From b64d76790e698080db2c7ef8b2404974ce3a07c7 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "(quasar) nebula" Date: Sun, 21 Apr 2024 18:53:40 -0300 Subject: james dever junior recital / senior recital commentary citations --- album/junior-recital.yaml | 9 ++++++--- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) (limited to 'album/junior-recital.yaml') diff --git a/album/junior-recital.yaml b/album/junior-recital.yaml index 0d7298b..3f3e78e 100644 --- a/album/junior-recital.yaml +++ b/album/junior-recital.yaml @@ -20,7 +20,8 @@ Contributors: - Cara Givan (percussion) - Tyler Vandermeer (percussion) Commentary: |- - James Dever: + James Dever: ([SoundCloud description](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/raucousy)) + Raucousy was written in 2014 and premiered at the University of Northern Colorado in April of 2015 by the Majority Percussion quartet: Mario Alvarado, Joe Darpino, Cara Givan, and Tyler Vandermeer. Born from a very common phrase from our dear professor, Gray Barrier (who himself learned it from Cloyd Duff), Raucousy is about bringing the edge out with percussion, which wasn't much of a challenge. The challenge comes from adapting from various different styles. @@ -34,7 +35,8 @@ Duration: '7:32' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/reisher-fanfare Commentary: |- - James Dever: + James Dever: ([SoundCloud description](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/reisher-fanfare)) + The Reisher Fanfare was composed in late 2014 and early 2015. It was premiered at the University of Northern Colorado in April of 2015. Written as a thank you for the generous three years of funding I received through the Reisher Scholarship at UNC, the Reisher Fanfare came to be after the passing of Roger Reisher in 2014. @@ -46,7 +48,8 @@ Duration: '11:14' URLs: - https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/intimate-strangers Commentary: |- - James Dever: + James Dever: ([SoundCloud description](https://soundcloud.com/jamesdevermusic/intimate-strangers)) + Intimate Strangers was written in the Spring of 2014 and premiered in May of 2014, performed by James Dever. The piece is written for a large multi-percussion set up featuring a vibraphone facing away from the performer, scratched tambourine, a wine bottle, bass drum edges, and various other standard percussion instruments. -- cgit 1.3.0-6-gf8a5