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Icarus Soaring: the music of John Pickard

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 November 2009

Extract

Although John Pickard's music has received a good many performances and radio broadcasts over the past decade, it was the relay of his dazzling orchestral tone poem The Flight of Icarus (1990) during the 1996 Proms1 which brought him to the notice of the wider concert–going and –listening public. There is some justice in that piece attracting such attention, as it is one of his most immediate in impact, while completely representative of his output at large. That output to date encompasses three symphonies (1983–4, 1985–7, 1995–6) and five other orchestral works, three string quartets (1991, 1993, 1994; a fourth in progress), a piano trio (1990), sonatas for piano (1987) and cello and piano (1994–5), vocal and choral works, pieces for orchestral brass (Vortex, 1984–5) and brass band – the exhilarating Wildfire (1991), which crackles, hisses and spits in ferocious near–onomatopoeia, and suite Men of Stone (1995), celebrating four of the most impressive megalithic sites in Britain, one to each season of the year. There are other works for a variety of solo instruments and chamber ensembles, such as the intriguing grouping of flute, clarinet, harpsichord and piano trio in Nocturne in Black and Gold (1983) and the large–scale Serenata Concertante for flute and six instruments of a year later. Still in his mid-thirties – he was born in Burnley in 1963 – Pickard has already made almost all the principal musical forms of the Western Classical tradition his own, with only opera, ballet and the concerto as yet untackled.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997

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References

1 Prom 14,31 July 1996, BBC National Orchestra of Wales c. Mark Wigglesworth.

2 Avebury, Wiltshire (Autumn); Castlerigg, near Keswick in Cumbria (Winter); Barcloediad y Gawres, on Anglesey (Spring); Stonehenge, Wiltshire (Mid-summer).

3 The composer argues (letter to me, 9 May 1997) that Serenata Concertante qualifies for this last category, not as a chamber work; in any event, a Trombone Concerto is planned for 1998.

4 e.g. Bь–C–C–B♮; Dь–D♮–E–Eь

5 In draft notes for a projected lecture, accompanying a letter to the present writer, 22 April 1997.

6 Ibid.