A Tune Beyond | for violin, viola and guitar by Frank A. Wallace

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by Frank A. Wallace
for violin, viola and guitar; PARTS INCLUDED
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Duration: 7 minutes; 8 pages

Instrumentation: violin, viola and guitar

Difficulty level: Moderate technically

Written: December, 2013

Commissioned by: the Hartt School of Music Guitar Department at the University of Hartford, CT with assistance from the Augustine Foundation

World premiere: April 12, 2014 at the Hartt School, Hartford, CT by Phenix Enemble

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2014 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


Miller-Porfiris Duo
Richard ProvostA Tune Beyond was written for Phenix Ensemble: Richard Provost, guitar; Anton Miller, violin; Rita Porfiris, viola. The three make for a unique group, since a violin, viola and guitar are rarely combined to form a trio. Miller has performed at New York’s elite Carnegie Hall. He was the first to perform in Xiogang Ye’s “Last Paradise” in Beijing, China, an event that was broadcasted across Asia, and was also sold on CD. Miller has also toured in Asia, Brazil, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, England and China. He is currently a professor at New York University Steinhardt. Porfiris has performed with renowned orchestras such as the Orquesta Filarmonica de la Ciudad de Mexico, the New World Symphony and the Houston Symphony. Currently she is working as the Assistant Professor of Viola at the Hartt School, the performance art school within the University of Hartford in Connecticut.  Provost’s career consisted of a solo performance at Longdon’s Wigmore Hall, as well as performances across the United States, Great Britain and Germany. Provost also works at The Hartt School as Founder and chairman of the guitar department and according to Provost’s biography provided by The Hartt School, he is “regarded as one of the country’s leading guitar pedagogues.”

A Tune Beyond
Eight works composed by Frank A. Wallace in winter 2014 comprise As It Could Be, a chamber suite commissioned by and dedicated to the Hartt School of Music Guitar Department and its founder/director Richard Provost on the occasion of their 50th anniversary. The project was conceived at dinner following a concert of the New England Guitar Quartet at the Hartt Festival in the summer of 2013. My interest in writing chamber music melded perfectly with Dick’s desire to plan a celebration/concert for the Anniversary. Dick suggested using The Man with the Blue Guitar by Wallace Stevens (a resident of Hartford, CT) as a source of lyrics for a song to include. This incredible testimony to art and its role in changing society became inspiration for the music and titles. The possibilities for chamber music with guitar, guitar orchestra and ensembles are only beginning to be fully realized. Thank you Dick (and all your colleagues) who brought the guitar out of the dark ages and into a brilliant new community of creativity and progress through your courage, hard work and vision. Thanks to the Augustine Foundation for their support of this project. Let us imagine a future as it could be: “Things as they are / Are changed upon the blue guitar.” [Stevens]


Black Falcon | 1958 Velasquez | by Frank A. Wallace

Manuel and Alfredo Velazquez

by Frank Wallace performed on a 1958 Manuel Velasquez guitar;

Written: 2013

Duration: 8:43

Recorded: by Frank Wallace, September 2013, in Hillsborough NH with Schoepps and Neumann mics through an Orpheus preamp/converter

Sheet Music: Black Falcon is available for purchase on gyremusic.com

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


Manuel Velasquez, born 2/20/1917 passed away April 3 this year. He will be greatly missed. Manuel is known as America’s first great guitar builder who worked in New York, his native Puerto Rico and later in life in Florida with his son Alfredo. Watch a brief interview with the maestro here. This guitar from 1958 was restored by the maestro himself in the late 90’s. He told me, “It will be like a new guitar built with old wood.” And that it is, featuring perfectly quartered Brazilian, gorgeous straight grain spruce top and a silky oil varnish, and most importantly a rich warm tone all the way up to the incredible high B! [1:13]

Black Falcon was written by myself in early 2013 for the Cuban guitar virtuoso Edel Muñoz. It is featured on my album Elemental played on a 1931 Hauser. Please download this MP3 for free or purchase a 24-bit FLAC file at www.gyremusic.com

GARGOYLES CD | Mare Duo plays Wallace

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

Available at Strings by Mail

Performers: Annika Hinsche, mandolin I; Fabian Hinsche, guitar; Anne Wolf, mandolin II (track 1); Kristina Lisner, mandola (track 2,9,10,11); Melanie Hunger, mandolin II (track 2,9,10,11); Thomas Kolarczyk, contra bass (track 2)
Download Complete Notes: Program Notes for Gargoyles CD
Recorded: August 2012 at the Wuppertal Conservatory of Music, Germany; Night Owl September 2013 at the Hillsborough Center Congregational Church, NH; and White Albatross December 2013 at Klangport Musikproduktion in Heek, Germany
Released: May 15, 2014
Duration: 63:19
Microphones: Schoepps omnis and Neumann U87 through an Orpheus interface
Engineering and mastering: Frank Wallace, except White Albatross recorded by Matthias Reuland
Artwork and design: Nancy Knowles;
Photographs – back cover: Bettina Osswald (duo), Nancy Knowles (FW); interior: Frank Wallace

