Informationen zu "John Alexander micheldever, autumn of 1914 Double Bass Quartet"
Verlag: Recital Music
Verlagsnummer: RM891
EAN: 9790570458912
ISMN: M-57045-891-2
Beschreibung
John Alexander writes: 'My Dad was born in a labourer's cottage on a farm
near the small village of Micheldever, 5 miles or so north of Winchester, on
2nd October 1914, two months in to a dreadful war. His young mother ? she
was 17 or 18 ? lived in one of the farm worker's houses (Sunlight Cottages)
on Home Farm with her three sisters, two brothers and their parents a mile
and a half from Hursley, a small village 5 miles or so to the south of
Winchester. She worked as a 'General Servant (Domestic)' within the 'big
house' of the Hursley Estate. In those days it was considered extremely
shameful in such small communities to give birth to an illegitimate child.
Before the pregnancy became too noticeable, Edith Mary Alexander was shuffled
off to the home of a relative in Micheldever to see out her confinement.
Nobody, except the young mother, knew the identity of the father and she
never told anybody who it was. So I have never known nor had a paternal
grandfather. As 2014 dawned, my thoughts turned to my father in what would be
the centenary year of his birth. Vaguely knowing the story, I started to
think about my grandmother and the situation she was in. I wondered how she
had travelled the eleven miles to Micheldever and exactly who it might have
been who took her there. Could it have been her eldest brother ? who would
be killed in the Great War a couple of years later ? that drove her in the
farm's horse and cart, accompanied perhaps by one of her sisters? What were
her feelings, her fears, beliefs and experience? These and other relevant
thoughts occupied me during the composition of this piece. I also dwelt on
the fact that, four years later, in 1918, my Dad's young Mum died during the
Spanish flu epidemic that swept the country, leaving her little boy an orphan
? so, my paternal grandmother was also completely unknown to me. Thus,
imagining the place, circumstance and time he was born, these five short
pieces for double bass quartet are, with huge affection and love, in memory
of my father, Reginald (Reg) Percy Alexander (1914 ? 1988).' This work was
commissioned by David Heyes for Bass-Fest 2014, made possible with generous
funding provided by Alison McNaught and Marion Attrill. John Alexander was
born in West Sussex in 1942 and began to compose at the age of 20. At the
time he discovered a fascination for art, literature, dance, architecture and
sculpture and these topics, along with mathematics, have continued to have a
bearing on his work. He studied composition with Edmund Rubbra at the
Guildhall School of Music in London, and later with Jonathan Harvey and Peter
Wiegold at the University of Sussex. John Alexander has never been a
prolific composer, but an impressive and growing body of work reflects a rare
eye for detail and structure - each work beautifully crafted and reworked
until every inflection, detail and nuance is perfect. Probably best described
as a miniaturist, he writes in a fluent, independent and strongly personal
style with an intense desire to create music which communicates to both
performer and audience alike. In 1999 John Alexander won the 1st BIBF
Composition Contest and was invited to be a judge for several BIBF
competitions. He was a featured composer at Bass-Fest 2001, was an spnm
short-listed composer for three years, and was Composer-in-residence at the
2004 Rotterdam Conservatoire Double Bass Weekend, Bass-Fest 2006 and 2007
Wells Double Bass Weekend. His works have been performed and broadcast
throughout the world and he was written an impressive and unique body of work
for double bass.