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File under: Contemporary

Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, Yoel Levi, Robert Shaw, Stephen Paulus, William Preucil

Works By Stephen Paulus (CD)

Label: New World Records

Format: CD

Genre: Compositional

In stock

€14.40
€11.52
VAT exempt
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Stephen Paulus's musical style is melodic and highly rhythmic. He tends to work in traditional forms, and his music is accessible to listeners possessing a wide range of tastes. Those seeking well-crafted contemporary music with a decidedly neo-Romantic bent will find these three orchestral works very much to their liking.

As its title implies, Concertante is chiefly concerned with contrasts between solo instruments, small groups of players, and the full orchestra. Although, as the composer notes, its form and juxtaposition of ideas are "quite freewheeling," the work falls into three clearly defined sections: a rapid opening marked to be played "quietly, with intensity," a contrasting slow section for strings alone, offering dialogue between a concertino group of eight soloists and the massed strings, and a conclusion that gathers speed while recalling earlier ideas and building to a climax, interrupted by an outburst of percussion before the close.

The Concerto for Violin and Orchestra is in three discrete movements, beginning with a brash Allegro con fuoco that is by turns assertive, frenetic, and lyrical. The middle movement's moderato central section borrows a theme from the first movement and treats it in a slower, more playful manner. The finale, Allegro di bravura, emphasizes spirited and brilliant solo work. Mined with virtuosic difficulties in the Paganinian manner, it also contains a brief central interlude in a more idyllic mood.

While Paulus had already composed several works for full orchestra, the Symphony for Strings was his first composition for strings alone. The first movement, Moderato, begins wistfully and gives an overall impression of restlessness. Next is an Allegro vivo crafted of ostinatos and repeated-note figures, with a little waltz at its heart. Misterioso is the marking of the third movement, and the music merits its performance direction, "In a haunting fashion." The concluding Presto is just the sort of cheery rondo that Haydn or Prokofiev might have given to such a work, and makes cyclic reference to the motive that opened the first movement.

Details
File under: Contemporary
Cat. number: 80363
Notes:
Recorded at Symphony Hall, Robert W. Woodruff Arts Center, Atlanta, Georgia. Tracks 1-3 recorded April 26, 1988. Track 4 recorded May 15, 1989. Tracks 5-8 recorded December 12, 1989. All works published by European American Music Corp. Cover art: "Yellow Band" (1956). Oil on canvas, 68 x 80 in. NAA-Thomas C. Woods Memorial Collection, Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska-Lincoln 1961. N-130. ℗ 1990 © 1990 Recorded Anthology of American Music, Inc. Printed in U.S.A.

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