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Spirit of the Wild

Sheet Music: Score

Spirit of the Wild : concerto for oboe STUDY SCORE / Nigel Westlake.

Also known as: Concerto for oboe

by Nigel Westlake (2016)

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  • Library Availability: 784.2852186/WES 2 — Available for loan
  • Instrumentation: Solo oboe, 4 horns, timpani, percussion (5 players), harp, piano, strings.
  • Audio Sample

    Performance by Diana Doherty, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, Nigel Westlake from the CD Spirit of the Wild, by Nigel Westlake, and The Desert Music, by Steve Reich

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In mid 2016, following concert commitments in Hobart, I was invited by Bob Brown, one of Australia's leading environmentalists, to accompany him on a visit to Bathurst Harbour, a pristine waterway on the South West Coast of Tasmania contained within the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area.

Almost completely devoid of modern human intrusion, the area was the home of the Needwonnee people for many thousands of years, and is accessible only by boat, plane or foot.

It is a magical patchwork of button-grass moorlands, heathlands, and estuaries, bordered by jagged peaks, wild rivers and rugged coastlines.

My introduction to this place of exquisite beauty became the backdrop to my next project, an oboe concerto commission for the Sydney Symphony, and as I pondered the ensuing collaboration with soloist Diana Doherty, the memories and significance of my expedition with Bob continued to infuse my consciousness, leaving their fingerprints on the concerto score in subtle and mysterious ways.

As a young boy, my parents had introduced me to the wilds of Tasmania and I am forever grateful to them for instilling in me a deep love of Australia's wilderness fostered during numerous walking and boating expeditions.

My trip to Bathurst Harbour reminded me of the preciousness of the wilderness, & of mankind's propensity to become subsumed by materialism, neglecting our connection to country and the wonders of the natural world, choosing instead to value only those elements of our environment that can be quantified by monetary worth.

Such wild places are truly priceless and we exploit and destroy them at our peril.

Work on the concerto began when, in an act of courageous exploration, Diana dropped around to my studio one morning and allowed me to record her performing a dazzling stream of freeform improvisations. Always up for a challenge, she had accepted my invitation to do so with characteristic enthusiasm and good will.

To hear such an accomplished classical player liberate themselves from the constraints of the notated score in this way, enter "the zone" and follow their musical intuition through a myriad of patterns, riffs and sequences was a privilege indeed, and the best possible way for me to infiltrate Diana's highly unique, dynamic and virtuosic approach to the instrument. Her visit left me inspired and ready to start work.

Performed in a continuum, the concerto can be divided into 4 distinct sections, the first 2 of which are closely related in terms of energy and contour.

The third section is a slow movement where long, sustained oboe phrases are supported by a detailed filigree of repeated patterns that ebb and flow in dynamic waves.

A syncopated string hocket forms a bridge to the final section which is perhaps the most playful & extrovert in manner, building as it does to a traditional style big finish.

Published by: Rimshot Music — 1 score (92p. -- A4 (portrait))

Difficulty: Advanced

Duration: 22 min.

Commissioned with funds provided by Jane Mathews, Symphony Services International.

First performance by Diana Doherty, Sydney Symphony Orchestra, David Robertson at SSO: Westlake Oboe Concerto, Ravel’s Bolero (Sydney Opera House, Concert Hall) on 22 Feb 2017

Cadenza added April 2019.

Typeset edition.

This edition produced Mar 17.


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