Daryl Jamieson

composer

concerto haboku / コンチェルト破墨 (2012)
Genre / ジャンル
Piano concerto / ピアノ協奏曲
Instrumentation / 編成
3.3.3.3, 4.3.3.1, timp, 2perc, 2 harp, pf, 30.12.10.8
Duration / 演奏時間
10 minutes / 10分
Other information / 他の情報
This piece is a piano concerto arrangement of broken ink. This version is not published or recorded. Contact the composer for further information.
Programme Note
My concerto haboku for piano and large orchestra was inspired by my first encounter with the 15th century Japanese artist Sesshu’s haboku (broken ink) paintings. These scrolls are painted with broad, abstract monochromatic brushstrokes on a background of delicate washes. The rough strokes are meant to evoke landscape, but to my eyes, appeared so abstracted as to look more like ‘action’ paintings of the early 1950s, especially those by Franz Kline.
Taking these paintings as inspiration, I wrote a piece which, like Sesshu’s haboku works, is viewed from the bottom up: the piece is one long ascent, with the rougher strokes in the bass and the delicate washes soughing in the treble background, while the resonances floating through the space connect the disparate parts into a unified whole. Against what are often large blocks of sound coming from the orchestra, the piano soloist functions as a subjective interpreter of the different orchestral masses: now questioning, now mimicking, now looking forward, now recalling. Drawing further on Japanese tradition, the broad harmonic outlines of the piece are based on the standard chords that the shō plays in gagaku orchestral music, and the melodic material is based on Japanese flute scales.