Amanda’s Dance | guitar solo by Frank A. Wallace

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Amanda’s Dance
by Frank A. Wallace

for guitar solo
inspired by Amanda by Justin Morgan
SUGGESTED DONATION $8.00

Duration: 6 minutes; 4 pages

Difficulty level: Difficult

Written: February, 2017

Dedicated to: Detlev Bork

World premiere: April 22, 2017 in Bern, Switzerland by Frank Wallace

Recording: A Distant Wind, 2019, by Frank Wallace on Gyre

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2017 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Amanda’s Dance first movement on 1941 Hauser

Ensemble Inversus singing in an April 2, 2011 concert at the Church of St. John the Evangelist in Montreal, Quebec.

Thomas Canning: Fantasy on a Hymn Tune by Justin Morgan

American hymn

Amanda’s Dance is based on an American hymn called Amanda by Justin Morgan. It’s long been a favorite of mine, with its haunting harmonies and stark words. The surprising use of a cross relation [D# and D at the same time] in the third chord of the song always captivated me and I had long wanted to write a set of variations or other work based on this chord and the related melodies. In the winter of 2017, I began the project and dedicated the piece to my German friend Detlev Bork in thanks for many favors and his love of new music. The opening dance gives way to a contrapuntal fantasy on the melodic elements of the original work and slowly works its way back to a reprise and enhancement of the opening theme.

Justin Morgan (February 28, 1747 – March 22, 1798) was a U.S. horse breeder and composer. READ MORE at WIKIPEDIA. He was born in West Springfield, Massachusetts, and by 1788 had settled in Vermont. In addition to being a horse breeder and farmer, he was a teacher of singing; in that capacity he traveled considerably throughout the northeastern states. He died in Randolph, Vermont, where he also served as town clerk.

My favorite stanza

Death, like an overflowing stream,
Sweeps us away; our life’s a dream,
An empty tale, a morning flower,
Cut down and withered in an hour.

Omaggio CD | a tribute to Segovia

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OMAGGIO CD | a tribute to the legacy of Segovia
guitar by Hermann Hauser I, 1931

Frank Wallace plays Villa-Lobos, Turina, Mompou, Tárrega, de Falla and Wallace
GYRE 10212 | UPC- 802442102126 |
Omaggio by de Falla performed on 1931 Hauser I guitar by Frank Wallace
SUGGESTED DONATION: $15 for CD (includes shipping); $12 for Hi-Res 24-bit .wav files: $8 for MP3s; DOWNLOAD BUTTON WILL GIVE YOU THE MP3s. Please specify if you want a different format with a message through our CONTACT PAGE. Hi-res files or CD will be sent then.

HDTracks and MP3s available at:

“Each one is played as if it were a brand new piece to discover, yet informed by the love, connection, and depth that one would experience with an old, special friend.”
McCutcheon, Soundboard June 2017

Press release: Omaggio press release

Release date: September 16, 2016; digital January 7, 2017

Duration: 55:46

Engineering and mastering: Frank Wallace; recorded at Hillsborough Center Congregational Church in Hillsborough, NH on September 6, 2013 (track 11) and September and October 2014, by Frank Wallace with Schoepps and Neumann microphones into a Prism Orpheus firewire interface to MacBook Pro.

Artwork, photographs and design: Nancy Knowles

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2016 Frank A. Wallace
All rights reserved.

01. Prelude #1, Heitor Villa-Lobos, 1887-1959 4:46
02. Prelude #2, Villa-Lobos 2:54
03. Prelude #3, Villa-Lobos, 1781-1829 3:14
04. Omaggio, Manuel de Falla, 1876-1946 3:07
05. I. Garrotín, Homenaje a Tárrega, opus 69, Joaquín Turina, 1882-1949 2:54
06. II. Soleares, Homenaje a Tárrega, opus 69, Turina 2:18
07. Preludio #5, Francisco Tárrega, 1852-1909 1:50
08. Adelita, Tárrega 1:29
09. Marieta, Tárrega 2:11
10. Capricho Árabe, Tárrega 5:44
11. Dreams on a Lullaby, Frank A. Wallace, b. 1952 6:57
12. I. Preludio, Suite Compostelana (1962), Federico Mompou, 1893-1987 3:21
13. II. Coral, Suite Compostelana, Mompou 2:45
14. III. Cuna, Suite Compostelana, Mompou 3:24
15. IV. Recitativo, Suite Compostelana, Mompou 2:58
16. V. Canción, Suite Compostelana, Mompou 2:49
17. VI. Muñeira, Suite Compostelana, Mompou 3:03
TOTAL TIME: 55:46

See the story and pictures of Segovia’s 1931 Hauser, sister to the guitar on this recording with it’s identical rosette, on the Hauser webpage

Frank Wallace, guitarist with 1931 Hauser


OMAGGIO CD LINER NOTES

Five of the first six tracks on Omaggio, my 25th recording, are homages. Villa-Lobos dedicated his Prelude #1 to the “Brazilian country dweller” and his Prelude #3 to Bach; Omaggio, Le Tombeau de Debussy is de Falla’s nod to the master and Turina felt inspired to honor Tárrega with his Homenaje a Tárrega. Dreams on a Lullaby, variations on the folksong Noi de la Mare, is my homage to Catalan guitarist/composer Miguel Llobet and the great art and music of his native Catalunya. Federico Mompou, also Catalan, dedicated his Suite Compostelana to Andrés Segovia. He named it after the famed pilgrimage city Santiago de Compostela, home of Música en Compostela, the festival that featured Segovia’s summer masterclass for decades. I went to that class in 1972. I met my future brother-in-law, but not Segovia, who was ill. A decade later I performed medieval music at the Música en Compostela festival, unaware that Segovia and the magnificent repertoire he engendered had left an indelible mark on my musical soul, which you will hear here.

This CD was initiated by my old friend, the late Edmund Brelsford. In 2010 Edmund invited me to do a concert of Segovia repertoire on his beloved 1931 Hermann Hauser I guitar (born the same year as he), in honor of the 100th birthday of its original owner, Blanche Honegger Moyse (1909-2011). Smitten by Andrés Segovia’s concerts in Geneva in 1929, the young violinist Blanche Honegger asked Segovia if she could study with him, which she did, even living for a time in the Segovia household in Paris. Two years later, Segovia commissioned a concert guitar from Hermann Hauser. Of the two instruments Hauser delivered, Segovia kept one. The other, the guitar on this CD, he gave to Blanche. At the end of World War II, now a member of the illustrious Moyse Trio with her husband and father-in-law, she and the guitar left France on a boat to Argentina, finally settling in Vermont. Her Hauser guitar, which had not weathered well the long journey, eventually came into the hands of my friend Edmund Brelsford. In 1999 Hermann Hauser III, the master’s grandson, undertook a major restoration, and there it was: a sunburst of sound, with colors of every hue, each tone ever-so-reluctantly melting into the next. Its true voice, muted for fifty years, sings again.

