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Available as Individual Movements

Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

Concert Band / Grade 3-5 / ca. 20:00 / (2006)  Seven Movements

See Perusal scores below

for each Movement.

00:00 / 20:12

Complete -11x17 Printed Score Only - $50.00

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Seal Beach, CA.                       (Photo by Stephen Hill)

Concert Program

Azusa Pacific University Wind Ensemble
Dr. John Burdett, Conductor

Program Notes 

(By Stephen Hill and Dr. John Burdett)

 

In the spring of 2006, influential music educator Gary Scudder asked if I would consider writing a piece for his band that somehow included the tones CBDAAG derived from the acronym CBDA (California Band Directors Association). The additional A and G were added as it was the ‘Anniversary Golden’, the 50th anniversary, of the organization’s conference. The work began in late June 2006, with sketches of harmonic and melodic configurations of the tones. The entire work being performed today originated in this initial request.

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The sketching continued while my wife and I were on our annual camping and fishing trip. Sketches were worked out in Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, in a motel room in Missoula, Montana, while fly fishing the Lochsa River in Idaho and at a campground at the base of Mt. Hood in Oregon. The actual writing took place in July and was finished in late August. Each movement reflects the musical influence of my teachers and the composers I was studying at the time.

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The title "Harmelodic Configurations" is a reference to composer Howard Hanson (1896-1981) and his book, Harmonic Materials of Modern Music. In the preface, Hanson writes, “If consistency of harmonic-melodic expression is important in musical creation, this theory should bear the most intensive study, for it sets up a basis for the logical expansion of tonal ideas once the germinating concept has been decided upon in the mind of the composer.” For the title, I combined the two words harmonic and melodic into one made-up word, Harmelodic. By adding the word, configuration (noun - an arrangement of parts or elements; “the outcome depends on the configuration of influences at the time”), I completed the concept in the “mind of the composer” as Hanson proposed.

​

The title "Harmelodic Configurations" is a reference to composer Howard Hanson (1896-1981) and his book, Harmonic Materials of Modern Music. In the preface, Hanson writes, “If consistency of harmonic-melodic expression is important in musical creation, this theory should bear the most intensive study, for it sets up a basis for the logical expansion of tonal ideas once the germinating concept has been decided upon in the mind of the composer.” For the title, I combined the two words harmonic and melodic into one made-up word, Harmelodic. By adding the word, configuration (noun - an arrangement of parts or elements; “the outcome depends on the configuration of influences at the time”), I completed the concept in the “mind of the composer” as Hanson proposed.

Individual Movements Available

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Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

I. Fanfare and Canon Grade 3-4 / ca. 2:00 / Con Slancio q= 80

00:00 / 01:41

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Seal Beach, CA.                       (Photo by Stephen Hill)

I. Fanfare and Canon (Con Slancio) 

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The descriptive term "Con Slancio" (Italian), is translated, as "With vehemence, impetuously." (Sometimes written islancio, for the sake of euphony). From the Dictionary of Musical Terms (1895 Edition) by Dr. Theo. Baker.

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I first came across the term "slancio" in the music of John Barnes Chance. Chance uses the term in several of his works: Blue Lake Overture and Symphony No. 2. During my studies with Francis McBeth at Ouachita Baptist University, he and Band Director Marvin Lawson, shared stories of their classmate, John Barnes Chance while at the University of Texas, where they studied with Clifton Williams. Since the work, as commissioned, was to be based specifically on the tones CBDAAG, the 1st Movement begins with a Fanfare that strongly establishes those series of notes. The Canon passes the tones throughout the brass section and then throughout the whole ensemble. In contrast to the aggressive opening, the 1st movement closes with a cascading setting of the tone row that sets up the quiet and peaceful 2nd Movement.

Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

II. Idyll (The Eastern Sierras) / Grade 3+ / ca. 5:30 / Reflectively q= 68 

00:00 / 05:30

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II. Idyll: The Eastern Sierras (Reflectively, with Ebb and Flow) 


This is a musical reflection of my "Spring Break" trips to the Eastern Sierras to do a little Fly Fishing. They are certainly a majestic mountain range in the middle of California.

