Label: Soundset Recordings Item Number: SR1143 Format: CD Year Recorded: 2024 Traces Clifford Leaman Joseph Lallo - Saxophone Peter de Jager - Piano
Clifford Leaman Critics have hailed Clifford Leaman as "an artist of the first order...intuitive, exciting, and enthralling." (Paul Wagner, The Saxophone Journal) "Leaman reveals himself to be [an] artist of technical brilliance and emotional commitment." The range of colors is impressive..." (Jack Sullivan, American Record Guide) Professor of Saxophone at the University of South Carolina, Leaman is in great demand as a soloist and clinician and has performed and taught throughout the United States, South America, Canada, Europe, Australia, and Asia. Leaman has given masterclasses at numerous international saxophone conferences and leading schools of music and conservatories worldwide, including Northwestern, Eastman, Michigan, Duquesne, Bowling Green, Georgia, North Texas, Florida State, Conservatoire National Supérieur de Paris, Conservatorio Superior de Música de Aragón, Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya, Conservatoire de Boulogne- Billancourt, Conservatoire de Strasbourg, the Royal Academy of Music (Stockholm), Beijing Central Conservatory. Leaman has released four critically acclaimed compact discs of works for saxophone and piano on the Equilibrium label. He has also performed extensively with percussionist Scott Herring, giving concerts and masterclasses worldwide since 2005 as the RoseWind Duo. In addition to his work with piano and marimba, Leaman has performed as a concerto soloist with numerous Wind Ensembles and Orchestras and has recorded concerti by Brant, Bassett, and Dahl. An avid supporter of contemporary music, Dr. Leaman has commissioned and given the world premiere performances of numerous works, including concerti by William Bolcom, Leslie Bassett, Frank Ticheli, John Fitz Rogers, Stacy Garrop, and Michael Colgrass. His recording of the Bassett with the University of Michigan Symphony Orchestra is available through Equilibrium Records (EQ- 63), and his recording of the Ingolf Dahl Concerto with the USC Wind Ensemble is available on Summit (DCD 702). Dr. Leaman is an artist-clinician for and endorses Conn-Selmer, D’Addario & Co, Inc., and Key Leaves products. Joseph Lallo - Saxophone Joseph Lallo is a Senior Lecturer and Associate Director at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, University of Melbourne, and Artistic Director of the Melbourne International Saxophone Festival. Passionate about performing new Australian music, he has commissioned and premiered over 60 works for saxophone. Joseph is a member of the Australian Saxophone Quartet with Joshua Hyde, Mary Osborn, and Yo-yo Su, touring Asia and Australia in 2023 and recording their debut album, Echo Chamber. He is featured on Nat Bartsch’s album, Hope Renewed, a jazz reimagining of her groundbreaking classical release, Hope, and his 2021 ABC Classic recording with Briana Leaman and Yasmin Rowe, and other lines, was featured on both the ABC ‘Best of Australian Classical Music’ and ‘Swoon’ playlists. In 2022, Joseph completed his PhD, ‘The Performer/Curator: Expanding the Parameters of Artistic Expression and Creativity in a Concert.’ His work explores how our experience of music can serve as a model for our connection with each other and the world around us, with recent performances including Sona Eterna, Sound of Water, Aubade, What is a City? and Her Lover’s Shadow. Joseph teaches a vibrant saxophone studio at the Melbourne Conservatorium and is dedicated to fostering individual artistic expression and courageous musical exploration. He is a faculty member of the Asia Pacific Saxophone Academy in Thailand and has given masterclasses throughout Europe, North America, and Asia, including the Eastman School of Music, Duke University, Conservatoire de Strasbourg, New Zealand Saxophone Academy, and the Singapore Saxophone Symposium. A graduate of the University of Melbourne, Joseph was awarded the Catherine Grace McWilliam Bequest for achieving the highest result in his Bachelor of Music. As the winner of the Donovan-Johnston Travel Scholarship, he went on to study with Marie-Bernadette Charrier at the Bordeaux Conservatoire de Musique in France, and later completed both a Masters of Saxophone Performance and a Masters of Orchestral and Opera Conducting in Strasbourg with Philippe Geiss and Theodor Guschlbauer. Joseph is a Selmer Saxophones Artist and a D'Addario Woodwind Artist and performs on Series III Alto & Soprano Saxophones, Selmer Mouthpieces, and D'Addario Reserve Reeds. Peter de Jager - Piano Peter de Jager is one of Australia's most versatile musicians, thrilling audiences with his performances of music from award-winning Bach and Mozart to Xenakis and Chris Dench on various historical keyboard instruments, and