Judith Weir: I Give You The End Of A Golden String (Study Score)

Judith Weir: I Give You The End Of A Golden String (Study Score)

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Description:

I Give You The End Of A Golden String was commissioned in 2013, by the Royal Philharmonic Society/Britten-Pears Foundation, to celebrate the centenary of the birth of Benjamin Brittenand the bicentenary of the foundation of the Royal Philharmonic Society. The piece was first...

SKU/Product number.: CH81268
Stock status: pecial item, print on demand, upcoming, backorder – usually ships in 3–6 weeks (subject to availability)
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Stock status: pecial item, print on demand, upcoming, backorder – usually ships in 3–6 weeks (subject to availability)

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I Give You The End Of A Golden String was commissioned in 2013, by the Royal Philharmonic Society/Britten-Pears Foundation, to celebrate the centenary of the birth of Benjamin Brittenand the bicentenary of the foundation of the Royal Philharmonic Society. The piece was first performed on 8th June 2013 by the Britten Sinfonia conducted by Ryan Wigglesworth. 'My aim when I began this piece was to create a long length of string music out of a single strand of melody.While experimenting at the beginning, shaping and extending a melody in many possible directions, I cameacross William Blake’s lines… I give you the end of a golden string; Only wind it into a ball, It will lead you in at Heaven’s gate, Built in Jerusalem’s wall …and this became my working method, winding a single tune around itself so that it gradually formed itselfinto a much richer, more complex texture. The process happens three times, producing the equivalent of acontinuous three-movement concerto.The ‘first movement’ is engendered by two solo violas (the melody at the beginning already entwined witha slightly alternative version of itself). The ‘slow movement’ (a more extended, more decorated developmentof the opening tune) is introduced by a solo cello (soon winding itself into a quartet of celli). The fast ‘finale’,led by two solo violins, focuses on decorations within the melody, rolling out ribbons of (Britten-like?) thirds.' - Judith Weir Suggested minimum strings: 8.6.4.4.2 players
Arrangement String Orchestra
Genres Post-1900
Format Study Score
NumberOfPages 44
Media Sheet Music
Publisher Chester Music
Contributors Weir, Judith (Composer)
Language English