composers to use indigenous music as building blocks like Dvorak and Janacek though the idea is not necessarily to write "Scottish music".
Now the two Far Eastern pieces: A Bell Ringing in the Empty Sky is my improvisation based on a Shakuhachi piece several hundred years old. Quick Variations was transcribed for me by Somsak Ketukamchan. He was a Bangkok student of mine when I taught at the University of York. The original composer is called Seang Kum Neung Thao (1940).
Last but not least is the short Plaything, one of a Suite written for me by the
Irish composer James Wilson.
Ó Alan Hacker