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Andrew Ardizzoia

Ardizzoia: Two Songs That Aren't What They Seem

$ 17.50
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American Composers Alliance (ACA)  |  SKU : ACA-ARDA-039  |  Code-barres: 9790600237340
  • Composer: Andrew Ardizzoia (1979-)
  • Instrumentation: Piano, Medium Voice
  • Work: Two Songs That Aren't What They Seem, Op. 69
  • Work Language: English
  • ISMN: 9790600237340
  • Size: 8.9 x 12.0 inches

Description

Composer's Note:

Over the last few years, I've become very interested in the "volta" or "turn" — the point in a poem where a significant shift in perspective or theme occurs. Hazel Hall's quietly devastating "Before Quiet" shifts not on a phrase, or even a single word, but on the "n" in the word "wooden." with this single letter the poem makes a hairpin turn from a languid, nature-inspired ode to a reassuring message from beyond the grave.

Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Spring" reads as two poems in one, alternating between two distinct voices. The first ironically questions the return of spring, while the second makes self-assured proclamations. They eventually come together in absurd, existential decay.

American Composers Alliance (ACA)

Ardizzoia: Two Songs That Aren't What They Seem

$ 17.50

Description

Composer's Note:

Over the last few years, I've become very interested in the "volta" or "turn" — the point in a poem where a significant shift in perspective or theme occurs. Hazel Hall's quietly devastating "Before Quiet" shifts not on a phrase, or even a single word, but on the "n" in the word "wooden." with this single letter the poem makes a hairpin turn from a languid, nature-inspired ode to a reassuring message from beyond the grave.

Edna St. Vincent Millay's "Spring" reads as two poems in one, alternating between two distinct voices. The first ironically questions the return of spring, while the second makes self-assured proclamations. They eventually come together in absurd, existential decay.

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