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:>) AVANT GARDE for clarinet, tuba, viola and perc.

Posted: Wed May 22, 2013 2:19 am
by kathott
Hello all,
I am seeking repertoire recommendations by modern/avant garde/theatre/third stream composers for a professional performing ensemble consisting of:

(a) clarinet/Eb alto clarinet, tuba, viola, percussion
(b) clarinet, bassoon, trumpet, tuba, viola, double bass and percussion.

Ideally, this would include pieces you have either performed, or heard via concert or recording. The group is looking for well crafted, professional level works involving all/some of these instruments.
Thank you, Kathott

Re: :>) AVANT GARDE for clarinet, tuba, viola and perc.

Posted: Wed May 22, 2013 8:30 am
by AHynds
Here's a few to get you started.

Twice Upon Three Times--Herbert Brun
...and what rough beast...--Marc Satterwhite
Jonah and the Whale--Garth Knox

I'll add more as I think of them.

Re: :>) AVANT GARDE for clarinet, tuba, viola and perc.

Posted: Wed May 22, 2013 3:05 pm
by Roger Lewis
I did the world premier of a piece for clarinet, tuba and 2 percussionists back in my Mannes days. It was very avant garde and quite hard to put together but it was a good piece. I believe the composers names was Yin Lu but would have to track down the part to be sure. He also did another piece for Flute, Tuba and 2 percussionists that was also good, but even more challenging.

Good luck.

Roge

Re: :>) AVANT GARDE for clarinet, tuba, viola and perc.

Posted: Sat May 25, 2013 6:15 pm
by kathott
Thanks for suggestions (thus far)..................

Re: :>) AVANT GARDE for clarinet, tuba, viola and perc.

Posted: Sat May 25, 2013 7:26 pm
by ginnboonmiller
There's so much good stuff out there for open instrumentation. Look at Karlheinz Stockhausen, Cornelius Cardew and Mauricio Kagel in general for a start. Specific "classics" of the "avant-garde" include Frederic Rzewski's Les Moutons de Panurge, Terry Riley's In C and LaMonte Young's numbered compositions. Also seek out some library's archive of Source Magazine, which was a repository of a-g compositions in the late 1960s and 1970s.

If you really want to be avant-garde in the true sense of the word, stop looking for extant music. Write stuff. Commission stuff. Improvise stuff. Experiment.

I regularly perform in an improvisational context with a viola player, and we sound great together as a duo and in any context we've found. You don't need advice if you really want to do something different. Advice is, in its very nature, already hackneyed because someone else already thought of it and tried it and knows whether it works.