Orbits (viola part)
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"Orbits" is a work about musical gravity. The viola and piano behave like planetary objects engaged in a gravitational tug-of-war; they pull one another into different tempos and areas of musical material. The first conflict of the work occurs when the piano first enters, decidedly out of time with the viola, which is quickly drawn into the piano's new tempo. After a brief period of unity this rhythmic conflict returns, escalating this time and culminating in the first climax of the work. What follows is a slow, sparse meditation, devoid of rhythmic tension, that invokes the weightlessness of outer space. The instruments rotate through this sequence of musical material twice more. The work ends with both instruments vanishing into the distance; the piano's soft chords become increasingly sparse until nothing remains but resonance, while the viola, hushed by a mute, ascends so high that pitch gives way to the hiss of the bow hair.
Orbits was written in the summer of 2009. It was premiered on November 13, 2010 at the University of Chicago by violist Andrew McManus and pianist Amy Briggs.
Orbits was written in the summer of 2009. It was premiered on November 13, 2010 at the University of Chicago by violist Andrew McManus and pianist Amy Briggs.




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A native of New York City, Allen Brings received a Bachelor of Arts degree magna cum laude from Queens College and a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University, where he was a Mosenthal Fellow and a student of Otto Luening, and a doctorate in theory and composition from Boston University, where he was …
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