Playing this magical guitar has been a gift to me. In the process of relearning decades-ignored music for that 2010 concert and this recording, music I deeply love, I am more and more amazed at the myriad streams of life that flow into each ocean we call a human being. The decades I spent playing lute and vihuela, singing solo and choral music, teaching young professionals or young and old beginners—not to mention composing—all has made my understanding of the great masters of guitar so much deeper. It is a joy, an honor, an expression of gratitude to dedicate this recording
to all my mentors. —FW

PS – to hear more of this great guitar, listen to my 2014 CD Elemental, original compositions for the classical guitar.


Frank Wallace, Omaggio CD | a Tribute to the Legend [legacy] of Segovia

Frank Wallace has enjoyed a career that has included touring since 1976, and these are pieces that likely have been in his repertoire for some time. Each one is played as if it were a brand new piece to discover, yet informed by the love, connection, and depth that one would experience with an old, special friend. This recording, played on a 1931 Hermann Hauser I instrument, which is a “twin brother” of one chosen be Segovia, is clearly an homage to the music but also to the contributions made to Wallace by his many teachers and fellow artists.

Three Preludes by Villa-Lobos are played beautifully, and even though these are decades-old staples of the repertoire, I found them very enjoyable to hear, with strong, assured passage work and bravura delivery. The “Garrotín” in Turina’s Homage a Tárrega is performed with hesitant phrasing, which contrasts with the solid rhythm in the “Soleares.” Among four pieces by Tárrega himself, his Prelude #5, not often heard in recordings, stands out as a quiet, delightful gem. Mompou’s Suite Compostelana is dedicated to Andrés Segovia, who held summer masterclasses in Santiago de Compostela for many years. Wallace attended in 1972, which clearly inspires his interpretation. Wallace presents each movement as its own unique poem, from the depths of the “Recitativo” to the infectiously dance-like “Muñeira.” He includes his own homage to Catalan composer Miguel Llobet with Dreams on a Lullaby, a set of variations on the carol “El Noi de la Mare.” This piece has a wide range of settings starting with a contrapuntally beautiful treatment, dissolving into explosively contemporary and later almost free improvisatory sections, returning home briefly to the theme, and later moving into sections reminiscent of Julián Orbón.

Wallace is a member of the growing generation of sexagenarian players who continue to inspire by their artistry. The recording is well produced, with a solid yet sensitive guitar presence, and excellent graphic design by Wallace’s wife Nancy Knowles. – Jim McCutcheon
Soundboard Vol. 43 NO. 2, p.57


Omaggio CD
Frank Wallace
Gyre Music
Finding new colors in Segovia’s repertoire

This “tribute to the legacy of Segovia” (i.e., pieces associated with him) is played on a 1931 Hauser and recorded in a church, so there is plenty of natural reverb on the recording.  Wallace begins with Villa-Lobos’ first three Preludes, well-known to most, but what is unexpected is his presentation of some details in a slightly different way, which I found quite refreshing.  The Manuel de Falla Omaggio that comes next moves a little faster than a lot of interpretations and is full of power and drama.  Turina’s Garrotín and Soleares are wonderfully played.  It is such a shame that Turina’s guitar oeuvre is so tiny, as these pieces are exciting and consistently entertaining.

Four pieces by Tárrega follow, all lovely miniatures, including Adelita and the famous Capricho Arabe, which receives a particularly lively and dynamic performance. The only slightly unconventional addition to the recital is a set of variation on El Noi de la Mare, so beloved in Llobet’s magnificent version. Here, Wallace treats this lullaby to a constantly surprising set of emotions, many of them definitely not very lullaby-like.  This is Wallace’s own homage to both Llobet and Segovia.

The recital finishes with one of the finest pieces Segovia had written for him, Federico Mompou’s Suite Compostelana.  Wallace’s interpretations are quite telling, as here, too, he manages to find fresh ways to play this suite.  This is altogether a wonderful album, beautifully played.  – Chris Dumigan, Classical Guitar Summer 2017


Nina Krebs (friend and fan), in an email to me, 12/28/16

Dear Frank,
OMAGGIO CD sat on my desk for a few days, and I enjoyed looking at the cover. Last night I opened it and played it straight through. I was transfixed – did not move.

Everything about this work of art is beautiful: the lush multi-layered painting on the cover, the sensuous photo of the Hauser inside, your love letter to your mentors, The Guitar, the music and humanity. The music is exquisite; your Dreams on a Lullaby perfect for inclusion.

Clearly you and Nancy spent hours on design and production in addition to playing and recording the music. The depth of your knowledge, commitment and experience shimmer through the sound. Sometimes perfectionism pays, and this is one of those times. In addition to my pure pleasure in listening to the music I find inspiration to push for my best in the work I’m doing now. Thank you.

Congratulations on a fine contribution to world art.

BIO

Composer/guitarist Frank WallaceFrank Wallace, composer, guitarist, baritone; b. November 22, 1952

On stage, Frank Wallace is known for his “elegant virtuosity” (Classics Today) on the solo guitar, lute and vihuela and is also a master of self-accompanied song. Of his most recent CD Four Extraordinary Spanish Guitars, Al Kunze says in Soundboard,“…[he is] a powerful player, possessed of an unfailing musicianship…an almost symphonic range of colors and articulations…” Wallace tours internationally, performing music from the 16th – 21st century both as a soloist and with mezzo-soprano Nancy Knowles as Duo LiveOak. Wallace is a graduate of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music in guitar performance and is self-taught as a composer. American Record Guide calls Wallace’s compositions “exciting, unpredictable, and fresh.” Fanfare magazine has dubbed him a composer with “an authentic expressive voice” and a “high standard of musical interest” who performs with “flawless technical proficiency”. Wallace’s complete recordings and compositions are available at www.gyremusic.com, a site rich with information and samples of sheet music and audio.

“Wallace plays his own works with inspiration, determination, and a wealth of creativity…he can match the musicality of any player out there…” — This is classical guitar

Birthday Concert

Birthday Concert
a celebration of Frank Wallace’s 65th anniversary, guitar and baritone
music by composers born on or near Frank’s birthday, (November 22): Benjamin Britten, Joaquín Rodrigo, Julio Sagreras, Francisco Tárrega, Manuel de Falla, and, of course, Frank Wallace.

Birthday Concert is available spring 2018 – summer 2019. Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”; download 2017-18 Frank Wallace Birthday Guitar Concert

“It is easy to feel an intimate connection to the ethereal beauty of Frank Wallace’s compositions not only because of their individual splendor, but also because of the lush tone and sensitive perfection with which Wallace executes his music…“ — Stephen Griesgraber, Guitar Review

Workshop/masterclass also available:
The Singing Guitar how to play beautiful vocal lines on the guitar
Is your guitar a mini-orchestra as Andre Segovia described it? Or a small chamber choir, solo singer, violin virtuoso or blown woodwind? How do you approach the playing of melodic lines? This workshop will discuss the techniques involved in making your guitar sing. What is vibrato? What is legato? What is portamento? How do vowels effect your tone quality? What is the best fingering to achieve your goal? How do timbre and attack effect your vocal line? Read more: The Singing Guitar Workshop

Please click on tabs above for detailed program info, biography, video and audio. DOWNLOAD PDF of 2017-18 Frank Wallace Birthday Guitar Concert

Copyright ©2016 Frank A. Wallace
Photography and design by Nancy Knowles, Emily Taub; All rights reserved.

