Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...

Composed entirely of runes, the 14th century manuscript Codex Runicus is comprised of 101 sheets and contains historical documents such as "Kings until Erik Menved" and "Boundaries between Denmark and Sweden." The end of the codex contains the oldest surviving Nordic music fragme...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hostman, Anna
Other Authors: Kulesha, Gary
Language:en_ca
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43587
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-435872014-02-04T03:30:54ZDromde Mik en Drom i Nat...Hostman, Annaharding fiddle slattarstring orchestra with english horn and french horninfinity series0413Composed entirely of runes, the 14th century manuscript Codex Runicus is comprised of 101 sheets and contains historical documents such as "Kings until Erik Menved" and "Boundaries between Denmark and Sweden." The end of the codex contains the oldest surviving Nordic music fragment with lyrical text "Drømde mik en drøm i nat um silki ok ærlik pæl" which translates as [I] dreamt me a dream last night of silk and lovely cloth. This melody, alongside three Norwegian folk slåttar written for fiddle, Fjellbekken (The Mountain Stream), Fjøllrosa (The Mountain Rose), and Syrgjefuen (The Bird of Sorrow), is used to generate the pitch material for this composition for string orchestra, english horn and french horn. The piece is contrapuntal in nature. A large portion of the work is formed from essentially five groups or layers of melody that comfortably co-exist towards, as well as away from, each other, their independent natures being most evident in the first half of the piece. Additionally, there are fluctuations within each group itself, for examples, forms of imitation, slippage, change in register, variation in playing technique, and micro-displays of rhythmic independence set against more heterophonic textures (Considerable use of rhythmic embellishment is derived from the ornamental style found in harding fiddle slåttar). Such micro-fluctuations further distinguish the texture-intentional orchestration of each group. Although the use of layered melody forms the framework for the entire composition, there is continual exploration of its possibilities through various parameters such as density vs. transparency, and continuation vs. fragmentation.Kulesha, Gary2013-112014-01-09T19:57:24ZNO_RESTRICTION2014-01-09T19:57:24Z2014-01-09Musical Scorehttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/43587en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic harding fiddle slattar
string orchestra with english horn and french horn
infinity series
0413
spellingShingle harding fiddle slattar
string orchestra with english horn and french horn
infinity series
0413
Hostman, Anna
Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...
description Composed entirely of runes, the 14th century manuscript Codex Runicus is comprised of 101 sheets and contains historical documents such as "Kings until Erik Menved" and "Boundaries between Denmark and Sweden." The end of the codex contains the oldest surviving Nordic music fragment with lyrical text "Drømde mik en drøm i nat um silki ok ærlik pæl" which translates as [I] dreamt me a dream last night of silk and lovely cloth. This melody, alongside three Norwegian folk slåttar written for fiddle, Fjellbekken (The Mountain Stream), Fjøllrosa (The Mountain Rose), and Syrgjefuen (The Bird of Sorrow), is used to generate the pitch material for this composition for string orchestra, english horn and french horn. The piece is contrapuntal in nature. A large portion of the work is formed from essentially five groups or layers of melody that comfortably co-exist towards, as well as away from, each other, their independent natures being most evident in the first half of the piece. Additionally, there are fluctuations within each group itself, for examples, forms of imitation, slippage, change in register, variation in playing technique, and micro-displays of rhythmic independence set against more heterophonic textures (Considerable use of rhythmic embellishment is derived from the ornamental style found in harding fiddle slåttar). Such micro-fluctuations further distinguish the texture-intentional orchestration of each group. Although the use of layered melody forms the framework for the entire composition, there is continual exploration of its possibilities through various parameters such as density vs. transparency, and continuation vs. fragmentation.
author2 Kulesha, Gary
author_facet Kulesha, Gary
Hostman, Anna
author Hostman, Anna
author_sort Hostman, Anna
title Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...
title_short Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...
title_full Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...
title_fullStr Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...
title_full_unstemmed Dromde Mik en Drom i Nat...
title_sort dromde mik en drom i nat...
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/43587
work_keys_str_mv AT hostmananna dromdemikendrominat
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