Through the trees

OMP068

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Orpheus Music

Composer: Lea - Beverley

Instrumentation: Bass

Period/genre: Australian Contemporary

Grade: Moderate

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*Contemporary Piece.* Strongly rhythmic piece that works well on the bass.

1. Through the trees

_Part 2 pp._

  • Reviews
  • OMP068 Beverley Lea Through the Trees

    The bass recorder is not normally considered a solo instrument, so it is always interesting to find a solo piece written for it.  The Australian composer, Beverley Lea, wrote her first two works for solo tenor recorder before writing "Through the Trees" for solo bass in 2001.

    The piece is in three contiguous sections.  The first, in 6/8, is sprightly and rhythmic and needs to be played at the composer's recommended speed of crotchet=120 to be effective.  This gives way to a more reflective section in ¾ which meanders along gently to return to the original 6/8 material for the final section.

    The work is not very taxing for competent bass players, but might be of interest if only because it is a bass solo. 

    Janice Ormerod, The Recorder Magazine, Spring 2002

    OMP068 Beverly Lea Through the Trees

    Beverly Lea lives in Armidale NSW, Australia and has composed several other works for recorders.

    This work is technically about grade 4 AMEB but is musically more challenging.

    Through the Leavesdevelops a catchy melodic fragment in the Dorian mode. The composer uses an interesting combination of time signatures 6/8, 3/4, 2/4 that explore a whole variety of rhythmic patterns creating a wonderful poetic kind of sprung rhythm.  There is a slower middle section with lovely shifting tonality that leads back to a recapitulation of the first section.  This piece presents a moderate rhythmic challenge to a competent intermediate level player. The middle section requires good breath control and musical sensitivity to reveal the beauty of the melodic line.  Highly recommended!

    Once again I must congratulate Orpheus Music for these excellent publications, which are meticulously prepared and beautifully presented.

    Bernard Wells, Cinnamon Sticks Vol 4, No2.

    OMP099 Donald Bousted New Horizon: Five Easy Pieces for Alto Recorder and Piano or Harpsichord

    OMP084 Lance Eccles Moonlit Garden

    OMP068 Beverley Lea Through the Trees

    OMP079 Richard Peter Maddox Birthday Piece

    Based in Australia, a country where there is a thriving recorder culture, Orpheus Music has provided a steady and welcome stream of editions of music for recorder in many different styles for several years now. These four new editions provide a cross-section of the publisher's offerings.

    All four of these works feature intriguing titles that make frequent reference to nature. Through the Trees and Moonlit Garden are most obviously evocative, although two of the five short pieces in Donald Bousted's New Horizon are similarly titled "Floating Through Mist" and "Boats on a Painted Sea."

    Beverlev Lea's Through the Trees for solo bass recorder is described as a "strongly rhythmic piece," and the main theme is in a striding 6/8 with interjections in 2/4 and 3/4 - certainly suggesting a good brisk walk in the woods. A more cantabile middle section provides an effective contrast and makes a satisfying ABA structure for the work. The piece makes good use of both the jolly bassoon-like character of the bass recorder as well as its ability to sing in the upper register. The piece is quite approachable both musically and technically, and would be especially rewarding for an intermediate player wanting to explore the finer points of playing the bass.

    Moonlit Garden is a more conventional piece. The texture throughout is made up of gently rocking broken chords in the piano supporting a sustained melody in the soprano recorder. There is a middle section that changes key and mood somewhat, though still adhering to the same basic texture, and a coda that brings the piece to a close in four flats and in the recorder's high register. While the overall effect is attractive, the recorder is not really used to its best advantage, and some of the harmonic transitions are not as convincing as they might be. This will be for the curious and those who would enjoy the piece's uncomplicated directness of expression.

    Richard Peter Maddox's Birthday Piece paints a picture of a different sort. Maddox is a composer and educator residing in Armidale who describes his piece as having been "written for Karyn Ashley [perhaps one of his students] whose ambition is to find music that is as difficult and fast as possible." The piece starts and ends in a slow, improvisatory mood, framing a fast-moving, jazzy dance that features plenty of accidentals and leaping sixteenths. While catering nicely to the taste of the dedicatee (one can easily envision her delightedly practising her birthday present), there is a certain awkwardness to some of the figures in the dance and in the greatly contrasting moods of the three sections. The piece is probably best considered as a challenging, yet engaging, study in quick-note motion.

    The most substantial of the pieces here, and the most difficult is Donald Bousted's collection New Horizon subtitled "five easy pieces for alto recorder and piano or harpsichord". For a composer best-known for his microtonal writing, these might well be considered easy pieces, but in the course of this collection performers will encounter passages of two against three against four between the two hands of the piano and the recorder, syncopated eighths and sixteenths at a crotchet = 108, as well as some very precise dynamic balances between the recorder and piano.  All of these challenges are well worth conquering, however, since Bousted's ear for colour and texture is very acute and is put to good use here. Despite the stated option of using harpsichord, the piano is really necessary to make the most of the keyboard part.

    The presentation of these editions is clear and attractive with just a couple of missing cautionary accidentals in the recorder part of the Bousted.

    Scott Paterson, American Recorder, March 2004

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