Program note: The word “idyll” is from the Greek eidyllion, ‘“little picture’, a short poem of a pastoral or rural character in which something of the element of landscape is depicted or suggested.” I wanted to write a work that was predominantly bucolic and soothing in affect, in response to the precarity and volatility of the current times. For the majority of the piece, which is in one continuous movement, my pastoral scene is an interior imagining: it takes place in the mind, rather than in response to any specific pictorial tableau. However, there is part of Eydillion that does recall an actual place. The middle section is an elaborated quote from my Bundanon Sonata for Violin and Piano (2011) – the fourth movement, “Earth Art Could Fall From the Skies”. I composed this work on my fourth Artist Residency at Bundanon, bequeathed to the nation by the Arthur and Yvonne Boyd estate, situated near Nowra, NSW. This movement refers to the plethora of contemporary site-specific artworks around the vast property, not only on the ground but also up in the trees. The opening theme of Eydillion returns in various guises, one of which affords an obligato piano moment in the spotlight. I wanted to give the sense of travelling through this interior “journey”, with time unfolding, terrain – of a non-specified nature – traversed. A triumphant, ecstatic end is presented by the orchestra, in tutti.
Funding
Zelman Memorial Symphony Orchestra
with support from a City of Boroondara Grant and Kathy and George Deutsch;part of City of Boroondara Annual Community Strengthening Grant 2024;N/A
History
Add to Elements
Yes
NTRO Output Type
Original Creative Work
NTRO Output Category
Original Creative Work : Other
Place
Melbourne, Australia
Venue
Premiere performance: Camberwell Grammar School Performing Arts Centre
NTRO Publisher
Australian Music Centre
Medium
Original score
Research Statement
Eidyllion for Orchestra was commissioned by the Zelman Memorial Symphony Orchestra, with generous support from the City of Boroondara (part of Annual Community Strengthening Grant 2024) and Kathy and George Deutsch. It falls within the genre of contemporary art music and encompasses the instrumental forces of Prokoviev’s 5th Symphony.
My aim was for a predominantly bucolic work, soothing in affect, in response to the precarity and volatility of the current times. The piece meets the challenge of balancing extensive instrumental forces in a one-movement orchestral setting to maintain player- and audience-interest throughout. Its musical layering is underpinned by my post-atonal musical languages, traversing C20th/C21st minimalist harmonic procedures and contemporary popular idioms. The composition explores self-referential intertextuality in an elaborated quote from my Bundanon Sonata for Violin and Piano (2011).
It is an enormous honour to have been commissioned to compose a work for this orchestra, one of the longest-standing semi-professional orchestras in the country. The première was given at the Camberwell Grammar School – Performing Arts Centre on 7 December 2024, to a full house, and received rapturously.
Eidyllion for Orchestra is published by the Australian Music Centre, a peer-reviewed publishing body, Australia’s leading publishing house for music composition.