La'gathd: episodes

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Composer
Year of composition
2002
Lyricist
none
Difficulty
Difficult (Grades 7+)
Duration
15 minutes
Genre
Modern classical music
License details
For anything not permitted by the above licence then you should contact the publisher first to obtain permission.

In 1802, amongst the papers of a recently dead amateur chemist and explorer there was found a fragmemnt of a page of a letter briefly referring to a sacred ceremony of a still-unknown and perhaps long-dead people (even the continent on which they lived remains unidentified).

Lasting twenty-eight days and timed to coincide with a period of flooding, the worship began, accompanied by dancing, with the ritual exhumantion of large empty ceramic 'tomb'. In memory of their ancestors who, with their singing, mythically aided the 'forces 'of good' in some ancient battle against 'evil', there followed an extraordinary "burial of music" - a daily singing into the empty tomb, performed by the elders, which was then temporarily buried. Following the storm (believed to be a manifestation of the constant struggle between 'good' and 'bad') there would be a period of introspection and mediation. Once the floodwaters had lowered there were communal prayers and a final cermonial "burial of music" and procession - 'good' had overcome 'bad' for now…

According to the explorer, "la'gathd", being difficult to translate, acts simultaneously as an all-encompassing noun (the tomb, the grave, the ceremony, the flood, the 28 days) and a verb (to offer a sacrifice, to sing to a deity, to battle against evil, to meditate during this period).

La'gathd: episodes offers a soundworld glimpse of the extraordinary events to which the explorer referred in his letter to an unknown correspondent. Self-consciously non- symphonic and deceptively disparate and fragmented, the iece is in fact strictly built around an intimately linked and specifically chosen core of rythmic motifs, harmonies and progressions. For the real musicologists out there: the whole piece can be traced back to the a well-known motif of a piece for pianoforte…

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