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Judith Weir

Weir: Planet

¥5,800
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Chester Music  |  SKU: CH88386  |  Barcode: 9798350145083
  • Composer: Judith Weir (1954-)
  • Format: Full Score
  • Instrumentation: Chamber Orchestra
  • Work: Planet (2024)
  • ISBN: 9798350145083
  • Size: 9.1 x 12.0 inches
  • Pages: 48

Description

PLANET is a set of three short orchestral pieces inspired by views of our planet, and galaxy, photographed from outer space. These are: (1) "The blue marble"/Apollo 17 (2) "The pale blue dot"/Voyager 1 (3) Cluster NGC 6355 /Hubble Space Telescope

Musically, the three movements are primarily studies in texture and harmony. (1) explores a wide, almost- static set of chords (2) a dark, thin atmosphere, briefly illuminated towards the end by shafts of sound (3) a dense collision of instrumental groups, eventually forming a rich harmonic mass .It may seem strange to have explored such a huge, cosmic subject by means of a smallish Mozart-sized orchestra. My inspiration here was a visit to the ingenious Eise Eisinga Planetarium at Franeker in the Netherlands (completed in 1781, and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.) Built in the sitting room ceiling of a modestly sized house, and operated by a clockwork-style mechanism in the loft, it accurately represents the changing positions of the earth, sun, moon and five neighbouring planets, in real time.

Chester Music

Weir: Planet

¥5,800

Description

PLANET is a set of three short orchestral pieces inspired by views of our planet, and galaxy, photographed from outer space. These are: (1) "The blue marble"/Apollo 17 (2) "The pale blue dot"/Voyager 1 (3) Cluster NGC 6355 /Hubble Space Telescope

Musically, the three movements are primarily studies in texture and harmony. (1) explores a wide, almost- static set of chords (2) a dark, thin atmosphere, briefly illuminated towards the end by shafts of sound (3) a dense collision of instrumental groups, eventually forming a rich harmonic mass .It may seem strange to have explored such a huge, cosmic subject by means of a smallish Mozart-sized orchestra. My inspiration here was a visit to the ingenious Eise Eisinga Planetarium at Franeker in the Netherlands (completed in 1781, and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.) Built in the sitting room ceiling of a modestly sized house, and operated by a clockwork-style mechanism in the loft, it accurately represents the changing positions of the earth, sun, moon and five neighbouring planets, in real time.

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