Roads To Ixtlan
KOMPONIST:
Per Nørgård
VERLAG:
Edition Wilhelm Hansen
PRODUKTFORMAT:
Partitur
INSTRUMENT GROUP:
Holzbläserensemble
All roads lead to Rome , as the saying goes - but do all roads also lead to Ixtlan, perhaps at another time? Ixtlan being the city of the highest aspirations of the Mexican sorcerer, Don Genaro (according to Carlos Casteneda, the anthropologist publishing a series of books on Don Juan, Don Genaro's
Spezifikationen
Komponist | Per Nørgård |
Verlag | Edition Wilhelm Hansen |
Instrumentierung | Saxophone [Quartets] |
Text language | Dänisch;Englisch |
Produktformat | Partitur |
Instrument Group | Holzbläserensemble |
Style Period | Post 1901 |
Genre | Klassik |
ISBN | 9788759852286 |
Style Period | Post 1901 |
Seitenzahl | 12 |
No. | WHKP00337 |
Beschreibung
All roads lead to Rome, as the saying goes - but do all roads also lead to Ixtlan, perhaps at another time? Ixtlan being the city of the highest aspirations of the Mexican sorcerer, Don Genaro (according to Carlos Casteneda, the anthropologist publishing a series of books on Don Juan, Don Genaro's col-league). There was no final outcome to Genaro's journey, and there will never be one. I will never reach Ixtlan, he said, so Genaro is still on his way there.(Ixtlan may perhaps be interpreted as the inner goal of your heart).In any case: in these three movements the three points of departure are utterly different; still they unanimously move towardsjust one melodic outcome, a kind of musical centre of gravitation.