Pott: Toccata
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- Composer: Francis Pott (1957-)
- Instrumentation: Organ
- Work: Toccata (1991)
- ISMN:
- Size: 9.1 x 12.0 inches
- Pages: 20
Description
"The Toccata originated as a much shorter piece, written it must be admitted under some friendly duress for a wedding (and a severely limited instrument). A year earlier I had completed the two hour cyclic Passion Symphony Christus , and it had seemed reasonable to assume that I had said my piece in terms of the organ for some time to come. However, later freedom from the constraints of the wedding organ lent the embryonic toccata a more willing life of its own, resulting eventually in the present work, which perhaps understandably revisits some of the rhythmic features of Christus but generally lends them a more straightforward optimism.
The Toccata 's broad introduction consists of a declamatory statement followed by a quieter passage. The dynamic level suddenly escalates to launch the toccata 'proper' (originally the opening of the piece). Employing irregular rhythms, a rhapsodic exposition leads to a more melodious secondary subject which shares its material with the introduction. Subsequent free development leads through a series of rhythmic paragraphs, sometimes punctuated by brief silences, to an energetic recapitulation. The second subject is heard again in the pedal part beneath fairly conventional toccata figuration before a headlong coda. Despite a mildly idiosyncratic approach to tonality and chromatic harmony, the listener may feel in B Minor as the prevailing tonic. However, the conclusion reveals the introduction's hints of another key to have been significant, and the piece ends on an unequivocal chord of F-sharp, like its more imposing cousin, Christus.
In its definitive form the Toccata received its first London performance from Gerard Brooks. It has been played widely since in the U.K., the U.S.A., Scandinavia, Australia, and the Czech Republic by James O'Donnell, Matthew Martin, Jeremy Filsell, Graham Barber, Robert Quinney, Christian Wilson, Gerard Brooks and a number of other distinguished organists. --- Francis Pott (2017)
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