Website: https://www.stuartgreenbaum.com
Verlag: G. Schirmer Australia, Sydney
3. Spirals
Verlag: G. Schirmer Australia, Sydney
Bemerkung: Stuart Greenbaum (2001): In Spirals (commissioned by David Cramond) a somewhat more complex construction is found, expanding outward to cross–related harmonies as the ‘spirals’ elongate toward infinity. Based on a print of the same name by M. C. Escher, the original wood engraving was produced in December of 1953, the birth year of Kerry Landman (for whose 50th birthday the piece is dedicated). https://www.wisemusicclassical.com/work/79593/Four-Thoughts--Stuart-Greenbaum.
1. The Red Tree
2. Tree
3. Church at Domburg
4. Composition in Oval with Colour Planes
5. Composition Chequerboard, Dark Colours
6. Composition with Red, Yellow and Blue
7. Composition with Yellow Lines
8. Composition with Red, Yellow and Blue
Verlag: G. Schirmer, Australia
Verlag: G. Schirmer Australia, Sydney
Bemerkung: Programme Note: This piece is inspired by M. C. Escher’s famous 1960 lithograph, Ascending and Descending, showing stairs which descend impossibly back to an upper starting point. https://www.stuartgreenbaum.com/catalogue/catalogue/piano/new_roads.html.
Verlag: G. Schirmer Australia, Sydney
Bemerkung: auch in Fassung für Fagott und Klavier (1997)
1. The Gate
2. Pulse of the Earth
Verlag: G. Schirmer Australia, Sydney
Bemerkung: Stuart Greenbaum (2024): This symphony in two movements was written for The University of Melbourne Orchestra, under the direction of my colleague, Richard Davis. It was conceived at the Akiyoshidai International Art Village (AIAV) in Japan, where I was Artist in Residence in 2019, and again in 2023.The two movements are based on permanent works of sculpture created and installed in 1998 for the opening of AIAV. Created by Japanese artists, they are quite different but equally invite our contemplation of human presence in the natural world. https://www.wisemusicclassical.com/work/80826/Symphony-No-6--Stuart-Greenbaum/.
This work is licensed under CC BY 4.0 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
ao. Univ.-Prof. Dr. Monika Fink-Naumann
monika.fink@uibk.ac.at
Institut für Musikwissenschaft / Department of Musicology
Universität Innsbruck / University of Innsbruck
Haus der Musik
Universitätsstraße 1
A - 6020 Innsbruck