Kevin Puts "Arcana"

Page 1


Kevin Puts Arcana

for solo violoncello, two violins, two violas and violoncello (2008) Full Score

© 2008 by UMP Classics & Screen (BMI) International Copyright Secured. All Rights Reserved. RNY 1364/01 ISMN 979-0-073-00110-3

Warning : Unauthorized reproduction of this publication is prohibited by Federal law, and subject to criminal prosecution.

PROGRAM NOTE

Each night on the Hawaiian island of Maui, the immense volcano Haleakala sleeps soundly by the light of moon until around three AM when several dozen tourists create an unbroken parade of headlights along the long and winding drive to the summit. The sunrise as witnessed from here was described by Mark Twain as one of the “sublimest spectacles” of his life, and what it reveals is equally remarkable.

In absolute silence above the cloud layer below, a Martian terrain of red dust and oddly-placed meteoric-looking rock plays host to a number of arcane sights: the ‘ahinahina (silversword) plant must have been even more alien to the ancient Hawaiians who presumably had nothing else silver in their lives. It lives for 50 years and only flowers once, then dies. Exotic birds such as petrels, honeycreepers, and the rare nene (Hawaiian goose) squawk about. At the bottom of the enormous crater, giant cinder cones rise up like something out of the old Star Trek episodes. But as the eye continues along to the east towards the town of Hana, the austerity of dust and hardened lava gives way to a scene of almost impossible beauty, a tumbling waterfall of clouds pouring endlessly over the crater’s rim and dissolving into thin air.

Arcana was commissioned by the string sextet Concertante as a feature for Alexis Pia Gerlach, one of the group’s cellists. It was premiered on January 31, 2009 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

duration: ca. 11 minutes

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.