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Haralabos (Harry) Stafylakis

Stafylakis: The Keats Cycle

$ 35.50
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Just a Theory Press  |  SKU: 128-029-SP  |  バーコード: 9790094006842
  • Composer: Haralabos (Harry) Stafylakis (1982-)
  • Instrumentation: Piano, Baritone
  • Work: The Keats Cycle (2007)
  • Work Language: English
  • ISMN: 9790094006842
  • Size: 8.7 x 12.0 inches
  • Pages: 42

Description

The Keats Cycle, Haralabos [Harry] Stafylakis (2007) for baritone or bass-baritone and piano on poetry by John Keats (1795-1821)

Composed in the summer and fall of 2007, The Keats Cycle represents an attempt to express the pure and introspective poetry of John Keats (1795-1821) through a musical discourse that would somehow be appropriate to both Keats's 19th-century world and the composer's 21st-century one. The cycle unites five posthumous poems by Keats, as well as the poet's epitaph, in an order that creates a sense of philosophical unity and direction. The dramatic-musical interpretation of the texts traces a conceptual line from youthful idealism, through to self-doubt, self-realization, death, and finally to apotheosis.

Movements:

  1. How fever'd is the man
  2. The day is gone
  3. Why did I laugh to-night?
  4. Vocalise: Here lies one whose name was writ in water
  5. This living hand
  6. Bright star
Just a Theory Press

Stafylakis: The Keats Cycle

$ 35.50

Description

The Keats Cycle, Haralabos [Harry] Stafylakis (2007) for baritone or bass-baritone and piano on poetry by John Keats (1795-1821)

Composed in the summer and fall of 2007, The Keats Cycle represents an attempt to express the pure and introspective poetry of John Keats (1795-1821) through a musical discourse that would somehow be appropriate to both Keats's 19th-century world and the composer's 21st-century one. The cycle unites five posthumous poems by Keats, as well as the poet's epitaph, in an order that creates a sense of philosophical unity and direction. The dramatic-musical interpretation of the texts traces a conceptual line from youthful idealism, through to self-doubt, self-realization, death, and finally to apotheosis.

Movements:

  1. How fever'd is the man
  2. The day is gone
  3. Why did I laugh to-night?
  4. Vocalise: Here lies one whose name was writ in water
  5. This living hand
  6. Bright star
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