William Sweeney - Catalogue
http://www.scottishmusiccentre.com/william_sweeney/
Catalogue
Nine Days....: Piobaireachd (1976)
Programme Note available
William Sweeney
First performance:
Alan Hacker, Aberdeen, 01 Jan 1977
Recording BBC (off air recording) / location: sound archive - C - XZ 10 a ii [enquire]
Score : Scottish Music Publishing / Location: ref library [enquire]
Score : Scottish Music Publishing / Location: archive collection - Box 5 [enquire]
View performance history...
William Sweeney
First performance:
Alan Hacker, Aberdeen, 01 Jan 1977
Work Details
Category: instrumental
Instrumentation: Cl
Instrumentation: Cl
SMC Holdings
Programme Note
This piece uses the form of the piobaireachd - the Great Music of the Highland Bagpipes. It is simply a melody repeated with variations of a decorative nature, although in this piobaireachd changes in tone colour and melodic outline are also made. The figureation is not derived from the bagpipe but from the clarinet - using 'fake' fingerings for fast groups of grace notes and some devices usually associated with the 'avant-garde' (harmonic 'chords' etc).
The title is a reference to the nine days of the General Strike - the composition of the piece coincided with the 50th anniversary of that event. Piobaireachd is epic in style and this seemed to me relevant to the heroism and creativity displayed by the strikers. The work is dedicated to Alan Hacker.
This piece uses the form of the piobaireachd - the Great Music of the Highland Bagpipes. It is simply a melody repeated with variations of a decorative nature, although in this piobaireachd changes in tone colour and melodic outline are also made. The figureation is not derived from the bagpipe but from the clarinet - using 'fake' fingerings for fast groups of grace notes and some devices usually associated with the 'avant-garde' (harmonic 'chords' etc).
The title is a reference to the nine days of the General Strike - the composition of the piece coincided with the 50th anniversary of that event. Piobaireachd is epic in style and this seemed to me relevant to the heroism and creativity displayed by the strikers. The work is dedicated to Alan Hacker.
