From the Valley of Baca - The Chamber Music of David Carpenter
Sheet Music

Item Number: 21705615
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SKU: NX.NV6208

By Cassia Harvey, Charles Abramovic, Katelyn Bouska, Lawrence Indik, Myanna Harvey, and Rebecca Harris. By David Carpenter. Classical, Chamber Music. Classical. Listening CD. Navona Records #NV6208. Published by Navona Records (NX.NV6208).

UPC: 896931005081.

Composer David Carpenter's PARMA debut, From the Valley of the Baca, features three works that illustrate the expansive scope of his compositional style. From the lyrical Trio, to the powerfully poetic title work for baritone and piano, to the romantically-inclined Sonata, From the Valley of the Baca demonstrates the composer's ability to express his artistic vision in a wide variety of musical genres. The harmonic language and brooding character of the Trio, which recalls the introspective character of Shostakovich's String Quartet in C minor, op. 110, is balanced by Carpenter's penchant for long, lyrical lines, particularly in the Trio's second movement. Carpenter cites two sources of inspiration for his song cycle From the Valley of Baca, one musical and one poetic: His work Job for baritone and piano, based on the book from the Hebrew Bible, sparked the idea of writing a song cycle based on the poetry of the Jewish-American author Emma Lazarus. One of Lazarus's, poems, The Valley of Baca, which references the 84th psalm, also inspired Carpenter to intersperse the verses of this psalm, set in its original Hebrew, throughout the song cycle, serving as a counterbalance to the English texts of Lazarus's poems. In 2015, Carpenter composed a work entitled Rhapsody for pianist Katelyn Bouska as a companion piece to Chopin's Piano Sonata in B minor, op. 58, both of which Bouska performed at a recital in Paris that year. At Bouska's behest, Carpenter added two movements to this composition to form a sonata, employing a sighing, chromatic motive from the Rhapsody to bind the three movements together. Emphasizing again that the past informs the work of many artists, something of Chopin's musical style, as well as that of other Romantic-era composers, finds voice in this new work. While he has drawn musical inspiration from past masters, Carpenter's music is intended neither as a pastiche of earlier musical styles nor an anachronism.

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