Flute Solo - Level 5 - Digital Download
SKU: A0.533567
Composed by Carson Cooman. Concert,Contemporary,Standards. Individual part. 18 pages. Musik Fabrik Music Publishing #3022373. Published by Musik Fabrik Music Publishing (A0.533567).
I. Caprice
II. Folk Arabesques
III. March
IV. Aria and Interludes
V. Hootenanny at the Gates of Heaven
Sonata in memoriam Daniel Pinkham (2007) for flute was written for and is dedicated to flutist Fenwick
Smith. The work was written in memory of American composer Daniel Pinkham (1923-2006) – a composer
whose music, advocacy, and personal support meant a great deal to me over the years I knew him.
Throughout his distinguished career as a composer, keyboard performer (on harpsichord and organ),
teacher, and conductor, Dan Pinkham served as an inspiration for countless American composers and
musicians.
I had planned to write a solo flute sonata for a few years and made many sketches towards such a work. In
early 2007, reflecting on Dan’s passing in December 2006, I threw out everything I already had and began
anew, conceiving the work both as a tribute to Dan and a piece for his close friend and frequent
collaborator Fenwick Smith.
The five movements of the work each explore ongoing transformation of their opening materials. Though
there are elegiac moments in the work, the tone throughout is zestfully celebratory, with touches of humor,
representing Pinkham’s irrepressible and memorable wit.
The first movement, Caprice, flies through a series of arpeggio figurations in changing modes (often a
different mode “going up†from “coming downâ€).
The second movement, Folk Arabesques, is based on a Kentucky folk ballad, “John Riley.†The unusual leaps
in the original melody and its modal shifts are explored in the surrounding commentaries, which take
combine bits of the folk ballad with arabesque figurations.
The third movement, March, leaps through the total chromatic spectrum. Though the march is a form often
ignored by American composers, Pinkham often employed such sections and rhythms in his own music.
The fourth movement, Aria and Interludes, uses a common Pinkham form—where the basic musical
dialogue (in this case a straightforward ‘aria’ melody in G minor) is interrupted by “interludes†of
contrasting nature. In the case of this movement, it is gradually revealed that the interludes are altered
versions of the aria material.
The fifth and final movement, Hootenanny at the Gates of Heaven, is a joyous romp, combining together both
the chromatic/modal shifts of the earlier movements with pentatonic figurations and melodies in the spirit
of American folk fiddling.