Product Description
Mountains of Stowe is
a two-movement work written by Grammy nominated composer,
guitarist, and award-winning film-director, Apostolos Paraskevas. The work was commissioned and dedicated to guitarist Adam Holzman.
When
asked why he commissioned this piece, Holzman replied, "My wife and I spend summers
in Stowe, Vermont. We love being there, celebrate the summer and spend time
outside. We
have family and friends come and share a few days with us and Apostolos is dear friend
who has been coming for several years. We talked about the possibility of him writing
a piece that reflected Stowe and the mountains." When asked about the piece,
Paraskevas responded, "I always write music for people and not for instruments,
so every single note of this piece I had Adam in my mind. The way he plays the
instrument, the way he breathes the way he lives his life. The work is written for
the mountains of Stowe through Adams eyes and heart and I am the vehicle who translates
that."
Duration:
approx. 8 minutes
Apostolos Paraskevas is a classical guitarist and composer as well as an award-winning film
director and producer. He has received multiple international awards for his
compositions and was nominated for a Grammy Award. He is the only guitarist
ever to have a major orchestral piece performed at Carnegie Hall under the
direction of Lukas Fossand the only musician who has performed there in a
Grim Reaper outfit. He was the founder and served for 16 years as the artistic
director of the International Guitar Congress-Festival of Corfu, Greece. He is a voting member of the Recording
Academy (Grammys).
After
his undergraduate music studies in Volos he pursued advanced studies in
classical guitar with Costas Cotsiolis (diploma, 1990) and Leo Brouwer (Havana
1984, 1988), as well as postgraduate studies in composition with Lukas Foss and
Theodore Antoniou (DMA in composition, Boston University, 1998). Paraskevas
embarked on a successful career as a guitar soloist and contemporary composer,
achieving distinctions in both disciplines: Grammy nomination for Chase
Dance (Bridge Records, 1999); first prize for Night Wanderings
(Lukas Foss Composition Competition, 2000); first prize for Phygein Adynaton
(National Composers Conference, 1997); and numerous prestigious commissions,
performances, and publications. Following teaching posts at Northeastern and
Boston Universities, Paraskevas has taught since 2001 at the Berklee College of
Music in Boston (professor of composition and classical guitar).
His
eclectic compositional style arises as an idiosyncratic integration of
seemingly conflicting influences from avant-garde approaches to harmonic
structure, form, and timbre, to pop-folk modal and rhythmical concepts
amalgamated into a personal evocative musical language, characterized by rhythmic
verve, melodic grace, dramatic (and sometimes unexpectedly humorous) gestures,
and ritualistic or theatrical elements. The latter feature has also led
Paraskevas to the creation of films, notably the acclaimed I Finally Did It
(Gold award, California Film Awards 2010), dealing wittily with Death, a
recurring extra-musical theme in his music.
The Groves Dictionary of Music
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