Frank Wallace Composer PHOTOS
Hi res photos are available at Flickr Frank Wallace Performance and many more casual shots for the web are at Flickr Albums

Videos of works included in Birthday Concert


Birthday Concert is available fall 2017 – summer 2018. Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

NOTES
I have often wondered from whence my artistic sensibilities come. My parents enjoyed listening to musicals and decorating the house with small paintings of local artists, but they were not artists. My story for decades has been that one grandfather played the piano by ear and the other wrote poetry and plays, and that’s where I got “my talent.” But part of being a composer is becoming intrigued with numbers and their relationships. An alternative theory, though perhaps more mystical, seems too intriguing to ignore:

1963 – The numbers 11 and 22 become seared in all memories when JFK is assassinated on 11/22; my 11th birthday
1970s – I fall in love with Bream’s recordings of contemporary English composers Britten, Walton, Bennett, etc.
1974 – I play Britten‘s Nocturnal in my senior recital
1976 – Gunther Schuller, president of NEC, calls me to offer me a teaching job at NEC
1980 – Touring Spain with Trio LiveOak, we are invited to meet with Joaquín Rodrigo who is commissioned to write songs for the Trio. (Líricas Castellanas, with dedication to my wife Nancy Knowles, is delivered one year later, one of his last compositions)
2003 – I meet Norbert Dams, German guitarist/composer/publisher, at the GFA in Merida, Mexico

The connection? All composers named above were born on November 22, my birthday, or on my mother’s birthday, March 29. I recently discovered that the great Argentinian guitarist/composer Julio Sagreras was also born on Nov. 22, and Toru Takemitsu, composer and arranger of many important works for guitar, was born on my father’s birthday, October 8. November 22 is also St. Cecilia’s Day, patron saint of music, for whom many well-known poems and pieces of music have been written.

This concert is a celebration of my 65th birthday, in 2017, and the works that have graced the repertoire of the modern classical guitar oeuvre that emanated from musicians born on these special days. It is an honor to cohabit Nov. 22, this day of music, with the likes of Benjamin Britten (1913), Joaquin Rodrigo (1901), Gunther Schuller (1925), and a couple of close calls in Manuel de Falla (Nov. 23, 1876), and Francisco Tárrega (Nov. 21, 1852). My mother’s birthday is March 29, joined by William Walton (1902) and Richard Rodney Bennett (1936).      –FW

Birthday Concert is available spring 2018 – summer 2019. Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

Father Said: – Frank Wallace, b. 11/22/1952
poetry by my grandfather Frank C. Wallace, received on my 50th birthday

Suite Hartt – Frank Wallace
for the Hartt School of Music’s 50 Anniversary

 

A Heavy Sleep – Frank Wallace, b. 11/22/1952
in honor of Britten’s 100th anniversary

Nocturnal after John Dowland, op. 70 – Benjamin Britten, b. 11/22/1913

intermission

The Game – music and poetry by Frank Wallace
for medium voice and guitar

D’Angelus – Frank Wallace
for Norbert Dams’ 60th birthday, b. 11/22/51

La Ideal, Romanza sin Palabras #2 – Julio Sagreras, b. 11/22/1879

Preludio #2 – Francisco Tárrega, b. 11/21/1852
Omaggio – Manuel de Falla, b. 11/23/1876
San Juan  from Líricas Castellanas – Joaquín Rodrigo, b. 11/22/1901
Fandango (Tres Piezas Españolas) – Joaquín Rodrigo

Birthday Concert is available spring 2018 – summer 2019. Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

“…a true master of his instrument…His dynamic range is impressive, and his gradations of tone, constantly singing line, and sensitive musicianship confirm his ‘elegant virtuosity’ (www.classicstoday.com)” – Robert Schulslaper, Fanfare

“Wallace plays his own works with inspiration, determination, and a wealth of creativity…he can match the musicality of any player out there…” — This is classical guitar

BIOGRAPHY Frank Wallace, composer, guitarist, baritone; b. November 22, 1952

On stage, Wallace is known for his “elegant virtuosity” (Classics Today) on the guitar, vihuela and lute and is a master of self-accompanied song. He tours internationally, performing music from the 16th – 21st century both as a soloist and with mezzo-soprano Nancy Knowles as Duo LiveOak. He has performed at the Taxco International Guitar Festival, Guitar Foundation of America, Festival Ramon Noble, New York Guitar Seminar at Mannes, the Holland Festival, Regensburg Festival, Música en Compostela, Boston Early Music Festival, Barcelona Festival, International Guitar Festival of Arequipa, the Festival of Spanish Song of Granada, and more.

Wallace is a graduate of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music in guitar performance and is self-taught as a composer. He moved to the East Coast immediately after graduation in 1974. Since 1986 he has received enormous inspiration from his family and their residence in a 1789 farmhouse in rural New Hampshire. American Record Guide calls Wallace’s compositions “exciting, unpredictable, and fresh”. Fanfare magazine has dubbed him a composer with “an authentic expressive voice” and a “high standard of musical interest” who performs with “flawless technical proficiency”. Frank Oteri of NewMusicBox.org calls it “contemporary musical emancipation”. Wallace’s works showcase the classical guitar in solo and ensemble, as well as in chamber works with voice, flute, violin, viola, cello, oboe, bassoon, English horn, mandolin, and piano. His compositional style has many influences, from Medieval and Renaissance to blues, jazz, minimalism and modern atonalism. Great passion and a sense of humor infuse both his compositions and his performances.

Frank Wallace founded and directed for four years the Boston Classical Guitar Society’s Festival 21, a celebration of all that is new in 21st century classical guitar. He also served a two-year term as artistic director of the Society. In New York City Wallace founded and co-directed the Second Sundays Classical Guitar Series in conjunction with the NYC Classical Guitar Society and Roger Smith Arts. He has taught at the New England Conservatory, Plymouth State College, Emmanuel College, Keene State College and Franklin Pierce College and has a B.M. from San Francisco Conservatory.

In 2014 Frank Wallace wrote a one hour chamber suite for the 50th anniversary of the Hartt School of Music’s Guitar Department. He has also written for Juan Carlos Laguna, Pablo Garibay, Edel Muñoz, ChromaDuo, the Jugend Zupf Orchestra of Germany, Mare Duo, Marek Pasiezcny, Ciraldo Duo, Olson / De Cari Duo, the Providence Mandolin Orchestra and more. He has recorded for Gyre, Titanic, Centaur, and Musical Heritage Society, which re-released a number of LiveOak and Frank Wallace recordings in 2008. His compositions are published by Gyre Music and have been featured in Guitar Review, Soundboard, Fingerstyle Magazine, and The LSA Quarterly.

