1 CD
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€ 19.95
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Label Signum Classics |
UPC 0635212058428 |
Catalogue number SIGCD 584 |
Release date 27 September 2019 |
In his new Saxophone Concerto, Gabriel Prokofiev explores a side of classical music usually seen as forbidden by modern contemporary composers: melody. This aspect was incorporated at the request of the soloist, Branford Marsalis, allowing Prokofiev to revisit characteristics of the classical tradition not usually heard in contemporary music, giving the saxophone an open canvas.
Prokofiev’s Bass Drum Concerto shows the versatility of the instrument, despite only being used in a very basic fashion in classical music as a whole. Prokofiev experiments with how the bass drum is struck, where it is struck, and what it is struck with throughout the piece, producing a variety of sounds, colours and textures.
Het is al melodie wat de klok slaat
Gabriel Prokofiev schreef het Saxophone Concerto op verzoek van de gelouterde saxofonist Branford Marsalis. Voordat Prokofiev aan de compositie van dit concert begon, skypete hij met Branford met de vraag of hij iets speciaals zocht voor zijn nieuwe stuk. Marsalis, relaxed als hij was, wilde dat Gabriel zijn gevoel zou volgen. Er was maar een ding heel belangrijk voor hem: 'melodie'. Een ongewoon verzoek voor een eigentijdse compositie. 'Melodie' was door de na-oorlogse weerstand tegen traditionele vormen voor veel componisten bijna een taboe.Het instrument van de 21ste eeuw
In Prokofievs Bass Drum Concerto horen we de veelzijdigheid van het instrument, dat in de klassieke muziek, over het geheel genomen, het minst gebruikt wordt, eigenlijk alleen als er donderende climaxen nodig zijn. Het wordt niet gezien als een solo instrument waarmee je een concert kunt geven. Toch is het een van de meest alomtegenwoordige instrumenten van deze tijd. Waar je ook komt, je hoort de bas altijd uit auto's klinken, uit winkels of clubs, of bonkend door de muren als de buren thuis zijn, de bass drum is overal. Misschien meer dan je lief is, is de bass drum het instrument van de 21ste-eeuw. Prokofiev experimenteert met hoe op de bass drum geslagen wordt, waar en waarmee er wordt geslagen en bijvoorbeeld hoe vochtig het instrument is. Op deze manier produceert Prokofiev een variëteit aan klanken, kleuren en texturen. Joby Burgess die het instrument bespeelt weet deze verschillende klanken duidelijk uit de bas te voorschijn te toveren. Voor Gabriel Prokofiev was het een muzikale reis, al was het maar om de simpele opwinding van het componeren voor zo'n enorme drum met onbewust op de achtergrond de tumultueuze invloeden van buitenaf zoals de aanslagen in Londen en de Arabisch lente.Composing music that both embraces and challenges western classical traditions, Gabriel Prokofiev has emerged as a significant voice in new approaches to classical music at the beginning of the 21st century. After completing his musical studies at Birmingham and York Universities, and dissatisfied with the seemingly insular world of contemporary classical music, he developed a parallel music career as a dance, grime, electro and hip-hop producer. This background in dance music combined with his classical roots gives his music a unique and truly contemporary sound.
Gabriel has built up a large body of orchestral and chamber works and has composed seven concertos (three featuring turntables), as well as many electronic works, often combining synthesisers and samples with classical instrumentation. His works have been performed internationally by orchestras including Seattle Symphony, Detroit Symphony, St Petersburg Philharmonic, Moscow State Symphony, BBC Philharmonic, MDR Leipzig, Copenhagen Phil, Luxembourg Philharmonique, Buenos Aires Filharmonica, Porto Symphony and Real Orquesta de Sevilla. Also, he frequently collaborates with contemporary dancers and has worked with companies including Stuttgarter Ballet, Rambert Dance, Bern Ballet, Shobana Jeyasingh, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Alexander Whitley Dance and Gandini Juggling. In 2019, his first full-length opera Elizabetta was premiered by Regensburg Opera in Bavaria.
Gabriel is also an events curator, producer and founder of the Nonclassical record label and club night, home to a host of artists who defy conventions. Through Nonclassical, he has been one of the leading proponents of presenting classical music in non-traditional venues; and he regularly performs in East London nightclubs, warehouses and electronic music festivals, often DJing and doing live remixes of the works just performed.
Gabriel studied electroacoustic composition under Jonty Harrison in Birmingham, and a Masters in composition with Ambrose Field & Roger Marsh. He is published by both Faber Music and Mute Song, and resides in Hackney, London, with his wife and their three young children.
Composing music that both embraces and challenges western classical traditions, Gabriel Prokofiev has emerged as a significant voice in new approaches to classical music at the beginning of the 21st century. After completing his musical studies at Birmingham and York Universities, and dissatisfied with the seemingly insular world of contemporary classical music, he developed a parallel music career as a dance, grime, electro and hip-hop producer. This background in dance music combined with his classical roots gives his music a unique and truly contemporary sound.
Gabriel has built up a large body of orchestral and chamber works and has composed seven concertos (three featuring turntables), as well as many electronic works, often combining synthesisers and samples with classical instrumentation. His works have been performed internationally by orchestras including Seattle Symphony, Detroit Symphony, St Petersburg Philharmonic, Moscow State Symphony, BBC Philharmonic, MDR Leipzig, Copenhagen Phil, Luxembourg Philharmonique, Buenos Aires Filharmonica, Porto Symphony and Real Orquesta de Sevilla. Also, he frequently collaborates with contemporary dancers and has worked with companies including Stuttgarter Ballet, Rambert Dance, Bern Ballet, Shobana Jeyasingh, Birmingham Royal Ballet, Alexander Whitley Dance and Gandini Juggling. In 2019, his first full-length opera Elizabetta was premiered by Regensburg Opera in Bavaria.
Gabriel is also an events curator, producer and founder of the Nonclassical record label and club night, home to a host of artists who defy conventions. Through Nonclassical, he has been one of the leading proponents of presenting classical music in non-traditional venues; and he regularly performs in East London nightclubs, warehouses and electronic music festivals, often DJing and doing live remixes of the works just performed.
Gabriel studied electroacoustic composition under Jonty Harrison in Birmingham, and a Masters in composition with Ambrose Field & Roger Marsh. He is published by both Faber Music and Mute Song, and resides in Hackney, London, with his wife and their three young children.