Ready to print
You have already purchased this music, but not yet printed it.
This page is just a preview and does not allow printing. To print your purchase, go to the My purchases page in your account and click the relevant print icon.
Already purchased!
You have already purchased this score. To download and print the PDF file of this score, click the 'Print' button above the score. The purchases page in your account also shows your items available to print.
This score is free!
Buy this score now
Instant download
You are purchasing high quality sheet music PDF files suitable for printing or viewing on digital devices.A companion piece to 'Twelve Tone Tango', this is my second essay in combining Latin rhythms and tone row techniques. Both pieces, under the heading 'Two Dodecaphonic Dances', are programmed for a concert in London on 4th March 2011 with Derek Foster at the piano.
Derek pointed out that my chosen tone row - a wedge shape starting at C - has the same structure as that used by Luigi Nono in 'Il Canto sospeso'. I was not familiar with Nono's work prior to writing the Samba so this came as an intriguing surprise and a humbling confirmation that there can be nothing new under the sun.
The initial challenge in applying serial techniques to a dance form that relies so heavily on regular four-bar tonal harmonies was finding a non-tonal row that could generate suitable chordal sequences. Telescoping the wedge shape I'd chosen did just that - it produced three chords of four notes each that I could then use fairly freely within the four-bar pulse of the dance. So, not strict serialism as Nono might have known it.