My Lyric Passages for Oboe and String Trio was performed on April 21 at Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. The ten minute, three movement work was performed by Oboist Howard Niblock and colleagues at Lawrence’s Conservatory of Music. Mr. Niblock reports that the work was well performed and ‘warmly received’ by the audience.
Author: Jay Vosk
Announcing Free Flights for Solo Trumpet
Free Flights for Solo Trumpet.
I am pleased to announce the availability of my Free Flights for Solo Trumpet. Below are my comments regarding the piece:
One advantage of writing a work for a solo instrument is that the instrument doesn’t need to justify itself in a texture with other instruments. Thus the instrument can function freely, much like a hawk floats through the sky or a person on a hand glider floats freely through the air. Free Flights for Solo Trumpet is in four brief movements each in reference to the movement of a body through the air.
In I. ‘Floating freely’. I try to capture the motion of a glider floating lightly through the air. In 2, ‘With velocity’, is in reference to a jet streaking through the sky. ‘With Repose’ refers to the flight of a raptor such as a hawk effortlessly riding the thermals on a summer afternoon. The piece ends with ‘Fleeting’. Here I imagine a flock of doves rushing home as the sun sets at days end. Free Flights is around 8:30 minutes in length.
Here is a sample page so you may get a quick peek at the piece:
Freedom Flights – Tpt. samp.-PDF
Kindly contact me to purchase a full score of Free Flights: jvosk@cox.net
Bridging the Gap for Piccolo, Tuba and Piano
Coming in June… My Bridging the Gap for Piccolo, Tuba and Piano will be premiered by John Manning, Professor of Tuba at the University of Iowa and friends. Stay tuned for details!
Works in Progress
There are three works of mine now in progress. I just began a piece for solo bass clarinet which I anticipate will be in three or four contrasting movements. The bass clarinet is a wonderful instrument to write for. I love it’s deep, rich lower register and and there is something endearing about its shrill upper register.In the hands of an accomplished player,the instrument can jump nimbly from one register to the next. I like, for example, the way a pair of bass clarinets fly up and down in arpeggiated figures in Stravinsky’s Right of Spring.
My chamber orchestra piece is proceeding well. I’m just about at the halfway point and hope to be able to finish the work by the end of the summer. And summer is central to the piece. Summer in the desert is the time when the light is at it’s brightest. June is the month when the ‘dry heat’ seems to envelop you and the sky is perpetually blue. When July rolls around,clouds begin to billow up over the mountains. There is a gentle rumbling of distant thunder and the summer rains are lurking in the wings ready to make their dramatic appearance. A sinister scherzo unfolds in the second half of the work and a rumbling set of timpani is about ready to make its entrance.
After a number of attempts, my Tenor Saxophone, Marimba piece finally seems to be on solid footing. I hope to give you a progress report in a few weeks.