Wallace’s complete recordings and compositions are available at www.gyremusic.com, a site rich with information and samples of sheet music and audio.

“…a composer with a distinct voice…” Soundboard

Birthday Concert is available spring 2018 – summer 2019. Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

Four Extraordinary Spanish Guitars CD

Free Download
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Four Extraordinary Spanish Guitars CD
Frank Wallace plays Aguado, Giuliani, Mertz, Tárrega, de Falla and Wallace
on four great Spanish guitars: Manuel Gutierrez, Sevilla, 1854; Manuel de Soto y Solares, Sevilla, c. 1875; Manuel Ramírez, Madrid, c. 1910; Ignacio Fleta, Barcelona, 1964
GYRE 10182 | UPC 802442101822
SUGGESTED DONATION: $15 for CD (includes shipping); $12 for Hi-Res 24-bit .wav files: $8 for MP3s; DOWNLOAD BUTTON WILL GIVE YOU THE MP3s. Please specify if you want a different format with a message through our CONTACT PAGE. Hi-res files or CD will be sent then.

Become a Patron!

“Exceptional playing on historic Spanish guitars. [The Aguado Fandango is] beautifully played and superbly recorded [by the performer himself]…Three Tárrega pieces [are] wonderfully played with real depth of feeling.” Chris Dumigan, Classical Guitar, summer 2016

Manuel Gutierrez, 1854, Sevilla
1 Fandango Variado, Op.16, Dionisio Aguado, 1784-1849  7:49

Release date: November 6, 2015

Duration: 55:35

Guitars: Manuel Gutierrez, 1854 [1,6-8]; Manuel de Soto y Solares, c. 1860 [2-5]; Manuel Ramirez, c. 1910 [9-12]; Ignacio Fleta, 1964 [13-14]

Engineering and mastering: Frank Wallace; Tracks 1-8 and 13-14 recorded at Hillsborough Center Congregational Church in Hillsborough, NH at various times from 1998-2003, by Frank Wallace with Schoepps microphones, Sontec preamp and Troisi converter to Panasonic SV-3700 DAT; tracks 9-12 recorded at Hillsborough Center Congregational Church in September 2013 by Frank Wallace with Schoepps and Neumann microphones into a Prism Orpheus firewire interface to MacBook Pro.

Artwork, photographs and design: Nancy Knowles, cover photo of Manuel Ramírez rosette

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2018 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


Manuel Gutierrez, 1854, Sevilla
1 Fandango Variado, Op.16, Dionisio Aguado, 1784-1849  7:49
Manuel de Soto y Solares, c. 1860, Sevilla
2 Minuet in D, Aguado  2:34
3 Larghetto, Mauro Giuliani, 1781-1829  1:19
4 Erster verlust, R. Schumann, 1810-1856 [arr. Wallace]  2:01
5 Minuet in C, Anton Diabelli, 1781-1858  2:11
6 An die entfernte, Johann Kaspar Mertz, 1806-1856 3:40
Manuel Gutierrez, 1854, Sevilla
7 Shaker’s Dance, W. O. Bateman  3:21
8 Variations Mignonne, Mertz  6:56
Manuel Ramírez, c. 1910, Madrid
9 Adelita, Francisco Tárrega, 1852-1909  1:19
10 Marieta, Tárrega  2:00
11 Capricho Árabe, Tárrega  5:28
12 Omaggio, Manuel de Falla, 1876-1946 3:14
Ignacio Fleta, 1964, Barcelona
13 Débil del Alba, Frank A. Wallace, b. 1952  6:37
14 Suite in B minor, Wallace  7:04

TOTAL TIME: 55:34

BIOGRAPHY

Composer/guitarist Frank WallaceFrank Wallace is an artist whose wizardry on the guitar rivals the range and depth of his musical ideas in composition. Fanfare dubs him a composer with “an authentic expressive voice” and a “high standard of musical interest” who plays with “flawless technical proficiency”. The American Record Guide calls Wallace’s music “exciting, unpredictable and fresh”. A prizewinner in the 2013 José Fernández Rojas International Composition Competition in Logroño, Spain, he has also garnered two New Hampshire Artist Fellowship awards for composition. Tirelessly working to expand the guitar repertoire with new works, Wallace founded and directed Festival 21 in Boston, a celebration of 21st century guitar works. In New York he founded and co-directed the Second Sundays Guitar Series run by the New York City Classical Guitar Society and the Roger Smith Hotel. In performance, Wallace is known for his “elegant virtuosity” on the guitar (Classics Today) as well as for his mastery of self-accompanied song. He has toured widely throughout North and South America and Europe since 1976, both as a soloist and as Duo LiveOak with mezzo-soprano Nancy Knowles.

LINER NOTES

It is a remarkable experience to hear a powerful, refined performer playing gorgeous historical instruments he knows intimately. On this album Frank Wallace shares his talents on four rare guitars from his own collection. Known internationally since 1976 as an elegant performer on guitar and lute, Wallace enjoys equal acclaim as a prolific composer of guitar solos, songs and chamber music. Fanfare says he is “…a true master…His dynamic range is impressive, and his gradations of tone, constantly singing line, and sensitive musicianship confirm his ‘elegant virtuosity’ (classicstoday.com)”. “Wallace’s music is exciting, unpredictable, and fresh…” American Record Guide

Frank explains his passion for old instruments: “Too often vintage guitars hide away in a collector’s closet or the basement of a museum. Guitarists debate restoring/playing versus leaving them for historians to analyze. Modern string players, in contrast, are out in the world every day playing concerts with 100-400 year-old instruments. It is my belief that these older guitars are vibrant musical powerhouses. Their tones are infinitely more complex and haunting than those of newer guitars. In their discomfort with the smaller size and lighter construction of 19th and early 20th century guitars, modern guitarists tend to underplay, to be careful, to assume that old means weak. When I bought these guitars in the 1990s after a decade of performing on Renaissance instruments without nails, their sound felt robust and luxurious. Now having played them for a quarter century, they feel even more poetic and expressive: important for their vast palette of sound.”

About the Instruments

In the mid-late 19th century, the vibrant Sevilla school of guitar building centered on one street, the Calle de la Cerrajería, where at #32 renowned builder Antonio Torres Jurado (1817-1892) did his most creative work from 1856-1869. Arriving in 1845, he lived in Sevilla for almost a quarter century. Before opening his own shop in 1854, Torres worked up to five years in the shop of Manuel Gutiérrez Martínez (1773-1857) at #36 Calle de la Cerrajería. Since Torres and Gutiérrez were close friends, one assumes Gutiérrez shared his knowledge and skills with the younger Torres. The oldest guitar on this album, an 1854 Gutiérrez built the year Torres made his first known guitar, is remarkably similar to an 1857 Torres guitar (FE 07) in the Yale University Musical Instruments Collection.

