New Article on Helen Kotas
Section Listings Have Arrived
As part of the ongoing migration of content from hornplayer.net, the Section Listings are now available in their new home at IHS Online.
O'Connell and Pearlman Compostions Added to the OML
Two more new publications have been added to the IHS Online Music Library:
Remembering the Future - Ryan O'Connell
Remembering the Future was commissioned by Jeff Nelsen and his wife, Nina, for the 2010 Horn Symposium in Brisbane, Australia. It is a 5-song cycle for horn, mezzo-soprano, and piano based on the poems and artwork of Brian Andreas. Written with a combination of classical and musical theatre styles, it is a versatile piece that can work well for any type of voice.
Horn Trio (for violin, horn and piano) - Martin Pearlman
This composition was awarded Honorable Mention in the 1993 IHS Composition Contest.
"Pearlman's ear is keen, his sense of drama vivid... For all its cram-packed complexity, everything in this music is as clear as can be, everything registers... If fans of [Boston Baroque] wonder why Pearlman's conducting is so insightful, it's because he knows, as only a composer can, how music goes."
—Anthony Tommasini, The Boston Globe
Two New Titles in Online Music Library
Two pieces by Jeremy Beck have been added the IHS Online Music Library:
Beck, Jeremy - Three Short Pieces for two horns
Three Short Pieces for two horns in F was composed in 1980 in New York City and slightly revised in 1996 in Cedar Falls, Iowa. The first of the three pieces is a Prelude, where the melodic lines of the two horns create a tapestry of lyrical counterpoint. Following this is a stately Dancewhich unfolds primarily as a canon between the two horns. The Fanfare that ends the suite provides a rhythmic and energetic contrast to the proceeding two movements. Running ca. 6:00, these pieces were premiered by Tom Friedman and Nancy Chau-Huie Yang at the Mannes College of Music on November 24, 1980.
Beck, Jeremy - Quartet for horn, two violins, and piano
The Quartet for horn, two violins and piano was composed in 1983 in New York City and unfolds in three movements. The first movement, marked Allegro furioso, begins with a driving ostinato in the piano and is followed by a series of fanfare motives in the violins and horn. These motives will later be developed in a contrapuntal, imitative fashion. Along the way, the fast music is interrupted by a slower, chorale section, which will return as a reminiscence in the third movement. The second movement, Molto adagio, begins with a lyrical solo in the horn. This melodic line slowly builds and expands with the addition of the violins, pushing towards the climactic midpoint of the movement, before falling away into the quieter atmosphere where the movement began. The main theme of the final Allegro is introduced by the horn, accompanied by aggressive chords in the piano and strings. This theme will become the subject for certain fugato sections which follow The middle section of this movement provides a brief restatement of the second movement's lyrical music, followed by the chorale reminiscence of the first movement. The Allegro then closes with a return of the main theme, bringing the Quartet to a rousing close. Running ca. 12:00, it was premiered on January 27, 1984 on a recital of the composer's works at the Mannes College of Music in New York City, with Stig Jensen, horn; Wha-Rim Kim and Rachel Durling, violins; and Carol Archer, piano.
IHS Acquires Hornplayer.net
Hornplayer.net founder and long time administrator Robin Moffatt has turned over control and administration of his popular site to the International Horn Society. Online since 1997, the site is famous for its Teachers Database, Section Listings of many ensembles from throughout the world, the Information Archive gleaned from years of posts on the horn mailing lists and most especially for the Free Classified Ads featuring only horns and horn related merchandise.
The IHS assumed control of the existing site on August 18, 2011, and will continue to provide Hornplayer.net's content and services, all completely free and open to the public, on the IHS website. Over the following weeks, the content of horn player.net will gradually be incorporated into the IHS website. When that transition is complete, hornplayer.net will cease to exist in its present form, though site visitors will still be able to reach its new location through the old domain name.
Classified advertisers are encouraged to begin posting their ads now in hornplayer.net's new location at the IHS site: Marketplace—>Member Market in the main menu. Posting will end soon at the old hornplayer.net site and once all of the ads there now have expired, that site will close and traffic to that domain will be redirected to http://www.hornsociety.org/hornplayer-dot-net.
The IHS wish to express their gratitude to Robin Moffatt for his many years of service to the horn world through his website, and to thank him for allowing the Society to continue that service.