intriguing them with his compositions, which have been performed and commissioned by Melbourne Chamber Orchestra, Speak Percussion, Astra Chamber Music Society, Arcadia Winds, and many others. He is an alumnus of the Australian National Academy of Music and the University of Melbourne, and participated three times in the Lucerne Festival Academy, directed by Pierre Boulez. He also attended the Bang on a Can Summer Institute in 2011. Major performing awards include the inaugural first prize at the 2011 Australian International Chopin Competition and runner-up in the 2016 Australian National Piano Award. Peter performed the complete works for solo Piano and Harpsichord of Xenakis at the 2017 Melbourne Festival to critical acclaim, and his performance the same year of Chris Dench's monumental 98-minute Piano Sonata, which he commissioned using funds from the prestigious Freedman Fellowship, won him Performance of the Year from the Australian Music Centre's Art Music Awards. He co-wrote and performed Reception: The Musical with Actor/Writer Bethany Simons, which delighted audiences Australia-wide and was nominated for a Greenroom Award. In 2020 he released a critically acclaimed CD of works for clarinet and piano by Brahms with long-time collaborator Lloyd Van't Hoff. He has just, in 2023, commenced a PhD at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music focusing on links between 16th and 20th century harpsichord music of Spain. Our sincerest thanks to Matthew Orlovich, Catherine Likhuta, Recorded in the Prudence Myer Studio of the lan Potter
Seventh Heaven Joseph Lallo - Soprano Saxophone Clifford Leaman - Alto Saxophone Peter de Jager - Piano Seventh Heaven was commissioned in 2021 by Clifford Leaman and Joseph Lallo. The title of the score is intended to suggest the abundantly joyful mood of the music and my fondness for using the interval of a Major 7th. The first movement (Brillante Œ = c. 120) sets the scene with a cavalcade of flourishing gestures, buoyant melodies, spiky rhythms and climactic modulations. Working as one, the three instruments aid and abet each other to create a highly energised, driven music. As if uninvited, a brief fragment of classically-inflected bitonal piano music makes its first contrasting appearance in the musical narrative, followed by a resumption of heightening tensions leading to the conclusion of the first movement. In the second movement (Fugitivo Œ = c. 108), the scene is one of shadows and light, zephyrs and wind chimes, with a central section marked Dolcissimo, con rubato. Beginning with a 9/8 time signature, the third movement (Con ritmo Œ. = c. 80) uses a motoric piano rhythm to underpin the lengthy strides of a new theme echoed between the two saxophones. After a series of modulations heighten the music’s tension, there ensues an abridged recapitulation of material from the first movement, followed by a decisive coda. Dr. Matthew Orlovich (b. 1970) is a freelance composer based in Sydney, Australia. He studied composition at the University of Sydney under the supervision of Associate Professor Eric Gross and Professor Peter Sculthorpe, gaining the degrees of BMus (1st Class Honours & University Medal) and PhD. Published by Alfred Music, Morton Music, Reed Music and Waratah Music, his catalogue of scores has garnered the interest and admiration of performers and audiences worldwide and includes music for solo instrumentalists, large and small ensembles, choirs, bands and orchestras. Highlights of the catalogue include Lo, there is light! (commissioned by The Harvard University Choir, USA), Crazy Logic for saxophone and piano (performed by Gerard McChrystal and Mary Dullea at Wigmore Hall, London), Tides of Ocean (performed by the Asia Pacific Youth Choir at Milan Expo), Aviation (performed by BBC Singers, London), Carnival Capers (commissioned by Barry Cockcroft for performance with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra at the World Saxophone Congress XVI, Scotland), Butterflies Dance (performed by Latitude 34 at the inaugural Gondwana World Choral Festival, Sydney), Flying Colours (a saxophone concerto commissioned for performance by the United States Navy Band, Washington D.C.) and Escapade (a concerto for saxophone and band performed by soloist Jérôme Laran with L’orchestre d’harmonie H2O, Toulouse, France). Matthew’s most recent contributions to the repertoire include a new saxophone and tuba work for Ensemble Phantasmagoria (Portugal), a setting of poetry by Søren Kierkegaard for soprano saxophone and choir commissioned by Brisbane Chamber Choir (QLD, Australia), a concertino commissioned for premiere performance by the Sydney Conservatorium Saxophone Orchestra with soloist Dr Michael Duke, as well as new works for Nexas Quartet (Sydney, Australia), Duo Imaginaire (Germany) and HD Duo (Sydney, Australia).
