Sweet Briar Songs
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song cycle for voice and piano (2007)
poetry by Patricia Valdata
Duration: 5 minutes
16 pages
1. Moore's Garden
2. Looking for Bivalve
3. Fall Semester: First Frost
Website: www.dennistobenski.com
poetry by Patricia Valdata
Duration: 5 minutes
16 pages
1. Moore's Garden
2. Looking for Bivalve
3. Fall Semester: First Frost
Website: www.dennistobenski.com
Sweet Briar Songs
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I wrote the Sweet Briar Songs in April/May 2007, after having returned from a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Amherst VA, where I had met poet/writer Patricia Valdata. Pat had given me a copy of her chapbook Looking for Bivalve, and I was instantly drawn to the three poems used in this set of songs.
"Moore's Garden" is a quasi-recitative that opens reflectively with a meditation on a beautiful garden setting, accompanied by delicate, harp-like arpeggios. As the text and music become more lyrical, the song is interrupted at the words "but for the toad", where the voice is suddenly alone, and is only joined by a sickly accompaniment at the words "bleeding, in the snake's mouth." The descending-scale vocal line of the phrase "fully imaginary" become a unifying motive throughout the entire set.
"Looking for Bivalve" is a short, silly song. The singer is reciting absurd roadside landmarks and map markings. The triplet accompaniment suggests a car in motion on side roads, periodically slowing or stopping to check the map, which we discover at the end, isn't quite as accurate as our traveler had hoped.
"Fall Semester: First Frost" closes the cycle lyrically, describing the changing of the leaves and the season on a college campus. A little slice of life, the song ends with a quiet moment: "Through the window / pigeons watch ' my students take their exam."
"Moore's Garden" is a quasi-recitative that opens reflectively with a meditation on a beautiful garden setting, accompanied by delicate, harp-like arpeggios. As the text and music become more lyrical, the song is interrupted at the words "but for the toad", where the voice is suddenly alone, and is only joined by a sickly accompaniment at the words "bleeding, in the snake's mouth." The descending-scale vocal line of the phrase "fully imaginary" become a unifying motive throughout the entire set.
"Looking for Bivalve" is a short, silly song. The singer is reciting absurd roadside landmarks and map markings. The triplet accompaniment suggests a car in motion on side roads, periodically slowing or stopping to check the map, which we discover at the end, isn't quite as accurate as our traveler had hoped.
"Fall Semester: First Frost" closes the cycle lyrically, describing the changing of the leaves and the season on a college campus. A little slice of life, the song ends with a quiet moment: "Through the window / pigeons watch ' my students take their exam."
| Website: | http://dennistobenski.com |
| Email: | dennis@dennistobenski.com |
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| LinkedIn: | http://www.linkedin.com/in/dennistobenski |




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Aaron Alon's music has been performed around the world by such acclaimed musicians as Leone Buyse, Ian Davidson, Andrea Ceccomori, Catherine Branch, Daniel Neer, Michael Fennelly, Mark Whatley, and new music groups Sounds New and the Vientos Trio. His works have been included on three labels and awarded numer…
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