Joël-François Durand, composer |
Program Notes
Five
Musical Tales was written for the Seattle Youth Symphony
Orchestra and its Musical Director Jonathan Shames in the
Spring of 1998. Since composing for an orchestra of young
players dictated certain aesthetic as well as technical
constraints, I decided to use the idea of childhood as
programatic clue. The Tales were conceived in the spirit of
a "Divertissement." Each of them relates to impressions
given by a particular scene or place in the countryside in
summer, as seen through the eyes of a child: I. Village Dance: the child
is watching peasants dancing heavily in the summer heat; hay
is flying around, and every now and then the dancers miss a
beat, which gives a comical twist to their
choreography. II. The song of the stars:
the child is observing with wonder the night sky. In the
dialogue between trumpet and bassoon, one can imagine the
questions asked by the child and the answers of the stars.
Soon, the child falls asleep. III. Festival: the child is
participating in a lively dance made up of many different
rhythms with instrumental groups constantly interrupting
each other. IV. The song of the rain:
the soft melancholy of a day spent in the house, watching
the rain falling outside. V. The song of the light:
this last movement is a celebration of the light and colors
of a hot summer day; the child is playing outside again, in
the brilliant heat of the midday sun