Saxophone Quartet No.1 (Torre, Salvador)

Sheet Music

Scores and Parts

PDF typeset by composer
SalvaTorré (2015/5/14)

Publisher. Info. Salvador Torré
Copyright
Misc. Notes Please read carefully the instructions for performance
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PDF typeset by composer
SalvaTorré (2015/5/14)

PDF typeset by composer
SalvaTorré (2015/5/14)

PDF typeset by composer
SalvaTorré (2015/5/14)

PDF typeset by composer
SalvaTorré (2015/5/14)

Publisher. Info. Salvador Torré
Copyright
Misc. Notes Musicians have to be spatialized arounding the audience
Purchase
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General Information

Work Title Quatuor de saxophones No.1
Alternative. Title Cuarteto de saxofones No.1
Composer Torre, Salvador
I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No. IST 66
Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's 4 sections
  1. Constellatio
  2. Puzzle
  3. Crossnotes
  4. Sandclock
Year/Date of CompositionY/D of Comp. 1990
Dedication To Cage, Schoenberg, Varèse, Boulez, Messiaen, Berio, Beethoven, Webern, Berg, Bartók, Bach, Reich, Africa...
Average DurationAvg. Duration Variable
Composer Time PeriodComp. Period Modern
Piece Style Modern
Instrumentation Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Baritone Saxophone.

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Saxophone Quartet Nr.1 by Salvador Torré is an adaptation or ‘exploration’ or 'explosion' (!) of a very flexible material coming from five easy pedagogical pieces composed in 1987. The musicians have to be spatialized in the concert hall. This Quartet consists in several tributes to the twentieth century composers who were pioneers of various musical revolutions. They are little musical pieces each one devoted to one or more composers and applying the technique that each composer utilized, for example: Cage utilized star maps to compose, hence a constellation is formed, Messiaen was inspired by the birds singing and their intricate rhythms, Berio used a novel space-time writing but that space-time was already inherent in musical notation invented by Guido D'Arezzo in the year one thousand. Reich uses a melodic cell repeated ad infinitum but it changes imperceptibly. With all this we find that these procedures existed in other eras of history of music, only under a different light. Each musician plays each of these pieces of (almost) -independent, so that each piece or movement is a kind of "collage" in which the piece overlaps itself, this overlap must be set to the sound space thanks to which musicians are placed in different parts of the concert-hall spreading sounds among the public, providing distance and location of sound sources in three dimensional space.