|
Pictures of Israel
Commissioned by the Center for Jewish Culture
and Creativity in Los Angeles, Pictures of Israel received its premiere
29 June 1997 at the Fourth Annual San Diego Jewish Arts Festival.
It is scored for violin, double bass, alto flute, and tabla.
Rather than offer "pictures" of Israel
in the literal sense, my composition draws upon many diverse aspects
of Jewish musical culture - both sacred and secular - and seeks
to integrate these elements into an organic whole.
The use of the flute at the beginning of the piece
was chosen to recall the pipe. The earliest reference to music in
the Torah mentions the lyre and the pipe (Genesis 4:21).
Pictures of Israel seeks to reach back to the
earliest days of Jewish history and at the same time to look ahead
to a world beyond. Unlike Hanoch Jacoby's composition King David's
Lyre, Pictures of Israel is not a programmatic work based on a particular
chronology. Rather, it is in a spiritual sense that Pictures of
Israel looks both back and ahead at one and the same time.
The work is divided into five movements: “Shalom”;
“A World Beyond”; “Folk Dance”; “Reflection”; “Affirmation.” While
the score calls for four players, the use of the flute is confined
to the first movement. The predominantly three-part scoring recalls
the intimacy of a small chamber ensemble in Western music; at the
same time the use of the double bass imbues the work's sonority
with an orchestral undercurrent.
While Pictures of Israel is an instrumental composition,
I was much influenced by Jewish vocal music. In particular, I was
drawn to the expressive use of inflected notes that can be heard
not only in sacred Hebrew chant but in performances of secular songs.
The score calls for both the violinist and the double bassist to
produce inflected notes to be achieved by portamenti.
While the flavour of Pictures of Israel is unmistakably
Hebraic, the work is influenced by diverse musical cultures. The
use of the tabla recalls Indian music. The combination of the tabla
and the double bass, moreover, evokes the aura of the rhythm section
of a small jazz ensemble.
I was influenced by the Bach Solo Cello Suite
with regard to not so much as the formal design as to the general
idea of a balance of different emotions and moods as embodied in
individual movements, ranging from the melancholic introspection
of the Sarabande to the dance-like joy of the Gigue. In Pictures
of Israel, this influence carries over to a harmonic world far removed
from Bach's. At one end, there are figurations in the violin part
that evoke the most non-Western sounding of sacred Hebrew chant;
at the other, there is a duet for violin and tabla that was inspired
by Israeli folk dance.
While the tabla player is called upon to
improvise in certain sections of the score, the remaining instrumental
parts are fully notated throughout.
David
Hush
Recording Across the Globe
A CD of my solo instrumental and chamber compositions
was recorded in America in 2003. It was made by colleagues connected
with the Leopold Mozart Academy of Music in Philadelphia, a school
specializing in the instruction of gifted children.
With the release of a new CD, one's inner thoughts
and feelings are made public, as it were, by a series of interpretations
encapsulated by a single disc. I am very fortunate to have found
such sympathetic and gifted musicians to play my work. Each track
on this disc is the result of a complete meeting of minds and of
spirits.
Being based in Sydney, where I teach and write,
meant that I was on the other side of the world from the musicians
who would be recording my work. I found that many issues of interpretation
could be discussed by e-mail, often in reference to an informal
recording of a piece that had been sent to me, prior to the official
recording dates.
The pieces were recorded in the Anchor Presbyterian
Church in Philadelphia. The acoustic of the church is excellent
and works especially well for solo stringed instruments. Since I
felt certain that my music could not have been in better hands I
did not feel that it was essential for me to be present at the recording
sessions.
I was happy to receive the first draft of the
CD and to try to discern what work remained to be done. While mastering
had already taken place I felt the need for a final mastering session
that I would be able to personally supervise. This session took
place in Sydney. We used a Sonic Solutions hard disk system.
A not unknown British rock musician recently remarked
that when he launched his career in the seventies the musicians
were ahead of the technology whereas now the technology is ahead
of the musicians. In the more rarefied world of contemporary classical
music the musician stands a greater chance of distancing himself
from the plethora of technological options now available. There
are nevertheless certain pitfalls. Paradoxically, it is the very
perfection of sound quality available in the recording studio that
creates a potential problem for the musician playing in a recital
hall: how can a musician playing in concert hope to emulate the
state-of-the-art sound of the same piece that he has recorded in
a studio? The truly honest player will not rely too heavily on technology
while recording a piece in the studio; he will be concerned with
creating a natural sound that will faithfully reflect his thoughts
and feelings about the piece.
Primarily for economic reasons, many record companies
now release CDs of music that was recorded live. While a live recording
cannot offer the same degree of perfection to be expected from a
studio environment one of its greatest assets is a spontaneity and
lack of superficiality. For this reason I look on the proliferation
of live recordings as a positive development. The final piece on
the CD of my music - a Sonata for Cello and Piano - was recorded
in concert.
The title of the CD is Nesia - "journey"
in Hebrew. We thought of the journey as a metaphor not merely for
physical traversal but in addition for creative exploration.
David Hush
|