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10.12.2024 SNR Morris Program Notes

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Program Notes Concert Scherzo, Alexander Arutiunian (1920-2012) Alexander Arutiunian was an Armenian composer. He studied composition at the Komitas Conservatory in Yerevan, Armenia and at the the Moscow Conservatory. Afterwards, he was music director of the Armenian Philharmonic and taught at the Yerevan Conservatory while composing. Arutiunian is most well known for his Concerto in A-flat Major for trumpet, written in 1950. The Concert Scherzo was written in 1955 for trumpet and symphony orchestra. It is a playful presto featuring articulated moving phrases and a typical ABA structure.

Concerto in Eb, Johann Baptist Georg Neruda (1708-1780) Johann Baptist Georg Neruda was a Czech composer, violinist, and cellist of the classical era. He performed and conducted in Prague and Germany until becoming music director of the Dresden court orchestra. Neruda's compositional output included a number of symphonies and instrumental concertos, most notably, the Concerto in Eb for trumpet. In the modern era, this work is consistently performed on Bb or Eb trumpet, being more idiomatic for the latter. The work itself adheres strictly to its tonality, due to the capabilities of the instrument at the time, and the "proper" treatment of music for the era. It is highly contrapuntal and often features ornamentation that is characteristic of the time period.

Cantabile et Scherzetto, Philipe Gaubert (1879-1941) Philipe Gaubert was a French flautist, conductor, and composer. He studied at the Paris Conservatoire and had a prominent career performing in and conducting the Paris Opera, and teaching at the Paris Conservatoire. Cantabile et Scherzetto is Gaubert's only work for cornet and is split into two movements, though it is only one work. The cantabile features delicate leaping lines and emphasizes dissonance to embolden the phrase. The Scherzetto features rushing articulated triplets with a a brief lyrical intermission.

Concerto in F Minor, Oskar Böhme (1870-1938) Oskar Böhme was a German composer and trumpeter. He studied these professions at the Leipzig Conservatory of Music and pursued performance in the Budapest Opera Orchestra and the Mariinsky Theatre. Bohme composed forty six works and the Concerto in F Minor is his best known piece. He wrote in the Romantic style of music and primarily wrote for trumpet and other brass instruments. The first movement of the Concerto in F Minor features a moderate tempo with vast leaps and a high degree of technical demand. The constant sextuplet descents, two octave arpeggios, and the double tonguing passages are a few facets of the challenge in this work.


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10.12.2024 SNR Morris Program Notes by WCU Wells School of Music - Issuu