I had the opportunity to compare the two instruments some years ago. The resemblance is stunning. They are alike in size, shape and lightness of construction. Both have three-piece backs, five radial struts, a v-shaped shaft splice, and an almost identical headstock, in a shape reminiscent of bull’s horns. The two luthiers clearly used similar techniques to refine the tops. (The Gutiérrez varies widely from 1.4-2.2 mm, corroborating Torres’ famous statement that his secret is in the feel of the tips of his thumb and forefinger). With different woods for the back and sides, their sound is remarkably similar: rich, dark, full and complex. Since Torres built this guitar in the older, smaller style of Gutiérrez the year the elder luthier died, one wonders if he built it in honor of his friend.

Manuel de Soto y Solares (1839-1906) took over Gutiérrez’ former shop at #36 (renumbered as #4) in 1868 then moved to #7 in 1875. From a distinguished family of Sevilla guitar builders (his father, both grandfathers, his brother, his children and grandchildren), he is credited with developing the tablao guitar for the burgeoning flamenco market, with its shallow depth, cypress back and sides, and domed top and back. My Soto y Solares is a superb example, showing the influence of Torres, whose instruments were fast becoming famous. It was exhibited at the 2000–2001 Boston Museum of Fine Arts’ Dangerous Curves: Art of the Guitar Exhibition.

Manuel Ramírez (1864-1916) changed guitar history when the young Andrés Segovia walked into his Madrid shop asking to rent a guitar. The 1912 instrument that he gifted him became Segovia’s principal instrument until 1937, when he began concertizing on a 1937 Hauser I. Both instruments are now at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. The influence of Manuel Ramírez’ exquisite Torres-inspired instruments still resonates today, with good reason. Santos Hernández*, Domingo Esteso, and Enrique García among other great builders all worked in his shop.

The instruments of Ignacio Fleta (1897-1977) were made famous by many twentieth century virtuosos, including Segovia and John Williams. Like Madrid’s Manuel Ramírez, Fleta in Barcelona had the opportunity to repair many Torres guitars. By the late 1950s Fleta was pioneering his own style of guitarbuilding, veering away from his earlier lighter Torres construction to satisfy his clientele, who were performing in large halls. His early training and building was in violins, cellos, and bass viols. No wonder his guitars have such a soul-stirring sustain. In an interview shortly before his death, he spoke of the pivotal influence of Torres on his work.
— Frank Wallace

*Santos Hernández built the Segovia 1912 Ramírez

FOUR EXTRAORDINARY SPANISH GUITARS

“… a powerful player, possessed of an unfailing musicianship…the music is wonderfully executed [with] an almost symphonic range of colors and articulations…”
— Al Kunze, Soundboard Vol 45 No. 4

“…his playing shows what [the music] can sound like in the hands (and mind) of a real artist.”
— Ken Keaton, American Record Guide

“Exceptional playing on historic Spanish guitars. [The Aguado Fandango is] beautifully played and superbly recorded [by the performer himself]…Three Tárrega pieces [are] wonderfully played with real depth of feeling.” Chris Dumigan, Classical Guitar, summer 2016

PREVIOUS RECORDINGS

“…astonishing…an exquisite canvas…palpable excitement…consummate skill…virtuoso playing.”
— Canfield, Fanfare Nov/Dec 2014

“…he can match the musicality of any player out there…orchestral ideas in his playing…natural phrasing and rhythm…playing is virtuosic but always in a musically convincing way.”
— Bradford Werner, This is Classical Guitar

“…elegant virtuosity and Gyre’s gorgeous sonics…”
— Jed Distler, classicstoday.com

“…a true master of his instrument…His dynamic range is impressive, and his gradations of tone, constantly singing line, and sensitive musicianship confirm his ‘elegant virtuosity’ (www.classicstoday.com)”
— Robert Schulslaper, Fanfare

Of Love & Soul: a concert of music for and by fathers and sons

Of Love & Soul composed and performed by Frank Wallace, guitar and baritone
music and poetry for and by fathers and sons, a touching tribute to the composer’s male side of his family; see Of Love & Soul program

Available now through 2017 – Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”; download program.

“It is easy to feel an intimate connection to the ethereal beauty of Frank Wallace’s compositions not only because of their individual splendor, but also because of the lush tone and sensitive perfection with which Wallace executes his music…“ — Stephen Griesgraber, Guitar Review

Concert offering
Frank Wallace’s concert Of Love & Soul provides an “intimate connection” to the composer’s personal life with songs and solos about place, aging, and fatherhood, inspired by the birth of his first son, the passions and passing of his father, and the films of his second son. The concert features a group of songs on poems by his grandfather about childhood and the wisdom of his own father in the 1890’s.

Shall I ?
Fret at the summer sun when it distills
?The nectars in the lush Elberta peach
?For me?  — Frank C. Wallace (1887-1951)

The Poetry of Family lecture/demonstration
Wallace will discuss how he discovered his grandfather’s lost poetry, the pride he felt in embracing it, the joy of creating new life with it, and the shock of discovering his own father’s lack of connection to it. Each generation pursues its passion; how can we embrace our own creative urges and still respect family differences? Poetry in Wallace’s own life has given him not only a creative outlet but helped shape his journey to wholeness and his connection to his sons’ individual paths.

Workshop/masterclass also available:
The Singing Guitar  how to play beautiful vocal lines on the guitar
Is your guitar a mini-orchestra as Andre Segovia described it? Or a small chamber choir, solo singer, violin virtuoso or blown woodwind? How do you approach the playing of melodic lines? This workshop will discuss the techniques involved in making your guitar sing. What is vibrato? What is legato? What is portamento? How do vowels effect your tone quality? What is the best fingering to achieve your goal? How do timbre and attack effect your vocal line? Read more: The Singing Guitar Workshop

Please click on tabs above for detailed program info, biography, video and audio. DOWNLOAD PDF of Of Love & Soul – 2016
Copyright ©2015 Frank A. Wallace
Photography and design by Nancy Knowles, Emily Taub; All rights reserved.
Frank Wallace is supported in part by a grant from the NH State Council on the Arts.

