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Touch the Sky (Trio for Violin, Percussion, & Piano)

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Genre: Trio for Violin, Percussion, & Piano
# of Players: 3
Level: Medium Difficult | Duration: 7:00
Publisher: C. Alan Publications | Copyright: 2021


Download mp3 | Click on images to left for score sample

Price:
$24.00
Item #:
29400
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Notes & Instrumentation
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  • Notes & Instrumentation

    A heart-felt tribute to a dearly departed friend, Touch the Sky is a chamber piece which takes listeners on an emotional journey. Led by a featured violin, the work features memorable melodies and is appropriate for a solo recital.

    Genre: Trio for Violin, Percussion, & Piano | # of Players: 3
    Level: Medium Difficult | Duration: 7:00

    Instrumentation
    Violin
    Percussion: Vibraphone, Bells
    Piano

    Program Notes
    Touch the Sky was initially commissioned by Kurt Gartner, Professor of Percussion at Kansas State University, and the KSU Percussion Studio in memory of Andrew Abdayem, a fellow studio member and friend of mine who passed away in early 2016. Andrew had Myasthenia Gravis, a rare neuro-muscular and auto-immune disease that affects all voluntary muscles including the diaphragm, which affects the ability to breathe. Unfortunately, there is no cure and sufferers frequently must live their lives in constant pain.

    The work’s title is taken from a quote by a 13th-century Persian poet named Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi: “only from your heart can you touch the sky.” This version for three players was adapted from the original percussion ensemble instrumentation at the request of Christina Minton, who performed the solo violin part at the work’s premiere.

    Musically, the piece begins with the pitch “A” being stated as a reference to Andrew’s initials. The initial key signature is A major as an additional homage to Andrew. After a descending vibraphone melody, the solo violin emerges from the percussive texture for a brief cadenza before the work takes off at aq quicker tempo. The main melody is first established in the violin and passes around the ensemble in various forms. Underpinning this is a chord progression which emphasizes A major-B minor-D major-A major-E major, which are the letters in Andrew’s last name which can be set to Western chords.

    Eventually, the music segues into a quicker, more flighty section in B Mixolydian mode, where new melodic ideas are again stated by the violin and passed around the ensemble. The music gradually ramps up in volume and activity and, after a quick back-and-forth between the violin and ensemble, soon returns to the musical textures from the beginning. This time the violin plays the melody previously stated by the vibraphone, and after another brief cadenza the work ends with a series of A major chords, again referring to Andrew’s initials. Each statement gets ever more sparse until the entire ensemble ends playing two unison A’s.

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