Lullaby for the Innocent Joseph Lallo - Soprano Saxophone Clifford Leaman - Alto Saxophone Peter de Jager - Piano Lullaby for the Innocent (2022) was commissioned by Clifford Leaman and Joseph Lallo for their international recording project. Around the time I was supposed to start working actively on this commission, war began in Ukraine, my homeland. On the ninth day of this war, my disabled mother died in Kyiv as a direct result of Russia’s invasion. She had suffered from multiple sclerosis for decades and needed medication, which was out of reach when Russian tanks roamed the streets of her suburb, where I grew up. She ended up running out of breath. At that time, I felt I couldn’t write about anything except my mother. She was only 60 years old when she passed, and I had to witness the process of her departure via Zoom from halfway across the world, after years of being separated from her by the Covid pandemic. Lullaby for the Innocent depicts the final goodbye to the closest person in one’s life who has suffered a long and debilitating illness. It is incredibly difficult to lose a loved one, but it is a particular experience when you have cared for that person for decades and worried about them being unable to help themselves, and when your heart ached for them every day. When they leave, there is a certain sense of relief for them because they no longer have to suffer. That relief comes with a wave of guilt and a very complex bouquet of other emotions and feelings. It is impossible to describe these with words, so I chose music instead. My mom’s father was a saxophonist, and I am a pianist. Having saxophone and piano as main voices in this piece made me think of my grandfather and me playing a sorrowful yet serene lullaby to my innocent mother, who is finally at peace. Catherine Likhuta is a Ukrainian-Australian composer, pianist and recording artist. Her music exhibits high emotional charge, programmatic nature, rhythmic complexity and Ukrainian folk elements. Catherine’s pieces have been played extensively around the world, including highly prestigious venues such as Carnegie Hall, Glyndebourne Opera House, numerous International Horn Symposiums and World Saxophone Congresses, as well as many festivals and conferences. Her works have been commissioned and performed by prominent symphony orchestras (such as Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, The Ohio State University Symphony Orchestra and Orchestra of the National Radio of Ukraine), chamber ensembles (such as Atlantic Brass Quintet, Ensemble Q, ICE, Lyrebird Brass, NU CORNO and U.S. Army Field Band Horns) and soloists (including former presidents of the North American Saxophone Alliance Griffin Campbell and the International Horn Society Andrew Pelletier). Catherine has held residencies at Tyalgum Music Festival, North Carolina NewMusic Initiative, and Universities including Missouri-Kansas City, Georgia, Ohio State, Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, Cornell, and Syracuse. She is a two-time winner of the International Horn Society Composition Contest (virtuoso division) and a recipient of several awards, including two grants from the Australia Council for the Arts. Her music can be heard on Albany, Cala, Common Tone, Equilibrium, Mark and Summit Records. Horn virtuosa Denise Tryon’s album Hope Springs Eternal featuring Catherine’s piece Vivid Dreams was awarded the 2022 American Prize in Instrumental Performance.
