Vinao-Formas del Viento-Version 1 FULL SCORE ONLY-V/M/FL - Product Information
Alejandro Vinao's Formas Del Viento was commissioned by a consortium of players and the Festival Cervantino. There are 2 versions of this piece - this version contains the SCORE ONLY to Version 1 that is for flute and 1 percussionist (playing the vibes and marimba parts).The percussion part in version 1 of Formas del Viento is written for vibraphone and marimba stacked, making an enormous double keyboard played by one percussionist. The two instruments may be stacked in two possible configurations.
"In the first movement of this piece I tried to achieve an effect of outward simplicity. A tune or melodic cell with a certain 'groove' repeats itself, time after time, subjected only to what appears to be just minor variations. I imagine my audience listening to the Dance of the Nigh Wind with a certain abandon. And as the structure and rhythms get more complex the listener might just sink into them without expecting great tension or drama to unfold. In this sense this movement is unlike most of my music where the complexity of the form and local syntax is apparent.
I was not seeking simplicity, which is not much, but what Jorge Luis Borges has described as 'secret complexity', a feeling that there are more layers to a discourse than it appears to be and that we are happy to let that underlying complexity remain in the background.
In the second movement I return to one of my favorite themes: the preoccupation with polyrhythms and their ability to give the impression or create the illusion that more than one time is going on at the same time. Here the influence of Nancarrow and Ligeti is never far."
A.V. 2008
"In the first movement of this piece I tried to achieve an effect of outward simplicity. A tune or melodic cell with a certain 'groove' repeats itself, time after time, subjected only to what appears to be just minor variations. I imagine my audience listening to the Dance of the Nigh Wind with a certain abandon. And as the structure and rhythms get more complex the listener might just sink into them without expecting great tension or drama to unfold. In this sense this movement is unlike most of my music where the complexity of the form and local syntax is apparent.
I was not seeking simplicity, which is not much, but what Jorge Luis Borges has described as 'secret complexity', a feeling that there are more layers to a discourse than it appears to be and that we are happy to let that underlying complexity remain in the background.
In the second movement I return to one of my favorite themes: the preoccupation with polyrhythms and their ability to give the impression or create the illusion that more than one time is going on at the same time. Here the influence of Nancarrow and Ligeti is never far."
A.V. 2008
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