Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.lib.uom.gr/handle/2159/19224
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dc.contributor.authorConstantinides, Dinosen
dc.date.accessioned2016-04-18T16:39:30Z-
dc.date.available2016-04-18T16:39:30Z-
dc.date.issued1981el
dc.identifier.urihttp://dspace.lib.uom.gr/handle/2159/19224-
dc.description.abstractThe five movements of the Suite are played without a great deal of pause. They are distinct, however, and the movement titles indicate the moods and impressions created by the music in each one. In the first movement, Proud and Solemn, chordal sonorities in different rhythms and different registers evoke the quiet pleasure the self-absorbed youth takes in himself. The second movement is The First Kiss, the music a combination of tenderness and nervousness. The composer cautions (in fact, about the entire Suite), "Don’t tell too much. The element of surprise will be lost." The music is very clear, however, as to whether or not this episode culminates successfully. The third movement is Beginning Dancing Lessons. One feels the self-consciousness and the short concentration span of the adolescents, perhaps some frustration with the discipline of the lessons, and a surprising blue note. The fourth movement is named Clusteritis. An "-itis" denotes an illness, and the movement title and the dominant musical technique employed herein constitute a musical pun. A "cluster" is a group of tones, usually dissonances or half-steps, which are played simultaneously. Whose sickness is this? Contemporary composition cannot eschew this technique, a necessary stage in the development of harmony; the young man at his stage in life seeks compulsively to spend his time in a group of his peers, no matter how awkward. The fifth movement is Cotillion. A cotillion is an elaborate dance or formal ball, and this is the longest and most brilliant movement of the Suite. The form is ABA with a Coda. The A section is the longest, the B section recapitulating material from the previous four movements, as though the youth in his moment of joy has brought his entire personality together, despite the troublesome parts. The Coda intensifies the A material and brings the whole to a climactic conclusion. The first four movements are balanced by the much longer Cotillion, which collects and synthesizes material from the entire Suite. The composer demonstrates his affection and faith in the essential health of a young man in the musical progression he creates, from Proud and Solemn, the youth at the verge of change, through change and problems, to the celebration in the important final movement. The entire Suite becomes a paean to life and to development.en
dc.description.sponsorshipThis piece was commissioned by Daniel Sher. He premiered the work on September 14, 1980, in the Community Concerts in Baton Rouge.en
dc.format.extent181 filesen
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rightsDinos Constantinidesen
dc.subjectLRC78aen
dc.titleSuite No. 2 for orchestraen
dc.typeMusical Scoreen
dc.typeTexten
Appears in Collections:Dinos Constantinides (Works)



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