Gargoyles CD back cover

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2014 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

01) Gargoyles (2012) 7:32
for 2 mandolins and guitar, op. 68
Annika Hinsche, mandolin I; Fabian Hinsche, guitar; Anne Wolf, mandolin II

02) Nocturne (2010) 6:23
for mandolin orchestra, op. 62
Annika Hinsche, mandolin I; Fabian Hinsche, guitar; Kristina Lisner, mandola; Melanie Hunger, mandolin II; Thomas Kolarczyk, contra bass

The Coming of Arthur (2009)
for mandolin and guitar , op. 53
Annika Hinsche, mandolin; Fabian Hinsche, guitar
03) Chaos in the Land of Cameliard, 12:47
04) Arthur on the Flaming Wave, 3:52
05) With a Wink his Dream was Changed, 6:28

06) White Albatross (2013) 7:47
for guitar solo, op. 79

07-8) Night Owl (2012) 8:48
for mandolin solo, op. 73
Annika Hinsche, mandolin

New England Quartets (2010)
for mandolin orchestra in five parts; or quartet without bass, op. 60c
Annika Hinsche, mandolin I; Fabian Hinsche, guitar; Kristina Lisner, mandola; Melanie Hunger, mandolin II
09) North Branch 2:59
10) Loveren Mill 1:48
11) Monadnock 4:55

TOTAL TIME: 63:19

BIOGRAPHIES

Annika HinscheAnnika Hinsche, maiden name Lückebergfeld, was born in Bielefeld/Germany in 1981 and is one of the most successful German mandolinists. She is prizewinner on several national and international competitions, e.g. reknowned “Yasuo-Kuwahara-Competition“, and performs throughout Europe, Asia and USA. She teaches as assistant professor at “Cologne University of Music and Dance, Wuppertal Campus“, as tutor in highly awarded “JZO NRW“ and on international festivals in whole Europe and USA. Her students are prizewinners on different international competitions. Annika released several CD’s, e.g. her Solo-CD “Aproximação“,  “Mare Duo“ CD “Crystal tears“ or “Impressioni“ with “Quartetto Colori“. Moreover, she regularly conducts representative and festival orchestras in several countries in Europe. She is dedicatee of numerous compositions by well-known composers. She edited music for several publications with different publishing houses, e.g. in “edition mare duo“ with Trekel/Hamburg. A. Hinsche studied mandolin with Prof. M. Wilden-Hüsgen, Prof. C. Lichtenberg, Prof. J. McGann and G. Weyhofen-Tröster. More information: www.annika-hinsche.de or www.mareduo.com

Fabian and FrankFabian Hinsche was born in 1982 in Velbert/Germany. As prizewinner on more than 10 international guitar competitions in whole Europe Fabian is one of the most successful German guitarists of the young generation. He performs and teaches masterclasses on international festivals in Europe, USA and South America. He was assistant professor for guitar at “Cologne University of Music and Dance, Wuppertal Campus“. His students are prizewinners on several international competitions. Fabian recorded e.g. for Schott music, released his Solo-CD “Journey“ and “Mare Duo“ CD “Crystal tears“. Moreover, he edited music for several publications with different publishing houses, e.g. in “edition mare duo“ with Trekel/Hamburg. He is dedicatee of numerous compositions by well-known composers and publishes essays on guitar in several magazines. F. Hinsche studied guitar with Prof. H. Käppel, Prof. A. Eickholt and Prof. C. Marchione. More information: www.fabian-hinsche.de or www.mareduo.com

Anne WolfAnne Wolf was born in Zwickau/Germany in 1987. She ?rst took mandolin lessons with A. Schneider, subsequently as a young student with Prof. M. Wilden-Hüsgen and ?nally with Prof. C. Lichtenberg at the “Cologne University of Music and Dance, Wuppertal Campus“. Anne has won numerous ?rst prizes in national and international competitions, was a scholar of the “Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes“ and has undertaken several concert tours to Japan, Greece, Italy, Spain, the US and Switzerland. She published her Solo-CD “A Gleam in Winter” in 2011.

