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Symphony #1 I wrote my Symphony #1 between December 1996 and September 1997. The first movement, "Underground," emerges rapidly out of silence into a humming, buzzing, clanking, nerve-jangling, terrifying tower of rhythm and sound, revealing a subway hurtling by. A closer look reveals, in stop-motion, the individual people inside this speeding object each immersed in their own silent universes of melancholy and meditation. The glimpse is too brief the subway speeds up, and with rage and terror hurtles back away into darkness and silence. The second movement, "At Night," moves up out of the earth into a single bedroom, perhaps in one of those huge towers that carpet Manhattan and the Bronx. The only sound is the relentless, unchanging ticking of a clock; a soft layer of brass chords at last brings on deep sleep. A solo clarinet, calling into the night for an answer, brings on a duet, then a trio, then a blind and obsessive quartet the brass chords return, unbearable this time then suddenly awake, in a cold sweat, with just the ticking of the clock ... The final movement, "La Aurora," brings calm at last: a sigh of low strings releases a breath of mysterious wakefulness. This is the music of the "pre-dawn", the halfway time when the darkest part of night is gone and morning has not yet arrived. The obsessive music of the second movement has stopped; here is music of relief, of hope, of complex desire, the music of a solitary city dweller gazing out into space from a silent apartment tower... Then, as the sky turns from black to blue to purple, the quiet city sounds take on their own music: a single car alarm turns into an entire symphony of the approaching dawn, first in the winds and then in the whole orchestra. The night fades away, until only a solo flute is left and the sun breaks in upon this scene of mystical calm. It makes its blinding appearance from behind a cluster of glass skyscrapers, throwing its hydrogen-white light everywhere, onto swarms of pigeons, onto fire escapes, into dirty puddles. The dawn shatters all peace, beginning another day of mindless numbers and fruitless work; and the city's people, in what is almost a funeral march for the living, stagger one by one out of their sleepless beds into a sun so blinding that, as if it were darkness, it almost blots everything out. © 2001 Gordon Beeferman. All rights reserved. |
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