Votive Offerings - Six Eclectic Pieces for Piano attempts to evoke elements of the pianistic style, keyboard sonorities, and typical moods of six composers active during some part of the 20th Century. The composers identities remain undisclosed for the listeners speculation.
About the Composer:
Godfrey Schroth
(1927-2017) was a pupil of the noted American composer, Paul Creston.
Mr. Schroth first came to attention in 1959, when his Piano Quintet won
the LADO Foundation Prize for chamber music, premiered in New York by
the Phoenix Quartet. Many published choral and organ pieces followed and
A Solemn English Mass was the first vernacular setting sung at St. Patrick's Cathedral. In 1973, on a grant from the NJ Arts Council, he wrote Rocky Mountain Serenade for Strings, Percussion and Guitar for the Pueblo (Colorado) Arts Festival. In 1979 he completed Green Graves and Violets, a vocal chamber cycle, which celebrated the writings of a forgotten Civil War poetess, the tragic Ellen Howarth. The Mystic Trumpeter,
a work for chorus and wind instruments on a Walt Whitman text, was
commissioned by the Pro Arte Chorale and received its premiere
performance in March 1999.
Mr. Schroths
compositions span a period of more than 40 years, and show the influence
that travel and poetry had on his writings. Godfreys lifelong
dedication to music and piano education led to his inclusion in the
International Dictionary of Musicians and recognition in Whos Who in
American Music.