Kristina LisnerKristina Lisner was born in Hilden/Germany in 1990. She got first lessons with I. Hoffmann and thereafter studied with A. Hinsche. Kristina won 1st prizes in several competitions like “Jugend musiziert” or “Roland-Zimmer-Wettbewerb” and got a scholarship of “Yehudi Menuhin live music now”. At present she studies mandolin at “Cologne University of Music and Dance, Wuppertal Campus“ with Prof. C. Lichtenberg and Prof. S. Lisko. She is Concert Mistress of the highly awarded “JZO NRW” and performed in USA, Russia, Italy and China. Moreover she plays in different chamber music formations, e.g. with Melanie Hunger as duo amabile.

Melanie HungerMelanie Hunger was born in Hilden/Germany in 1990. She got her first mandolin lessons with I. Hoffmann and thereafter studied with A. Hinsche. She is prizewinner of several competitions like “Jugend musiziert” or “Roland-Zimmer-Wettbewerb” and got a scholarship of “Yehudi Menuhin live music now”. In 2009 she started studying mandolin at “Cologne University of Music and Dance, Wuppertal Campus“ with Prof. C. Lichtenberg and Prof. S. Lisko. She is member of the highly awarded “JZO NRW” and performed in USA, Russia, Italy and China. Moreover she plays in different chamber music formations, e.g. with Kristina Lisner as duo amabile.

Thomas KolarczykThomas Kolarczyk, born in 1989 in Krefeld/Germany, started his musical development with classical guitar. In 2007 he won nationwide contest “Jugend Musiziert” with the highest possible result. At 17 he started playing electric bass, which finally brought him to Jazz and his instrument of choice, the double bass. In 2010 he started studying Jazz-double bass at “Jazzinstitut Berlin“ and later in Cracow. He is a sought-after sideman for different Jazz- and Popbands in Germany and Poland and composes for his own projects. As a member of  “Golden Tapir Group” he was a finalist of prestigious Polish contest “Jazz nad Odra”. Thomas tours in Germany, Poland, Italy, Switzerland, Russia, USA and China.

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.


NOTES

“Frank’s music tells stories. He draws inspiration from what is around him, natural scenes near his home or abroad, literature, art or music from many lands and times. With this CD, featuring the design work of artist Nancy Knowles, we would like to introduce an excerpt of his world that is also connected closely to us, to a larger audience. We hope that the CD conveys the versatility, colorfulness and richness of Frank’s music. His compositions for mandolin use the instrument in full range just as did the great virtuosos Calace and Kuwahara. His knowledge of the guitar, its sonorities and hidden beauties, shows a life of devotion to the instrument, its predecessors, and to music in general.” Annika and Fabian Hinsche (Mare Duo)

Listening to Mare Duo in 2008 in the beautiful acoustics of Gordon Chapel in Boston, I was stunned at the flexibility, beauty and lyrical nature of the mandolin.  Annika’s passionate lyricism, expressed through a flawless tremolo, surpassed my prior experience of the instrument.  When they asked me to write for them, it was their obvious joy in rhythmic strums combined with Fabian’s rich guitar sound, and the elegance of their musical presence that gave rise to my work The Coming of Arthur.  When I came to what I thought was the end of Arthur, I immediately realized it was only the first movement, that I had many more ideas of sound to explore for this combination of instruments and musicians. And the collaboration went on from there, as you shall hear…

Medieval gargoyles seem to represent two sides of humanity – fear and love. They frighten us away, and yet seem to say, “ Enter! (If ye dare.)” They are ugly by design, but beautiful in their intensity. In fact it is often the most grotesque that fascinate and inspire. But if we are to enter the sacred space, we must face the gargoyles. My grandfather wrote, “Grin at the thing that bothers you and it will laugh with you.” Do we not all have “gargoyles” in our lives, persons that challenge with their brash or ugly manners, yet in knowing them we grow? Or are they right here inside, and on occasion burst to the surface to scare us?

I thank Annika and Fabian for their incredible artistry and faith in my work as composer and producer. I also thank Anne for her gracious hosting of my stay in Germany as well as her fabulous playing; and Kristina, Melanie and Thomas without whom this recording would have half the sound and richness. — Frank Wallace

Gargoyles
by Frank A. Wallace
for classical guitar and two mandolins, op. 68
Commissioned by: Mare Duo

Gargoyles, for two mandolins and guitar, was written in Carrión de los Condes, Spain in July 2012 for the Mare Duo of Dusseldorf, Germany. Returning to Spain to play music on my own turned out to be a very emotional experience. “Celebrating” the 40th anniversary of my attendance at the Segovia master class in Santiago de Compostela and the 30th of a performance of medieval music for Música en Compostela was not a smooth ride. Sparing the details, I was nevertheless moved once again by the architecture and art of the Romanesque churches as well as the Roman ruins’ spectacular mosaic floors at Villas Romanas Olmeda and Tejada. But the Gothic gargoyles on the cathedral of Palencia stole the show for me and seemed to characterize my mixed emotions of joy and sorrow. So this piece is dedicated to the bizarre in art.

