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Alex Burns

Blogs

Arturo Márquez ‘Conga del Fuego’: A Fiery Dance

Arturo Márquez: Conga del Fuego Context Arturo Márquez was born in Sonora, Mexico in 1950. Surrounded by a musical family, Márquez studied composition with the likes of Federico Ibarra, Hector Quintanar, and Joaquín Gutierrez Heras. His use of Latin American styles in his music makes Márquez a highly popular composer Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years5 years ago
Blogs

Maurice Ravel ‘Boléro’: Rousing Repetition!

Maurice Ravel: Boléro Context Composed originally as a ballet that was commissioned by the Russian actress Ida Rubinstein, Maurice Ravel’s orchestral work Boléro is his most famous composition. Before composing Boléro in 1928, Ravel had composed music for ballets including suites for ballet and full large-scale ballet scores. For instance Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years5 years ago
Blogs

Ralph Vaughan Williams ‘In the Fen Country’: Desolate Marshlands

Ralph Vaughan Williams: In the Fen Country Context Inspired by the fairly bleak and desolate East Anglian marshland, Ralph Vaughan Williams’ In the Fen Country is one of his earliest orchestral works. The Fens, known for being flat and dull, was an interesting, and perhaps unusual inspiration for Vaughan Williams. Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years4 years ago
Blogs

Alexander Glazunov ‘Oriental Rhapsody’: Victory and Celebration

Alexander Glazunov: Oriental Rhapsody Context Composed in 1889, Alexander Glazunov’s Oriental Rhapsody was one of many orchestral works by Russian composers that took great inspiration from East Asia. This vein of Russian exoticism is also seen in works by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Alexander Borodin and Igor Stravinsky. The five-movement work is Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years ago
Blogs

Hildur Guðnadóttir ‘Bathroom Dance’: Ritual Transitions

Hildur Guðnadóttir: Bathroom Dance Context In 2018, Icelandic composer Hildur Guðnadóttir was announced as the composer for the 2019 thriller, The Joker. Alongside Director Todd Phillips, Guðnadóttir composed a lot of the music based on her reactions to filmed scenes and script ideas. Guðnadóttir was allowed to flex her creative Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years4 years ago
Blogs

Franz Liszt ‘Liebestraum No.3’: The Purest Kind of Love

Franz Liszt: Liebestraum No.3 Context Franz Liszt was born in 1811 in Hungary, into an already well-established musical family. His father, Adam Liszt, had been in service for Prince Nikolaus II Esterházy. This meant he was in direct contact with prolific composers such as Haydn, Beethoven and Hummel. Liszt was an Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years5 years ago
Blogs

Ralph Vaughan Williams ‘Prelude to 49th Parallel’: Warm Beginnings

Ralph Vaughan Williams: 49th Parallel Prelude Context Unlike in America, the British film industry in the 1930-40s did not specifically employ specialist film composers to write scores for films. Instead, popular concert composers were asked, as was the case for the 1941 war drama 49th Parallel. In 1940, conductor Muir Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years4 years ago
Blogs

Elisabetta Brusa ‘Firelights’: Celestial Sounds

Elisabetta Brusa: Firelights Context Italian-British composer Elisabetta Brusa is an award-winning musician with a wealth of experience in the music industry. Her music has been performed by some of the top orchestras in the world including the CBC Vancouver Orchestra, BBC Philharmonic, St Petersburg Symphony Orchestra, and The Women’s Philharmonic. Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years4 years ago
Blogs

Herbert Howells ‘Elegy’: A Touching Tribute

Herbert Howells: Elegy Context Herbert Norman Howells was born in Lydney, Gloucestershire on 17th October 1892. After beginning to learn piano and organ at home with his parents, Howells continued his musical studies at the prestigious Royal College of Music, London. Here, Howells studied under the likes of Hubert Parry Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years5 years ago
Blogs

Ralph Vaughan Williams ‘The Vagabond’: A Song of Travel

Ralph Vaughan Williams: The Vagabond Context Ralph Vaughan Williams’ The Vagabond was originally set for voice and piano and is part of a larger song cycle entitled Songs of Travel. Composed between 1901-1904, this was Vaughan Williams’ first major offering in the world of vocal music. Songs of Travel is Read more…

By Alex Burns, 5 years4 years ago

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