Login

Enter your username and password

Forgotten your username or password?

Your Shopping Cart

There are no items in your shopping cart.

Angustam Amice

Sheet Music: Score

Angustam Amice : for choir (SATB) and string orchestra / Andrián Pertout.

by Andrián Pertout (2015)

$70.91

Add to Cart

Usually ships in 3-8 business days

Shipping Info

Product details

Angustam Amice sets to music a poem by Quintus Horatius Flaccus (65 B.C.-8 B.C.) from the classic text of Carmina (23 B.C.) - a collection of four books of Latin lyric poems, more commonly referred to as the 'Odes of Horace'. The fourth stanza of Liber III.2, or Book 3.2 (the selected poem featuring a metrical pattern based on an Alcaic stanza, or 11 × 2, 9, 10) opens with the famous line 'Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori' (or 'Sweet and proper it is to die for your country') utilized by English poet and soldier Wilfred Owen (1893-1918) in his October 1917 anti-war poem where, as Kenneth Simcox from the Wilfred Owen Association explains, "the title is ironic" and "the intention was not so much to induce pity as to shock, especially civilians at home who believed war was noble and glorious." 'Angustam Amice' also adopts an interpretation of Estonian composer Arvo Pärt's tintinnabuli style within its utilization of a Dorian #4/ Lydian b7 two-octave scale (O and RI forms for ascending Dorian #4, R and I forms for descending Lydian b7).

In an article entitled 'Musical Archetypes: The Basic Elements of the Tintinnabuli Style', contained within the publication of The Cambridge Companion to Arvo Pärt Leopold Brauneiss describes the essential ingredients of the musical language of Pärt thus: "Tintinnabulation: the joining of scale and triad: In tintinnabulation, every single note of a melody voice formed by scales (which English conductor Paul Hillier calls the M-voice) ideally gets assigned a note of a triad at a certain distance to this M-voice. In the so-called first position above (+1) or below (−1) the M-voice, this produces diatonic dissonances of minor and major seconds and also thirds and fourths; in second position (+2, −2) we get fourths, fifths, and sixths. By this method, a second voice develops consisting exclusively of triad notes which sounds throughout the whole composition like the peal of bells. From this we get the terms tintinnabuli-voice (T-voice), and tintinnabuli triad (T-triad), which itself consists of three tintinnabuli-notes (T-notes)."

Published by: Australian Music Centre — 1 facsimile score (57p. -- A4 (portrait))

Difficulty: Advanced — Professional

Duration: 9 mins, 22 sec.

Dedication note: In Memory of the First World War (1914-1918)
Commission info: Commissioned by Mario Dobernig and the Victoria Chorale in Celebration of Arvo Pärt’s 80th Birthday

First performance by Victoria Chorale, Mario Dobernig, Joanna Cole, Adrian McEniery at Music in War and Peace (The Edge, Federation Square) on 18 Apr 2015

Composer's no: 428.

Includes programme notes, full Latin text, full text (in English) of various translations of excerpt from The Odes of Horace, and performance notes.

The composer notes the following styles, genres, influences, etc associated with this work:
Arvo Pärt Tintinnabuli; Quintus Horatius Flaccus (65 B.C.-8 B.C.), Carmina (23 B.C.), Odes of Horace

Composed as part of the 100th Anniversary of the ANZAC Landings at Gallipoli (25 April, 1915).

Typeset edition.

ISMN: 979-0-720156-58-3

Related products

This work is also available in the following products:

Angustam Amice
Score: Angustam Amice : for choir (SATB) and string orchestra, piano-vocal score / Andrián Pertout.

Angustam Amice
Parts: Angustam Amice : for choir (SATB) and string orchestra / Andrián Pertout.

This work also exists as the following versions:
- Unaccompanied SATB Choir

 

- Browse other works for SATB Choir with string orchestra

- Browse other works by Andrián Pertout


User reviews

Be the first to share your thoughts, opinions and insights about this item.

To post a comment please login