Frank Wallace Composer PHOTOS
Hi res photos are available at Flickr Frank Wallace Performance and many more casual shots for the web are at Flickr Albums

Videos of works included in Of Love & Soul

Three videos of Passing in the Night: Don’t say good-bye #2, Say au revoir #4; I’m still your Pappy! #5″

Of Love & Soul is available now through 2017 – Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

Read more about the poetry and music of the concert on the following blog posts:

Father’s Day Gift (part 1)

Father’s Day Gift (part 2)

Of Love & Soul is available now through 2017 – Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

Download 2016 – Of Love & Soul.
Click on titles to learn more about each work and to hear samples or purchase sheet music

Father Said:
2003 – 16 songs, medium voice; poems by Frank C. Wallace (1887-1951)

Passing in the Night
2012 – five pieces for guitar solo

intermission

From the Windy Place
1997 – four movements

like black snow
2012 – baritone and guitar; poems by Nathan G. Wallace

Film Scores
2015 eleven short solos for my friends

The Game
2007 – 5 songs, medium voice and guitar; poems by Frank A. Wallace

Of Love & Soul is available now through 2017 – Please write for more information with our Contact form or to “info (at) gyremusic.com”

“…a true master of his instrument…His dynamic range is impressive, and his gradations of tone, constantly singing line, and sensitive musicianship confirm his ‘elegant virtuosity’ (www.classicstoday.com)” – Robert Schulslaper, Fanfare

“Wallace plays his own works with inspiration, determination, and a wealth of creativity…he can match the musicality of any player out there…” — This is classical guitar

BIOGRAPHY Frank Wallace, composer, guitarist, baritone; b. November 22, 1952

On stage, Wallace is known for his “elegant virtuosity” (Classics Today) on the guitar, vihuela and lute and is a master of self-accompanied song. He tours internationally, performing music from the 16th – 21st century both as a soloist and with mezzo-soprano Nancy Knowles as Duo LiveOak. He has performed at the Taxco International Guitar Festival, Guitar Foundation of America, Festival Ramon Noble, New York Guitar Seminar at Mannes, the Holland Festival, Regensburg Festival, Música en Compostela, Boston Early Music Festival, Barcelona Festival, International Guitar Festival of Arequipa, the Festival of Spanish Song of Granada, and more.

Wallace is a graduate of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music in guitar performance and is self-taught as a composer. He moved to the East Coast immediately after graduation in 1974. Since 1986 he has received enormous inspiration from his family and their residence in a 1789 farmhouse in rural New Hampshire. American Record Guide calls Wallace’s compositions “exciting, unpredictable, and fresh”. Fanfare magazine has dubbed him a composer with “an authentic expressive voice” and a “high standard of musical interest” who performs with “flawless technical proficiency”. Frank Oteri of NewMusicBox.org calls it “contemporary musical emancipation”. Wallace’s works showcase the classical guitar in solo and ensemble, as well as in chamber works with voice, flute, violin, viola, cello, oboe, bassoon, English horn, mandolin, and piano. His compositional style has many influences, from Medieval and Renaissance to blues, jazz, minimalism and modern atonalism. Great passion and a sense of humor infuse both his compositions and his performances.

Frank Wallace founded and directed for four years the Boston Classical Guitar Society’s Festival 21, a celebration of all that is new in 21st century classical guitar. He also served a two-year term as artistic director of the Society. In New York City Wallace founded and co-directed the Second Sundays Classical Guitar Series in conjunction with the NYC Classical Guitar Society and Roger Smith Arts. He has taught at the New England Conservatory, Plymouth State College, Emmanuel College, Keene State College and Franklin Pierce College and has a B.M. from San Francisco Conservatory.

In 2014 Frank Wallace wrote a one hour chamber suite for the 50th anniversary of the Hartt School of Music’s Guitar Department. He has also written for Juan Carlos Laguna, Pablo Garibay, Edel Muñoz, ChromaDuo, the Jugend Zupf Orchestra of Germany, Mare Duo, Marek Pasiezcny, Ciraldo Duo, Olson / De Cari Duo, the Providence Mandolin Orchestra and more. He has recorded for Gyre, Titanic, Centaur, and Musical Heritage Society, which re-released a number of LiveOak and Frank Wallace recordings in 2008. His compositions are published by Gyre Music and have been featured in Guitar Review, Soundboard, Fingerstyle Magazine, and The LSA Quarterly.

Wallace’s complete recordings and compositions are available at www.gyremusic.com, a site rich with information and samples of sheet music and audio.

“…a composer with a distinct voice…” Soundboard

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An American Song Book, vol. I | arr. by Frank A. Wallace

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An American Song Book, vol. I
arranged by Frank A. Wallace

eleven songs from 19th century America by Foster, Wood, Belcher, Morgan, anonymous
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Instrumentation: guitar and medium voice

Duration: 20 pages

Difficulty level: Moderate; mostly standard chords for guitar with some melodic elements

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2010 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

I. Ah, May the Red Rose — Stephen Foster
II. If I Only Had a Moustache — Stephen Foster
III. Somebody’s Coming to See Me Tonight — Stephen Foster
IV. Mr. and Mrs. Brown — Stephen Foster
V. None Shall Weep a Tear For Me — Stephen Foster
VI. Johnny Sands — John Sinclair
VII. Brevity — Abraham Wood
VIII. Amanda — Justin Morgan
IX. The Lilly — Supply Belcher
X. French Broad — William Walker
XI. Nancy Wells — Shaker Traditional

No one knows for sure exactly why or when the traditional Renaissance and Baroque double courses, or pairs of strings, were dropped in favor of the single strings of the six string guitar, but by the year 1807, this new guitar had established its popularity in the musical capital of Vienna. In that year, when Schubert was a boy of ten, the thriving musical community saw the publication of Beethoven’s famous song Adelaide in guitar transcription as well as numerous guitar works of Giuliani, Molitor, and Aguado. As part of Schubert’s efforts to become known as a song-writer, his publisher, Diabelli (a guitarist himself), chose to issue four of his first songs in guitar versions in 1821 in order to appeal to the large contingent of guitarists in Vienna.

The 19th century romantics loved the guitar. Paganini, whose fame was made on the violin, was also an incomparable guitarist. . . in fact, those who heard him on both instruments had a hard time deciding which he played best. In 1821 he and Rossini dressed up as two female singing beggars and strummed their way on two guitars through the streets of Rome during carnival. Berlioz’ principle instrument was the guitar – he never played piano – and in true romantic fashion he would often take his guitar up to the mountains for long rambles, serenading the peasants and inventing wild recitative from Virgil with strange harmonies on his guitar. His friend, French playwright Ernest Legouvé wrote: “The guitar embodied all instruments for him, and he was very good at it.”

In the world of song, Stephen Foster and Franz Schubert seem in some ways to be polar opposites – the genius of Foster being his simplicity and accessibility; the genius of Schubert being his subtlety, his depth, and the fantastic colors he weaves into his accompaniments. But the common thread that has caused both composers to live on in the hearts of song lovers everywhere is their gift for melody. America’s first professional songwriter, Foster was born in Pittsburgh and lived in Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and New York. He never lived in the South – he wrote his “plantation” songs as a serious effort to lure minstrel players into a sympathetic portrayal of blacks.

Foster was self-taught, tirelessly studying songs of all types, from Scottish ballads to German lieder, Italian opera and African-American spirituals. In response to the rising popularity of the guitar, he arranged many of his songs with guitar accompaniment. He also wrote the lyrics to his songs, lyrics that speak movingly of universal emotions and situations, some of them hilarious as you shall hear.

Nancy Knowles, soprano
Frank Wallace, 19th century guitars
recordings from an unreleased CD titled Pastiche done in 2001 for Gyre.

