Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion

abstract: Phantom Sun is a ten-minute piece in three sections, and is composed for flute, clarinet in b-flat, violin, cello, and percussion. The three-part structure for this work is a representation of the atmospheric phenomenon after which the composition is named. A phantom sun, also called a par...

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Other Authors: Mitton, Stephen LeRoy (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.43998
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-43998
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-439982018-06-22T03:08:13Z Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion abstract: Phantom Sun is a ten-minute piece in three sections, and is composed for flute, clarinet in b-flat, violin, cello, and percussion. The three-part structure for this work is a representation of the atmospheric phenomenon after which the composition is named. A phantom sun, also called a parhelion or sundog, is a weather-related phenomenon caused by the horizontal refraction of sunlight in the upper atmosphere. This refraction creates the illusion of three suns above the horizon, and is often accompanied by a bright halo called the circumzenithal arc. The halo is caused by light bending at 22° as it passes through hexagonal ice crystals. Consequently, the numbers six and 22 are important figures, and have been encoded into this piece in various ways. The first section, marked “With concentrated intensity,” is characterized by the juxtaposition of tonal ambiguity and tonal affirmation, as well as the use of polymetric counterpoint (often 7/8 against 4/4 or 7/8 against 3/4). The middle section, marked “Crystalline,” provides contrast in its use of unmetered sections and independent tempos. The refraction of light is represented in this movement by a 22-note row based on a hexachord (B-flat, F, C, G, A, E) introduced in measure 164 of the first section. The third section, marked “With frenetic energy,” begins without pause on an arresting entrance of the drums playing an additive rhythmic pattern. This pattern (5+7+9+1) amounts to 22 eighth-note pulses and informs much of the motivic and structural considerations for the remainder of the piece. Dissertation/Thesis Mitton, Stephen LeRoy (Author) DeMars, James (Advisor) Norton, Kay (Committee member) Rogers, Rodney (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Music Chamber Music Parhelion Percussion Pierrot Ensemble Septet Sundog eng 39 pages Masters Thesis Composition 2017 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.43998 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Music
Chamber Music
Parhelion
Percussion
Pierrot Ensemble
Septet
Sundog
spellingShingle Music
Chamber Music
Parhelion
Percussion
Pierrot Ensemble
Septet
Sundog
Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion
description abstract: Phantom Sun is a ten-minute piece in three sections, and is composed for flute, clarinet in b-flat, violin, cello, and percussion. The three-part structure for this work is a representation of the atmospheric phenomenon after which the composition is named. A phantom sun, also called a parhelion or sundog, is a weather-related phenomenon caused by the horizontal refraction of sunlight in the upper atmosphere. This refraction creates the illusion of three suns above the horizon, and is often accompanied by a bright halo called the circumzenithal arc. The halo is caused by light bending at 22° as it passes through hexagonal ice crystals. Consequently, the numbers six and 22 are important figures, and have been encoded into this piece in various ways. The first section, marked “With concentrated intensity,” is characterized by the juxtaposition of tonal ambiguity and tonal affirmation, as well as the use of polymetric counterpoint (often 7/8 against 4/4 or 7/8 against 3/4). The middle section, marked “Crystalline,” provides contrast in its use of unmetered sections and independent tempos. The refraction of light is represented in this movement by a 22-note row based on a hexachord (B-flat, F, C, G, A, E) introduced in measure 164 of the first section. The third section, marked “With frenetic energy,” begins without pause on an arresting entrance of the drums playing an additive rhythmic pattern. This pattern (5+7+9+1) amounts to 22 eighth-note pulses and informs much of the motivic and structural considerations for the remainder of the piece. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Composition 2017
author2 Mitton, Stephen LeRoy (Author)
author_facet Mitton, Stephen LeRoy (Author)
title Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion
title_short Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion
title_full Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion
title_fullStr Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion
title_full_unstemmed Phantom Sun: Septet for Flute, Clarinet in Bb, Violin, Cello, and Percussion
title_sort phantom sun: septet for flute, clarinet in bb, violin, cello, and percussion
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.43998
_version_ 1718701395218006016