classical music

Earth Slips Beneath You by Maddy Wildman (World Premiere) | Vanguard Live

New Year, New Music! We're happy to finally share with you the premiere performance of Maddy Wildman's Earth Slips Beneath You from our concert in October 2021.

Maddy's piece is an exploration of anxiety and how it often lives in the background, but can pile up over time, eventually spilling over. To capture that feeling, this piece is often intentionally unnerving, from the crunchy harmonies, to the quarter-step intervals in the upper voices, to the gradual climb in pitch over the course of the piece. Eventually, we arrive at the final build to the apex of the piece, aptly marked "Unleash the Screaming Baby" in the score, with the oboe and clarinet wailing in the stratosphere while the lower voices honk and rumble away. After all of this sound finally bubbles over, we're left in a more tranquil state, with the bass clarinet finishing the piece out.

Maddy proudly reports in her notes about this piece that the stressful and anxious feelings that inspired this piece have become less frequent and intense than when she originally wrote it in 2019. We were so glad to finally be able to perform it!

Threepenny Suite by Kurt Weill | Vanguard Live @ Ypsilanti Freighthouse

The Threepenny Opera is a play by Bertolt Brecht with music by Kurt Weill, inspired by jazz and German dance music of the 1920s. The Overture opens the play, and it sounds like Weill drew more upon European classical music, especially in the fugue-like section in the middle. "Mack the Knife" serves as a prologue to the play, introducing the main character Macheath. The song has become a jazz standard, recorded by artists like Bobby Darin, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, and Frank Sinatra.

These two movements are selections from a suite from the opera, arranged by Raaf Hekkema of the Calefax Reed Quintet.

VanguardTV: Mack the Knife by Kurt Weill

The Threepenny Opera is a play by Bertolt Brecht with music by Kurt Weill, inspired by jazz and German dance music of the 1920s. "Mack the Knife" serves as a prologue to the play, introducing the main character Macheath. The song has become a jazz standard, recorded by artists like Bobby Darin, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, and Frank Sinatra.

The version we're playing here is from an arrangement of a suite from the opera by the fine folks at the Calefax Reed Quintet. The melody gets passed around the ensemble and the accompaniment in each iteration changes the character, from cutesy and cheeky to bombastic and dramatic.

We hope you enjoy and we can't wait to perform this for you in person soon!

VanguardTV: 32 Etudes for Clarinet, No. 1 by Cyrille Rose

As I was teaching this etude to one of my students recently, I couldn’t help but think how much I love the Rose 32 Etudes for Clarinet. Etude #1 from these studies is near and dear to my heart because it was one of the first pieces of music that drove me to falling in love with being an artist.

This short study not only teaches you the mechanics of the instrument: how to go from low to high, loud to soft, up and down. It teaches you expression, how to play with rhythm, and how to be an artist. I always tell my students that these studies are there for you to experiment, learn, and create art. Isn’t that what making music should be about?

I wish that there was a recording of middle school Mickayla playing this etude somewhere… I think she would love to hear today Mickayla’s rendition!

VanguardTV: Troubadour by Daniel Zlatkin

In the early months of the pandemic, Daniel Zlatkin reached out to me as he was revising his work for solo oboe and offstage cello, Troubadour. Some of you may remember that Daniel and I worked together before on his piece for Vanguard, Out of Bodies! Troubadour's two movementsshow a great contrast in the capabilities of the oboe, from fast passages and multiphonics in the first movement to beautiful lyrical lines in the second movement.

Here are Daniel's notes about the piece:

The oboist takes on the role of a mysterious troubadour. While the first movement is both joking and sinister, the second is a goodbye. The musician's ancient and grinning spirit fades into oblivion. An invisible companion aids his final journey.

Big thanks to Daniel Kaler for providing the "offstage" cello in the second movement!

~ Sagar



VanguardTV: Song for the Lonely by William Grant Still

Raindrops, soft from the mist
Disturb the stillness of my thoughts
Raindrops, soft from the mist
Beat down

A bird note breaks, the all pervading hush
A ray of moonlight cuts a darkness
No footstep comes along a rebel highway
Not the sound of a stone displaced

Soft raindrops, fresh from the mist
Dull the pain of loneliness
Soft raindrops, fresh from the mist
Beatdown

Raindrops, unceasing, they bring again the breath of a presence
Raindrops insistent they bring again the long lost dream

Raindrops raindrops unending they fall into my soul…
Into my heart and mingle with my tears

This piece is hauntingly beautiful. William Grant Still creates the perfect sonic interpretation of loneliness, something I’m sure a lot of us felt this past year. It sucks to be lonely, but if you can change your perception of what it means to be lonely you can make good use of your ME* time. There’s always time for self-reflection, solo dance parties, and naps when you’re alone, so it doesn’t always have to be a bad thing. Next time you’re feeling lonely go for a walk, treat yourself to ice cream, visit a cat/dog shelter, just do something other than staring off into space for hours on end (unless you actually enjoy that, then go ahead and do you), but make the most out of your ME time!

VanguardTV: Preludio from Violin Partita No. 3, BWV 1006 by J.S. Bach

I’ve always loved the cheerful Preludio of J.S. Bach’s third partita for solo violin. I was inspired to arrange it for Vanguard Reed Quintet after hearing a fantastic recording by the Masato Kumoi Sax Quartet. The quartet’s bold and symphonic reimagining of Bach’s solo piece struck me, and I couldn’t wait to hear what it sounded like for reed quintet. I soon discovered that this arrangement was based largely on Rachmaninoff’s arrangement for solo piano. Not only that, but Bach had re-tooled the bubbly opening theme himself as the instrumental overture to his Cantata BWV 29. This arrangement is based closely on Rachmaninoff’s version for solo piano, but I’ve borrowed ideas from a few other arrangements and added some flair of my own.

It’s been a long, difficult year without live music and without the ability to gather with friends and family. Listening to this piece always lifts my spirits, and I hope this little arrangement can bring some joy and optimism as we look forward to gathering again. Enjoy!

VanguardTV: Splinter, II. Sugar Maple by Marc Mellits

"Sugar Maple," the second movement of Splinter by Marc Mellits, is another one of our favorite movements from this piece. This movement especially highlights the reed quintet's ability to sound homogeneous. From the beginning, the bassoon and bass clarinet play alternating patterns that create a composite texture. The saxophone and clarinet at first join in with interjections but then also fall into the texture set up by the bass instruments. When the oboe enters, it's something completely different, with a soaring melody over the other instruments' perpetual motion. "Sugar Maple" is an excellent exercise in blending, and it's a fun and energetic movement that we love playing! We hope you enjoy it!

VanguardTV: Hommage à Manuel de Falla by Béla Kovács

Béla Kovács, a famous Hungarian clarinetist, wrote a set of nine short pieces for clarinet that are an homage to some of the most influential composers to classical music today. They were originally intended to be pieces of study for his students, but now are widely played as part of clarinetists’ concert programs around the world.

Hommage à Manuel de Falla is a tribute to the great Spanish composer Manuel de Falla, who is known for his exciting Spanish dance-like rhythms and folk melodies.

Like many of us, I have found it extremely difficult to stay motivated with playing my instrument during the pandemic…. Returning to this piece from my past has given me an outlet of creativity and expression that I hope you can enjoy!