String Songs | guitar and string quartet by Frank A. Wallace

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String Songs
by Frank A. Wallace

Seven songs for guitar and strings; PARTS INCLUDED
SUGGESTED DONATION: $30

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Written: String Songs are arrangements of songs by Frank Wallace written at various times from 1996-2007; completed in May 2015

Duration: 23 minutes; 32 pages

Difficulty level: advanced

Instrumentation: guitar, violin 1 & 2, viola, cello

World premiere: Mud Turtle Quintet | Return to Nature Concert, April 2018

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2015 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Mud Turtle Quintet | Return to Nature Concert


A Finale Garritan Orchestra midi rendition

String Songs are arrangements of seven songs that I wrote between 1996 and 2007. The first String Song is my first actual song and the second uses a poem of Wendy Holmes, lifelong friend of my wife, and fabulous artist/photographer. The next five songs are all from a 2006 composition entitled Syzygy, which is a song-cycle on poetry written by my wife, Nancy Knowles. The treatment of each song varies to create a constantly changing texture throughout the 23 minutes of the work.

1. Song without words  quintet
2. Advice  trio
3. Watershed at Brewbakers  duo
4. Architecture  quintet
5. Caramelo  quartet
6. Remembered wellness  quintet
7. Orbs in syzygy  quintet

The quintets use the full resources of the string ensemble and are the most lavishly adorned with polyphonic lines, textural octaves, enhancements to the guitar accompaniments, etc. Advice, the only trio, is virtually identical to the original piece for guitar with soprano and baritone voices. [There is also an arrangement for piano and oboe and bassoon.] Next we have a duet between violin and guitar, a jazzy number with strummed chords and elaborated vocal/violin line with two-part polyphony at times and melodic flourishes at others. The rest are full ensemble except the cello is tacet in #5, in which the strings are muted in this peaceful setting.

The words are no longer part of these string arrangements, but appear here for reference:

I. Song without words Nancy Knowles
Secretly shining
prism within my heart
Sings forth your light,
star all alone, apart,
all alone so soon.

Warming my soul
from afar
I hear your call
echo in the womb
of my song,
song without words
you’re gone too long.

Now you’re the sun,
I’m your moon
your reflection
secretly shining
I’m your song
without words.

II. Advice Wendy Holmes
On these cold nights of the equinox

Evoke
warmth ’til it washes over you
and radiates from within.

Accept
that you are a perfect child of god,
not in charge of the plot.

Laugh,
looking everywhere for lightness. Don’t fret,
for this corrects nothing.

Relish the black night
as it fills with the rippling song
of the woodcock, returned to dazzle his mate.

Learn from him as he spirals upward,
folds his wings at the peak, and plummets
in a fountain of melody to the dark field below.

Stand near where he lands,
then wanders curiously in circles,
beeping,

And suddenly takes off again with a burst of wings,
whistling as he ascends,
only to tumble down once more in birdsong.

Guard
your open mind. Rise each day into fresh courage.
Embrace the early turn to spring.

Follow
the thaw in the soil; like the killdeer and the robin,
spend the morning listening for worms.

Let meaning take care of itself.

III. Watershed at Brewbakers Nancy Knowles
All of me leads
to half of you

We meet, mourn
the silent passing
leavetaking of child
who was, is you

Tears blind our eyes
how brief

Wonder in our souls
how sweet

Mute
we await
our dreams.

IV. Architecture Nancy Knowles
A burst, yea
burst me not, Sampson
outflowing
asunder,
astride of thunder.

If the walls of your vessel
burst with rising boiling waters,
shards and torrents
gushing forth intermingled,
your body parts and all of our dreams
hurled on the rocks below,

If then the vessel itself
needs hence to be repaired,
If someday, old man,
you become weary of gluing little pieces
back together, or cry over lost ones
crushed in haste by your foot,

You might then ponder
then a new design-—
a vessel of porous clay
that daily sweats its labors,

Or an open bowl, round lip
calling to the heavens,
welcoming divine cooling breezes

Or if that rising heat contained
keeps you alive,
gives fuel to your passions,
you might then just fashion

a little spout.

V. Caramelo Nancy Knowles
Face of honey
Sweet song
Dear sweetness
Precious tune
My dear, I gave it to myself.
Tawny honey song day.

VI. Remembered wellness Nancy Knowles
Indeed it happens
we even sometimes notice it

Sometimes yes we revel in it
soaring for a moment or two
just like dreams.

It’s not always stunning
(or even vaguely glamorous)
On the contrary, when we are not
stunned into forgetting
then the extraordinary
becomes so ordinary

That we remember it,
dropping into grace.

VII. Orbs in syzygy Nancy Knowles
I did it
How did I do it?
I did it

It wasn’t enlightened
It really just happened
but I did it

Didn’t tell no one
(that’s the rub)
gotta tell someone
I did it

I did it
somehow I did it
don’t matter none
why where or how:
I just did it.

I did it
somehow I did it
he said I must
she said I could
I said I can
and so
it seems
I did it.

Copyright ©2015 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography by Frank Wallace, design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Song Without Words | song by Nancy Knowles and Frank A. Wallace

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Song Without Words
by Frank A. Wallace

song for mezzo-soprano and guitar, op. 4
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Duration: 3 minutes; 3 pages

Instrumentation: mezzo-soprano and guitar

Difficulty level: medium

Written: 1996

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©1996 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


This, my first song, originally had no words – my wife was aching to sing it and so wrote these words in memory of her brother John.

Secretly shining
prism within my heart
Sings forth your light,
star all alone, apart,
all alone so soon.

Warming my soul
from afar
I hear your call
echo in the womb
of my song,
song without words
you’re gone too long.

Now you’re the sun,
I’m your moon
your reflection
secretly shining
I’m your song
without words.

– Nancy Knowles

Film Scores – for solo guitar by Frank A. Wallace

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Film Scores
by Frank A. Wallace

eleven short preludes for guitar solo
SUGGESTED DONATION: $8

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Written: completed in May, 2015; for Adam Wallace, Robert J. Ward, David Isaacs, Bret Williams, James and John Knowles and the team at Roger Smith Hotel, Dieter Hennings, Rafael Elizondo, Mike Dillon

Duration: 15 minutes; 11 pages

Difficulty level: moderate

Instrumentation: solo guitar

World premiere: June 18, 2016 at Stone Church Arts, by Frank A. Wallace

Recording: Frank Wallace on YouTube, recorded Nov. 2015

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2015 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Film Scores I hope will become just that, but as of yet they are headless horsemen riding in search of films to connect with. I started the project in summer of 2011 with the writing of 10 very brief ideas that my son Adam Wallace could use for the many short films he was making along with his colleagues at the Roger Smith Hotel. Great work they were doing about life in the City, artists and art exhibits at the Hotel, Hotel employees and more. I was left with the feeling that writing a real film score would be an awesome task some day. That has not happened, but when friend Mike Dillon asked if I would write a short piece for him based on The Old Man of the Mountain (a now fallen chunk of rock in the White Mountains of New Hampshire), I got inspired to write more short works that were romantic, nostalgic and suggestive visually. But I didn’t do it. Actually, it was borrowing a bunch of manuscript paper from Bob Ward while visiting in Boston that finally worked – I told him I would pay him back with a piece, so that was the real motivation for getting off my duff and penning these works. Thanks Bob. And Adam and Mike.
Old Man of the Mountain

I. Rain in DR for Adam Wallace
Adam spent a lot of time in the Dominican Republic around 2011 and later. Beauty abounds, human and otherwise.

