Luke Bedford
Wonderful Four-Headed Nightingale
Duration: 9'
Instrumentation details:
1st violin
2nd violin
viola
violoncello
Bedford - Wonderful Four-Headed Nightingale for string quartet
Translation, reprints and more
Luke Bedford
Bedford: Wonderful Four-Headed NightingaleOrchestration: für Streichquartett
Type: Partitur
Luke Bedford
Bedford: Wonderful Four-Headed NightingaleOrchestration: für Streichquartett
Type: Stimmensatz
Print-On-Demand
Work introduction
This piece is a reworking of my Wonderful Two-Headed Nightingale for violin, viola and fifteen players. The original title was taken from a 19th century poster advertising a pair of singing conjoined twins: Millie and Christine McCoy. They were born in slavery in 1851, sold to a showman, and yet managed to escape the fate of many performers at freak shows and built a relatively normal life for themselves. Something of their story and the poster intrigued me, and I found parallels with the music I was trying to write. From early on in the composition process I knew that the two soloists would be forced to play either identical or very similar music for most of the piece. I felt the tension between their combined, unified sound and their desire to break free from one another could be richly exploited. But I also knew that they would never be successful in tearing free. They would remain as locked together at the end of the piece as they were at the start.
The two basic harmonic ideas, from which everything else in the piece is created, are heard in the opening section. The first is familiar: the bare fifths of open strings, while the second is altogether stranger: the flattened F heard in the first climax of the work. These two building blocks – fifths and quarter-tones – are matched in rhythmical terms, by a few short patterns, which are combined in constantly changing ways, so that the overall result is never predictable
There are four definable sections to the piece. After a duet between the first violin and viola, the second violin and cello gradually enter and take over the rhythmic impetus. This builds to a crisis point and the music collapses, leaving only a series of stark chords. Instead of fading away, the opening material springs back into life, bringing the piece to a close.
Luke Bedford