Hello everyone,
I may have mentioned a while back that I composed a piano piece that included some motifs from M6.
When posting it to YouTube in June of 2009, here is what I had to say about it: "When I think of my Lamentation in A minor, written mainly as a result of a parolizing loss in December 2008, Gustav Mahlers "Tragic" sixth symphony--also
a work in A minor--most often comes to mind. This composition--composed over a six-month period during my junior year at Willowbrook High School in Villa
Park, IL--tells the story of a friendship gone disastrously wrong, and my (at the time) unsuccessful attempts to restore it and have peace. At the end,
the music tells exactly what I faced: the most bitter form of rejection imaginable, unforgiving reality, and the realization that there was virtually no
hope of ever restoring the friendship. It is no accident that several aspects of this piece parallel Mahler 6; take, for instance, the militaristic left-and
sometimes right-hand fate motif that dominates much of my composition. Additionally, those familiar with the Finale from the sixth will undoubtedly notice
my allusion to the three (yes, all three) famous "hammer blows of fate"--growing in intensity in the case of my work. Another section of this piece that
incorporates borrowed music is the "Molto agitato" d minor theme (starting at
5:00)
before the big A minor climax (at
5:49
); this melody comes from a viola and double bass duet in the Romance movement of Serjé Prokofievs Lieutenant Kijé Suite, Op. 60. I do not usually quote
music from the works of other composers--even though I have been told that it is the highest honor one can give a fellow composer--but in this case, the
music is symbolic.
I am totally blind, thus I have composed this work entirely in my head; at some point, I plan to figure out a way to get my ideas on paper."
While the performance linked to below is not my best, it is the best one I have on video. If interested, the video can be viewed/heard here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wRSmstL-AABest regards,