Frederick Frahm: Indian Earth for two violins, cello and organ by Frederick Frahm Sheet Music for Performance Ensemble at Sheet Music Direct
Log In
553854
Frederick Frahm:  Indian Earth for two violins, cello and organ Digital Sheet Music
Cover Art for "Frederick Frahm:  Indian Earth for two violins, cello and organ" by Frederick Frahm PASS

Frederick Frahm: Indian Earth for two violins, cello and organ
by Frederick Frahm Performance Ensemble - Digital Sheet Music

A$31.99
Sales tax calculated at checkout.
Free access with trial. A$ 14.99/month after. Cancel anytime.
Purchase of Frederick Frahm: Indian Earth for two violins, cello and organ includes:
Official publisher PDF download (printable)
Access anywhere, including our free app

This item is not eligible for PASS discount.

Product Details


Product Description

I. INTROIT
II. INTERLUDE
III. ALLELUIAS

Commissioned by the American Guild of Organists,
Albuquerque Chapter,
For the Region VII AGO Convention, 2009

Performance notes:

Indian Earth, after a book of poetry by Santa Fe poet Witter Bynner, explores the mystical cultures and resplendent terrain of the American
Southwest. An underlying tenor ofthis collection is the complex relationship between the earth and humanity, and metaphorically the discord
between native and colonial peoples. Bynner captures the essence of these relationships in this way:
"It is the earth itself that hems you round against intruders alien to the earth, that brings you heaven under a shadowy tree, curves heaven to
your arm and lets you lie close to its living thorn. The crown is yours, not theirs. You know the one divinity, the only death, the offering of
the heart to the cruel earth, the love, the consummation."
The three movements of the work progress from a quiet melancholy to exuberance, from darkness to light. Frahm makes use of an architectural
approach to music composition in this piece, as in the building of an adobe wall brick by brick. Self-contained musical structures, often in four bar
units, are symmetrically arranged as a technique of musical development. The final movement, 'Alleluias', is based in part on plainchant tone 6 from
the Graduale Romanum.

This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.