Traces for two alto saxophones A central tenet of Buddhist philosophy is the notion of “dependent origination” – the idea that everything is interconnected in an infinite chain of causation, that all things exist because other things exist. This idea is echoed in the scientific law of the conservation of matter and energy, which posits that both are neither created nor destroyed but only recycled and rearranged into different forms. Drawing inspiration from these concepts, Traces explores various interconnected musical ideas across four movements. Long/short rhythms manifest in numerous gestures and phrases, and musical motives and harmonies return again and again in different guises. Although the movements sound distinct from one other, they are all based on the same rearranged musical material, and their progression even echoes earlier symphonic forms. In the last movement, if then, the interconnected musical ideas are recycled one final time in a raucous, grooving burst of energy. Composer John Fitz Rogers\'s music has been performed and commissioned by ensembles, festivals, and venues such as Alarm Will Sound, Bang on a Can Marathon, Third Coast Percussion, American Modern Ensemble, Ear Taxi Festival, Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, National Cathedral, the Albany, Louisville, Charleston, and Tulsa Symphony Orchestras, South Carolina Philharmonic, New York Youth Symphony, World Saxophone Congress, Bennington Chamber Music Conference, the MATA, Rockport, Bumbershoot, Bravo! Vail, and Bowling Green festivals, Festival of New American Music, Phillips Collection Concert Series, and the College Band Directors National Association and the Percussive Arts Society national conferences. Rogers’s recordings include Once Removed, a collection of his chamber music, and Magna Mysteria, for soprano, choir, and chamber orchestra, both on Innova Recordings. Rogers has received many fellowships and awards, including those from ASCAP, New Music USA, the American Composers Forum and the Jerome Foundation, Music at the Anthology and the Mary Flagler Cary Trust, National Flute Association, MacDowell Colony, South Carolina Arts Commission, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council, as well as the Heckscher Foundation Composition Prize. A dedicated advocate for contemporary music, Rogers founded and directed the Southern Exposure New Music Series, which received a Chamber Music America / ASCAP Award for Adventurous Programming. He holds degrees in music from Cornell University, the Yale School of Music, and Oberlin College, and is a Professor of Composition at the University of South Carolina School of Music as well as composition faculty at the Vermont College of Fine Arts.
The Lily-colored Jasmine Flowers for soprano and alto saxophone Clifford Leaman - Soprano Saxophone Joseph Lallo - Alto Saxophone The Lily-colored Jasmine Flowers was commissioned by saxophonists Clifford Leaman and Joseph Lallo to whom this work is dedicated. Composed together with another work of mine “Blue Orchid Flowers on the Flowing Water” for solo harp, both pieces were inspired by Chinese folk songs about the colorful flowers. In this work, I adapted one of the most popular Chinese folksongs named “Mo Li Hua (Jasmine Flower Song)” from the Southeast Jiangnan region dated back to the 18th century. The most famous adaptation can be found in Puccini’s opera “Turandot”. This folksong depicts the purity of love by highlighting the beauty of jasmine flowers. Adapting these simple but gorgeous folksongs reflects longing for my family in the motherland as the ongoing pandemic has prevented me from going home for a long time. Lily color is often associated with femininity, compassion and love. Fang Man Fang Man, hailed as “inventive and breathtaking” by the New York Times, is a Chinese-born American composer who has been influenced by both Eastern and Western musical and literary traditions, often borrows materials and ideas from traditional Chinese operas, instrumental music, and folk music, blending them with Western techniques and forms. Her music has been performed by the San Francisco Symphony and Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra New Music Group both under the baton of maestro Esa-Pekka Salonen, as well as Camerata Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Basel Sinfonietta, American Composers Orchestra (ACO), Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra, National Orchestre de Lorraine, Minnesota Orchestra, Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, among others. In 2019-20, she was featured as the composer-in-residence with the Mannheimer Philharmoniker under maestro Boian Videnoff (Germany). She was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, Koussevitzky Foundation Commission, League of American Orchestras/ the Virginia B. Toulmin Foundation Commission, an Underwood/ACO Commission, Toru Takemitsu Award (Japan), Opera America Discovery Grant, the National Endowment for the Arts Award, among other recognitions. She has been invited to new music festivals such as the Festival d\'Aix-en-Provence, Centre Acanthes (France); Darmstadt New Music Festival, and residencies such as at the Hermitage Artist Retreat in Florida, Aldeburgh Music Centre (UK), and Civitella Ranieri Music Foundation (Italy). Fang studied with Steven Stucky and Roberto Sierra at Cornell University, where she earned a Doctor of Musical Arts degree. She also studied at IRCAM-Paris and the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing. She is currently an Associate Professor of Composition at the University of South Carolina’ School of Music.
