Unseen Seasons
13,39 €
Digital version (+0,00 €) instant download
Printed format (+16,20 € printing and shipping). Colissimo7-14 days aprox.
When you buy a score, you can contact the composer right here!
Specifications
Region
Europe
Estimated Duration
16 - 20min
Date
2013
ISMN : 979-0-2325-1106-1
In Stock
Notes on this piece Unseen Seasons (2013)
1) In Spring, The Dawn2) In Summer, The Night3) In Autumn, The Evening4) In Winter, The Early Morning
The starting point for this composition was my attempt to re-imagine the seasons evoked so beautifully by Sei Sh?nagon at the start of The Pillow Book. Having never personally seen or experienced the seasons of 10th Century Japan – which seems a very distant, almost unreal, world – her words brought to my mind a sense of the difference between the universal familiarity of time passing through seasonal cycles, and the particular qualities of the unique instances to which she draws our attention. She seems to capture, in a few words, impressions of eternal moments, which are nevertheless long passed, having been inevitably subject to processes of change as time moves on. The wisps of trailing cloud on the mountain; the fireflies dancing in the moonlight; the songs of autumn insects; the winter fires dying down. All things I have never known, yet it is precisely the unattainability of the experiences which she describes that makes them enticing to the imagination.
Add to a playlist
- Login to create your own lists
1) In Spring, The Dawn2) In Summer, The Night3) In Autumn, The Evening4) In Winter, The Early Morning
The starting point for this composition was my attempt to re-imagine the seasons evoked so beautifully by Sei Sh?nagon at the start of The Pillow Book. Having never personally seen or experienced the seasons of 10th Century Japan – which seems a very distant, almost unreal, world – her words brought to my mind a sense of the difference between the universal familiarity of time passing through seasonal cycles, and the particular qualities of the unique instances to which she draws our attention. She seems to capture, in a few words, impressions of eternal moments, which are nevertheless long passed, having been inevitably subject to processes of change as time moves on. The wisps of trailing cloud on the mountain; the fireflies dancing in the moonlight; the songs of autumn insects; the winter fires dying down. All things I have never known, yet it is precisely the unattainability of the experiences which she describes that makes them enticing to the imagination.
Instrumentation
Choir (SATB)
Recording
Tokyo Philharmonic Chorus
Score Details
Format - A4 / US Letter
Pages - 68
Pages - 68