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Nathaniel Stookey : Out of the Everywhere


Publisher Associated Music Publishers Inc
Category
Orchestra
Sub-Category Large Orchestra
Year Composed
2003
Duration 22 Minutes
Orchestration
3333/4431/timp+3perc/hp.pf/st
Availability Hire  Explain this...

Programme Note

Digital perusal score available from SchirmerOnDemand

 
 
 

Reviews

  • Stookey's Out of the Everywhere is a 22-minute celebration of childbirth, written for his wife and two children, and it's a lush riot of orchestral color built on a solid structural foundation.

    Actually, the piece is less about birth itself – although that does figure into it prominently – than the period of gestation leading up to the climactic passage. It's constructed as a series of variations over a theme, dubbed "moon music," that recurs 10 times in the course of the pregnancy, and the piece unfolds in three movements, or trimesters, played without a break.

    Taking as his model the large passacaglia movements of Bach and later Brahms and Britten, Stookey overlays this theme with a variety of invitingly scored episodes, from vivacious dance music to plush instrumental chorales. The theme itself makes a first appearance bathed in shimmery moonlight a la Richard Strauss; later it pokes up tentatively amid the proceedings.

    The ending is foreordained: With a triumphant blaze of brass and timpani, the baby makes its way into the world. In the final measures -- sentimental but irresistible -- the newborn surveys the new surroundings of the nursery, embodied by a plinking mobile over the crib and the strains of "Au clair de la lune" from the flute.
    Joshua Kosman, San Francisco Chronicle, 17/05/2005

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