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Visions, fantasies and dances

Sheet Music: Score

Visions, fantasies and dances : for string quartet / Yitzhak Yedid.

by Yitzhak Yedid (2009)

  • Sales Availability: This item may be available to purchase from the Australian Music Centre.
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  • Library Availability: 785.714/YED 1 — Reference (not for loan) copy only
  • Instrumentation: 2 violins, viola, cello.
  • Audio Sample

    Performance by Sapphire String Quartet from the CD Visions, fantasies and dances

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This item may be available to purchase from the Australian Music Centre.
Please contact our Sales Department to confirm pricing and availability.

Product details

My spiritual experience as a child chanting the Baqashot at the well-known Ades Synagogue in Jerusalem inspired this composition. Baqashot are collections of supplications, songs and prayers that have been sung by the Sephardic Syrian Jewish communities for centuries. Every Shabbat during winter months my father woke me up a few hours after midnight to walk to Ades Synagogue to participate in the singing until dawn. Later in my life I was able to distinguish between different Maqamat. This attracted me to explore classical Arabic music and heterophonic textures, and, just as has occurred in Baqashot, to compose works that merge Maqamat with Jewish themes. Since I trained in Western classical music and practice improvisation (as a pianist) it seemed appropriate to merge these different influences.

And so, Visions, Fantasies and Dances is an authentic expression of new music which incorporates a wide spectrum of contemporary and ancient styles. It creates a confluence between the heterophonic textures of Arabic genres (classical Arabic music and Arabic-influenced Jewish music) and the compositional approaches of contemporary Western classical music. Amongst the Western composers of special importance to me are Béla Bartók (1881-1945), György Kurtág (b. 1926), György Ligeti (1923-2006), Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992), Alfred Schnittke (1934-1998), Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1951), Stefan Wolpe (1902- 1972) and John Zorn (b. 1953).

The quartet consists of seven major sections in Part One (tracks 1-7), six major sections in Part Two (tracks 8-13), five major sections in Part Three (tracks 14-18), six major sections in Part Four (tracks 19-24), four major sections in Part five (tracks 25-28), four major sections in Part six (tracks 29-32) and two major sections in Part Seven (tracks 33-34).

The titles of the sections evoke various musical and visual images and transfer the ideas and thoughts that inspired my work. The sections have been created with a range of different approaches and the musical elements have been developed in diverse ways. The thirty two sections utilise approaches and musical modes that contrast with each other. These sections range between up-tempi to slow, between Arabic melody and a Piyyut to a melancholic mood, between choral Baroque style to Serialism, between slow harmonic progression to the heterophonic texture of Jewish prayers and between microtonality to improvisation.

The transition between sections often occurs abruptly and without a musical link, and the sections unite through the development of themes, motifs, articulation and modes. The superimposition and synthesis of such a variety of musical styles and contrasting compositional approaches and modes have been made possible by an overall connectedness in the work. This connectedness can, to a certain degree, be understood, perhaps subconsciously, by experiencing the performance of the piece or by listening to it without a break. Although a musical integration of the various sections has been achieved, the work nevertheless embodies tensions between the ancient and the new, the religious and the secular, and the East and the West.

Prayers and Piyyutim (including Baqashot) have a unique and distinct sound, which is a result of the way they are performed and of their religious purpose. They are sung/chanted by a cantor and congregants as part of the services in synagogues. Congregants (mostly males) chant alongside the cantor and the congregants and the cantor sing in a quasi unison. The melodies of prayers and Piyyutim are monophonic and the congregants intuitively generate variations of these melodies. The texture that results from the congregants' simultaneous variations is typically heterophonic. The combination of traditional choral performance practice in traditional Sephardi-Mizrahi synagogues, and religious purpose, results in a unique sound. The congregants do not aim for musically refined variations, because for them the priority is the content of the prayer. With their praying, within the emphasis of the content of the prayer, the congregants produce a range of musical elements. Some of these elements include (1) the lowering or raising the pitch mainly at the beginning or/and ending of phrases, (2) changes in dynamics, applied to fragments of the prayer, (3) register changes, (4) changes in articulations including staccato and legato and (5) temporal changes, including changes in tempo and in the duration of individual notes. This creates a distinct sound and this distinct sound is my primary inspiration for integrating melodies that resemble Piyyutim.

Visions, Fantasies and Dances draw on two musical elements and sounds that are unique to prayers and Piyyutim. The first element is the characteristic heterophony of its choral singing and the second element is the integration of aspects of various modal systems including scales characterising Ashkenazi Piyyutim. These scales consist of three main modes, Ahavah Rabbah, Magein Avot and Adonai Malach.

This heterophonic texture (described above) contains musical elements in ways that contradict Western classical performance practice. The most important of these relate to intonation and tone quality and many of these musical utterances would be considered inappropriate in Western choral performance. Visions, Fantasies and Dances faced the challenge of incorporating this type of heterophonic singing. Materials derived from prayers and Piyyutim are prominent in this quartet and apply in various ways in six out of the thirty-four sections/musical images. These six sections are Singing the Baqashot (Part 2, track 13), Nighttime prayer at the Western Wall (Part 3), Prayer of "The soul of every being" (Part 3, Track 15), Night watch prayer at the Western Wall (Part 3, Track 18), And in the midst of the holy thou shall be praised (Part 7, track 33) and Prayer for another day (Part 7, track 34).

Visions, Fantasies and Dances incorporates improvisations. My approach was to apply improvisation in a variety of different ways. I composed sections of improvisations that have some limitations and request improvising on specific musical elements and sections of improvisations that limit the performers to use only specific musical elements.

Published by: Israel Music Institute [IMI 7803] — 1 score (63p. -- A4 (portrait))

Difficulty: Advanced

Duration: 56 mins

First performance Mar 10. Henry Crown Symphony Hall, Jerusalem Theatre

In Israel, I grew up acutely aware of the tensions caused by the animosity between Palestinians and Israelis. Of profound significance were the sensory images of the shocking terror attack that occurred in a mall in central Jerusalem on December 3, 2001. The destruction and suffering caused by two suicide bombers was devastating and continues to haunt me to this day. This attack killed eleven innocent boys including my relative 19-year-old Moshe Yedid-Levy. In my music, my intention is not to refer directly to experiences such as this but rather to look at Arabic and Jewish matters from a human perspective and in conjunction with philosophical and religious concerns. I am a strong believer in the power of music to bring about understanding, change and reform in societies, and perhaps also between nations. In this work it is my wish to convey the idea of cultural pluralism.

Winner of the Israel Prime Minister's Prize for classical composers

Typeset edition.

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Visions, fantasies and dances
CD: Visions, fantasies and dances : music for string quartet / Yitzhak Yedid.

 

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