II. On Seine for Adam Wallace
Who wouldn’t want to be on the Seine right now with a loving partner.

III. Anoushka for Bob Ward
OK, I watched Anoushka Shankar on a video and was looking for a name for this exotic piece which is dedicated to Bob Ward. Bob and I are old friends and I hope his current partner won’t get mad at me for the name!

IV. Old Man Remembered for Mike Dillon
read above

V. Broome Street for Adam Wallace
While this was written in the first batch in 2011, I wasn’t quite sure about it. I added a repeat and a new ending and realized this is a perfect rendition of the sounds on Broome St. Manhattan where my son just moved. It’s gritty as he likes to say, but really fun and vibrant.

VI. She Looked at Me for Bret Williams
…or did she?! My most recent piece is another set of short guitar solos that I dedicated to Adam Levin, Boston entrepreneurial guitarist, called Clusters. This work is in the same vein but written for Bret Williams, another entrepreneurial guitarist from NYC. In fact, I originally named this piece with an exact description of what it is, Cluster Pluck, but decided it was a bit too racy for me. I reviewed Bret’s CD eponymously titled The Music of Bret Williams and decided to give him an ironic little response to his lovely music. The [new] title comes from a song/poem of Nancy Knowles used in my song cycle Syzygy:

Born, Again
for my father (and mother)

When
when she
he said
she looked
at me
he said
my life
as I
he said
had known it

ended.

VII. Awakenings for David Isaacs
I met David, and his wife Chelsea, at a GFA about ten years ago. We share many passions, mostly around guitar and song, both of us being married to, and partners with, our singing wives. Yesterday, May 30, 2015, we started sharing fatherhood when Rowan Allan Isaacs was born, at 9.5 lbs I might add! So today I wrote David a piece, something I should have done a long time ago, he being one of my biggest fans. The first chords came out and I said, “No, this isn’t right – it should be bright and happy on this occasion.” Then I remembered our email conversations of the past three weeks, David being scared of what fatherhood would do to his career. I assured him, as he assured me many others had, that it would be a huge boost to his overall energy and output. A totally win/win situation. Nevertheless, Awakenings is about the fear just before the break-through, the dark just before the dawn, ending with that first little tiny ray of sunshine coming over the mountains.

VIII. Pan City for James Knowles and John Knowles
This quirky dynamic little piece is dedicated to all the folks who ran the Arts at the Roger Smith Hotel, back in the day, around 2006-10. My brother-in-law James Knowles is a great artist, but midway through life his wife inherited a small family-run hotel. Jimmy set about re-creating it’s image and infusing the space with vibrant color and life. Part of that effort was the Second Sundays Guitar Series (run by John Olson and me), part the Lab Gallery (run by Matt Semler), and part the in-house social media team run by John Knowles, Adam Wallace and others. Their job, of course, was to document the events as well as create a buzz about the Hotel online. Much of that was video, which became a creative process itself in the hands of such innovative young pioneers. Samples can be seen at Roger Smith Shorts. Others are Homage to a Hero, The Talea Ensemble – and Adam’s later independent work can be seen Adam J. Wallace.

IX. Rain in VT for Dieter Hennings
Beauty also abounds in the Green Mountain state, Vermont. Dieter Hennings, professor of guitar at University of Kentucky Lexington, came to Boston to play 21st century Mexican music in Festival 21 in 2009. We hit it off personally and the audience experienced a truly miraculous concert of passion and commitment. I could go on and on about Dieter’s boundless energy – but this story began when he called about a year later to ask if I could record him next weekend and produce a CD in a week! Fortunately some of the music was already finished, we only had to record a 30 minute long Weiss suite! We did it – in the rain. It rained incessantly for two days throughout the regions and we hid out on a hill in Vermont working our asses off while my wife stayed at home designing the cover.

X. Sweet Betrayal for Rafael Elizondo
I was a little pissed off at someone, which reminded me of another someone I was a little pissed off at in the same way, when I wrote this lovely and nostalgic piece. No big deal, but I don’t usually attack a new work with any particular emotion, it’s engrossing for me, but not emotional usually. So it was that this was a balm for me, a nice way to forgive and forget. It is dedicated to the great Mexican guitarist Rafael Elizondo who is an online friend of mine who shares my love of good microphones, cameras, and guitar, ie: we both have made a lot of videos in the last year or two. I know Rafa will bring out the real beauty of this simple piece and my hope is we’ll see a video of him playing it soon. For the record, I was not and have never been angry with Rafa!

XI. Wood More Graced for Rafael Elizondo and Steve Connor
This piece was added as somewhat of an after-thought a month after the others were completed. I wanted to include a more rhythmic, dance-like piece in the set. This is perhaps more rock than dance, but fills the need! I was playing my Connor guitar #71 from 2004 when I picked up my pencil to start this piece, almost immediately I noticed a message from Rafa Elizondo that he had just received his Connor #289 called Mirror. The coincidence was too weird, so in commemoration of that moment I chose a title that comes from a poem I wrote about living in the country – it seemed the perfect praise of beautiful guitars and their amazing builders. I should add that the fundamental parallel fifths and other musical building blocks were derived from the previous two works – and that Dieter Hennings also plays a Connor guitar!

Copyright ©2015 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography by Frank Wallace, design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


Below are samples presented for inspiration only should you wish to make a video using these works. The first by NYC Ballet has 1.5 million views; the second is a beautiful essay on In the Woods by Toru Takemitsu presented by Matthew Rohde; then three from Adam Wallace with Frank Wallace guitar pieces in the background and the last is a simple slide show made by Frank Wallace.

Orpheus’ Lyre: music for voice and vihuela

Frank Wallace, vihuela and baritone-IMG_0291

Frank Wallace, vihuela and baritone

van der Waals vihuela

vihuela, 1986, by Nico van der Waals

Viola da Mano Raimondi, c1510

Viola da Mano, Raimondi, c1510

Luys de Milán El Maestro 1536

El Maestro, Milán, Valencia, 1536

El grande Orpheo / primero inventor
Por quien la vihuela / paresce en el mundo
Si el fue primero / no fue sin segundo
Pues dios es de todos / de todo hazedor.

The great Orpheus, first inventor
Through whom the vihuela appeared in the world
If he was the first, he was not without a second [?]

Since God is creator of everyone and everything.

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