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The opening section recalls the "Quintal" Chord and pulsing timpani part I discovered when McBeth brought his copy of the score of Howard Hanson's "Lament for Beowulf" to class and handed it to me to study.

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Eastern Sierras, CA.                   (Photo by Stephen Hill)

Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

III. Sturm and Drang / Grade 3-4 / ca. 2:00 / Pesante q= 130 Slancio q= 160

00:00 / 01:20

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III. Sturm and Drang: Angst (Pesante, Slancio) 

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(Sturm and Drang - from German, translated - storm and stress) A style of composition that communicates emotions of stress, fear, horror, anxiety, etc. typically attributed to German music of the Romantic era.

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This movement is a reflection of the expansive influence my composition teacher Dr. Byong Kon Kim, had during my graduate studies at California State University, Los Angeles.

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Eastern Sierras, CA.                   (Photo by Stephen Hill)

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Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

IV. Valse (Political Circus) / Grade 3-4 / ca. 2:30 / q= 176

00:00 / 02:08

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IV. Valse: Political Circus (Seriously, but not too seriously) 

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Valse: Political Circus intended as witty musical commentary. This movement is a mixture of the musical influences of La Valse by Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) and the middle waltz section of Blue Lake Overture by John Barnes Chance.

Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

V. Toccata (Driving the 5) / Grade 4 / ca. 5:00 / With Drama q= 120

00:00 / 04:42

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V. Toccata: Driving the 5 (With Drama, Faster) 


The phrases "Take the 5", "Driving the 5", "Get on the 5", and many others like them are all clearly understood by those who drive in California.

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This movement begins with the gentle sounds of wind chimes, a sound I would often hear outside my studio when the breeze would begin to move the small wind chimes my wife had placed in the patio breezeway. The gentle chiming soon turns into a loud clash of clustered sounds that declare the day has begun and it is time to get on the "5" and make the mad dash to your destination. Whether going North or South, you are bound to encounter the hectic driving habits of Californians weaving in and out of lanes while "Driving the 5". The closing section recalls the frantic action it may take to change lanes in time to catch your exit off of the "5".

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Norwalk, CA.                            (Photo by Stephen Hill)

Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

 VI. Elegy (Howard Hanson) / Grade 3 / ca. 2:30 / Reflectively q= 60

00:00 / 02:22

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VI. Elegy: Thank you, Howard Hanson (1896-1981) (Reflectively) 
The composer Howard Hanson, a native of Nebraska and the first Director of the Eastman School of Music, began teaching at age 19 at The College of the Pacific in San Jose, California.

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In the early 1970s, I discovered a copy of Song of Democracy in the piano bench of our family piano. Not being a piano player, I struggled through it trying to play the melodies and harmonies. It left a strong impression on me and I am fortunate to have been further exposed to the musical influence of Howard Hanson through my teacher Francis McBeth who was one of Hanson's students.

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Hanson's Birthplace, Wahoo, NE.   (Photo by Stephen Hill)

Harmelodic Configurations (on the tones CBDAAG) 

VII. Fanfare, Canon and Flourishes / Grade 4 / ca. 3:30 / Con Slancio q= 80 Heroic q= 120

00:00 / 03:25

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11x17 Printed Score and PDF Parts - $95.00

11x17 Printed Score Only - $35.00

8.5x14 Printed Score Only - $30.00

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Lone Pine, CA.                         (Photo by Stephen Hill)

VII. Fanfare, Canon, and Flourishes (Con Slancio, Heroic) 

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This 7th and final movement was patterned after the form utilized in Janacek's Sinfonietta by restating the opening Fanfare and Canon of the 1st Movement before venturing into an extended Flourish on the Tones CBDAAG. The movement is one of bravura with a grand G Major cadence in a bit of a film score-like ending.

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