Three Dances for soprano saxophone, alto saxophone and piano Clifford Leaman - Soprano Saxophone Joseph Lallo - Alto Saxophone Peter de Jager - Piano Three Dances was composed in 2022 for Clifford Leaman and Joseph Lallo. My long association with Clifford Leaman has been fruitful and artistically rewarding, and this composition is the third work of mine he has commissioned. I am pleased to begin my association with Joseph Lallo through this project. The rhythmic drive and spiky syncopation of funk music from the 1960s and early 70s has long influenced my rhythmic language and, though veiled, is present in the first movement, Rondo. Additional elements that comprise the movement’s fabric are the extensive use of hocket and canon as well as piano textures that are influenced by jazz or and funk drumming. The work’s harmonic language is often woven of disparate major and minor triads, either stacked or arpeggiated. The more melodic material circles but never quite lands on a firm tonal center. Elegiac in character, the Sarabande is in stark contrast to the work’s outer movements. It is almost static in character and is influenced by the gray and austere winter beaches that have moved me since childhood and have influenced other works of mine. The material for the two saxophones is almost motionless, the individual parts move mostly by step. The languid piano voice slowly closes in a quiet solo that serves as the movement’s envoi. The concluding Tarantella is an energetic moto perpetuo. It is a driven, virtuosic movement that draws upon the harmonic language of the Rondo. Here too, the techniques of hocket and canon are used throughout. After completing the Tarantella, I realized that it was influenced by the finale to the Brahms d-minor violin sonata, a work I was studying at the time. Braxton Blake was raised in Galveston, Texas, where he first studied composition and theory with Francis J. Pyle, and thereafter at the University of Houston with Michael Horvit and Thomas Benjamin, with additional concentrations in piano and conducting. He received the MM and PhD degrees from the Eastman School of Music, where he studied with Samuel Adler, Warren Benson, and Joseph Schwantner, and served as music director of the Musica Nova Ensemble. Blake has participated in various music festivals, including the Aspen Music Festival, the Bayreuth Festival, and the Dartington Festival. While living in Stuttgart, he studied composition with Milko Kelemen at the Staatliche Musikhochschule. He served as music director and toured extensively with the Erick Hawkins Dance Company, New York, as well as guest conducting appearances with Ensemble Modern, Frankfurt, Musik Fabrik, the Stuttgart Philharmonic, the San Francisco Contemporary Music Players, the South German Radio Choir, Ensemble 20, the Stuttgart Ballet, the Studio Ensemble Stuttgart, and Musica Nova Stuttgart. He has recorded extensively for the South German Radio and the labels Muza and Col Legno. Blake’s commissions include those from the Sonderjyllands Symfoniorkester (Denmark), the Galveston Symphony, the Stuttgart Philharmonic, the West German Radio (Cologne), the Stuttgart Ballet, and the University of Michigan. His works have been recorded for CD and broadcast by Southwest German Radio and can be heard on the labels Ars-Musici, Troy, and Albany. Mr. Blake is a recipient of the Wladimir and Rhoda Lakond Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Label: Soundset Recordings Item Number: SR1143 Format: CD Year Recorded: 2024 Recording Engineer: Haig Burnell Mastering Engineer: Haig Burnell Artwork Designer: Joseph Lallo Not Available | Physical CD $15.99 US
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