
Revêrie
‘Revêrie’ was
written for Laura Hay for passing her Grade IV flute. The piece
is in ternary form and romantic in style with a dreamy atmosphere in
accordance with the title. The flute part is easily of Grade VI standard
and the piano part requires a more advanced technique. Revêrie
was premiered at the Voices Anon Christmas Concert (8/12/05), following
it with a second performance in the school Christmas concert (12/12/05).
The performance from the school concert is featured here on this page.
It was always planned that Revêrie would become part of a flute sonata and the first movement was completed in July 09. The full sonata will consist of 5 movements with Revêrie featuring as the third. For more details on the sontata, click here.
The
piece was orchestrated for Flute & Orchestra on 2/5/06. Click
here for more details.
Selected Performances:
-(8/12/05)
Maidenhead, UK. Premiere performance. At the Voices
Anon Christmas Concert.
-(12/12/05) Maidenhead, UK. Performed at Furze
Platt Senior School's Christmas Concert.
Analysis:
The
piece is in ternary form with the following structure:
Introduction
(1-8):
The piano begins in a high register introducing the main theme. The harmony
employs extended chords (Gmaj7, D7/G x2, Em, Em-maj7, Em7, A7/E, Gsus2,
Dsus2,4, Dsus2) evoking a dreamy atmosphere. The flute enters at the
end of the introduction mimicking the piano.
‘A’ Section (9-41):
The main theme is played by the flute (9-16) with the piano accompanying.
The theme is then repeated by the piano (17-24) with a flute countermelody.
The melody begins the same but changes direction at 20 with harmonic
movement towards the subdominant. The triplet countermelody used
in this section was put in as a request mirroring similar figuration
found in my ‘Paris Prelude.’ A four-bar link follows
(25-28) using the main melody over a dominant pedal. The piano
begins the main theme again (29) using a cross-rhythm accompaniment
(triplets against quavers) that paves the way for the next direction
change occurring in 33. Through bars 33-36 the previous triplet
accompaniment in the piano continues over a circle of 5ths chord
progression. The melodic idea of this section (33-26) is a development
of bar 13. A Phrygian cadence marks the end of section ‘A’.
‘B’ Section (42-59):
After the rising scale, the mode changes to the relative minor
(Em). Bar 42-45 introduce a scherzando style them in the flute
over pulsing chords that descend through the 7ths of Em over a
tonic pedal. This is followed by a passing modulation through F
major, Bb major, G minor, and Eb (46-54). Bars 54-59 modulate back
towards G major ready for the reprise of ‘A’. During
this section the piano play a phrase developed from the motifs
of the main theme of ‘A’ (see 54), whilst the flute
plays rising scales to increase the tension.
‘A’ Section
(60-79):
The ‘A’ theme is reprised but with slight modification and
changes of direction that were predicted in the original ‘A.’ The
triplet counter melody of 68-75 is varied to create more excitement.
Coda
(79-97):
The coda opens with the flute quoting a motif similar to the first notes
it played at the beginning. The opening texture returns with a similar
harmonic progression. The piece closes with the flute rising up to the
tonic (84-87).
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