'Then the Rocks on the Mountain Began to Shout'
for 5 mixed voices or a cappella chorus
by Lukas Foss
A Cappella - Sheet Music

Item Number: 22697512
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Chamber Music Mezzo-soprano, alto voice, baritone voice bass voice, soprano 1, soprano 2, tenor voice

SKU: CF.V2510

For 5 mixed voices or a cappella chorus. Composed by Lukas Foss. Performance Score. Carl Fischer Music #V2510. Published by Carl Fischer Music (CF.V2510).

ISBN 9781491165546. UPC: 680160924547.

“…then the rocks on the mountain began to shout.” —Charles Ives(Lukas Foss, V2510)As a composer, Lukas Foss (1922–2009) was fluent with a variety of different mediums, including works for orchestra, chamber ensembles, solo instruments and voices. He eagerly explored a wide variety of twentieth-century styles, including improvisation, electronic music, neoclassicism, twelve-tone techniques and minimalism. The latter style is especially evident in his work “…then the rocks on the mountain began to shout.” composed in 1977 for seven a cappella singers (2 sopranos, mezzo-soprano, alto, tenor, baritone and bass). The title of the work is derived from Charles Ives’ From the Steeples and the Mountains for brass and percussion, a work that Foss conducted in several instances. The piece features no text, but rather is composed with an ever-changing pattern of vowels, as well as solfege syllables, to contribute to subtle changes in vocal timbre. In a program note for the work, Foss noted: “In this composition, the chorus does not sing words, it vocalizes, with the many repeated notes set to vowels. A five-note chord dominates the work. It is endlessly repeated, varied, permutated, transposed and inverted. It invades the entire piece via persistent, pulsating, echoing and criss-crossing quarter notes. Only an explosion near the end liberates us from its domination.” This work is one of a series of new publications of Lukas Foss to be released by Carl Fischer Music, as a means of celebrating his works and achievements. These publications will be important means for promoting performances of his music as well as securing his legacy as a composer.