Crimson (2006)
Genre / ジャンル
Music Theatre
Instrumentation / 編成
Mezzo-soprano, Baritone
clarinet, horn, viola, cello
clarinet, horn, viola, cello
Duration / 演奏時間
15 minutes
Text / テクスト
Text in Japanese by Natsume Sōseki, in English by Sir Thomas Malory, and anonymous text in Old French
Other information / 他の情報
Premièred 6 May 2006, Sir Jack Lyons Hall, University of York, by the New York Ensemble
Score available for purchase (pdf or printed copy) from the Canadian Music Centre.
Programme Note
Crimson began life in 2004 as a piece for two singers, three dancers and three instruments. The scenario was developed jointly with the choreographer Harriet Macauley to abstractly convey the emotions involved in a love triangle in which no one gets what they want. We chose to tell the story with four different texts in four archaic languages, each of which tells a different aspect of the same, archetypal story. Though the music had been composed and rehearsals got underway, the dancers were unable to stay with the project and I was left with about 8 minutes of music and no prospect of performance. Fast-forward two years. Having become increasingly interested in film as a medium for art, I decided that it would be a good idea to rewrite Crimson as a soundtrack for a silent film, an idea I proposed to the Cinematography Society at the University of York. Nezih Savaskan took up the project, and spent a year shooting footage, while I completely rewrote the score, keeping the best of what I had written two years earlier, while adding material and reworking it to suit my current artistic ideas.
The piece was premiered on 6 May 2006, accompanied by Nezih Savaskan’s film. However, I do not view that as the definitive version of the piece. The score is finished, but I envisage that this piece could be performed with any number of different accompaniments: dance, film, or anything else.
The piece was premiered on 6 May 2006, accompanied by Nezih Savaskan’s film. However, I do not view that as the definitive version of the piece. The score is finished, but I envisage that this piece could be performed with any number of different accompaniments: dance, film, or anything else.