Not having enough of these little fellows, I decided to write More Gargoyles for the Mobius Trio of San Francisco. A gargoyle seems to represent the two sides of humanity – they protect the sacred space within the walls they adorn, frighten us away. They are ugly by design, but beautiful in their intensity and in the sculptor’s execution. In fact it is often the most grotesque that fascinate and inspire. But it is the sacred space we must enter by facing the gargoyles. My grandfather wrote, “Grin at the thing that bothers you and it will laugh with you.” Do we not all have “gargoyles” in our lives, persons that challenge with their grotesque or ugly manners, yet in conquering them we grow. Or are they right there inside, and on occasion jut to the surface and scare our selves, our partners and loved ones. Life is not a smooth ride.

All notes are derived form the the name of both groups (for their respective pieces) and, you guessed it, “gargoyles.” Both a chromatic and a modal version are created and then used and, perhaps. abused throughout the compositions.

Gyre Publications | Copyright ©2012 Frank A. Wallace

Nocturne
by Frank Wallace
for mandolin and guitar orchestra, op. 62
Written: fall, 2010
Commissioned by: Das JugendZupfOrchester des Landes NRW, Christian de Witt, director, and the Providence Mandolin Orchestra, Mark Davis, director

Special thanks go to Robert Margo for his support and to Annika and Fabian of the Mare Duo who taught me how spectacular the mandolin can be. I first heard Annika and Fabian in Boston in 2008 and was struck by the lyrical qualities they achieved. I was also stunned at the perfection of the ensemble sound of the JZO on their tour of New England in the fall of 2009. Mark Davis is an old friend and the PMO has been a vibrant force on the mandolin scene for several decades now.

Nocturne is an exploration of the subtle sonorities and dynamic capabilities of the mandolin orchestra. Many shades of dark pass throughout the night as harmonies and textures slowly migrate throughout the piece towards a rather sudden climax, returning to a peaceful close. All in all, a pleasant rest!

Gyre Publications | Copyright ©2010 Frank A. Wallace

The Coming of Arthur
by Frank A. Wallace
three movements for mandolin and guitar
Written: June 2008 for Mare Duo

The Coming of Arthur was written for the Mare Duo, Annika Hinsche [Luckebergfeld], mandolin and Fabian Hinsche, guitar, in early summer 2009 at a beautiful home on Cape Cod. The Duo had requested that I write a piece with a literary theme to fit a “concept” album they were creating. We tossed around many ideas and finally I stumbled on the poem of this name by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. While the form of the poem seemed difficult to me, the passion, and dynamic inspired me. I did not realize until afterward how my love of medieval music infuses the work – appropriately.
I have borrowed some musical material from my song Rain, Rain and Sun from The Great Deep. I do not like to think harmonically – so many of my harmonies result from melodic and textural work. As the poem constantly goes back and forth between hope and despair, the work alternates dissonant dialogue with consonant dance and song. Arthur comes to a land that has been torn by unrest and disorder. The land is rife with beasts and the people have lost control of their homeland. As we all know, the story ends with hope.

I want to thank both Denise Sullivan for the use of her gorgeous home and gardens and August Watters for loaning me an exquisite mandolin. You can read more at my blog about the creation of this piece.

Gyre Publications | Copyright ©2011 Frank A. Wallace

White Albatross
by Frank A. Wallace

for classical guitar, op. 68
Written: October 2013 for Mare Duo
Commissioned by: Fabian Hinsche

The creation of this piece is the happy coincidence of the reading of Moby Dick and a visit from Fabian Hinsche and his wife Annika – together the spectacular Mare Duo from Dusseldorf Germany. Fabian is a guitarist and aspiring writer who draws musical inspiration from literature. I had already found several passages in Moby Dick that suggested song to me, the language is so rich in sound. As Fabian and I discussed what kind of piece would round out this CD, I immediately thought of Melville.

The title came quickly, though I rarely name pieces before they are complete. Fabian had commissioned a piece for Annika only a year ago which has the name Night Owl. Two other solo works came shortly after and retained the usage of raptors as names: Blue Heron, for mandolin solo, and Black Falcon for guitar. The imagery of the albatross is strong in Moby Dick, and thus the name was critical to the conception. All of the “raptor” series are in binary form: roughly half a slow and free introduction, moving into a virtuoso display of scales, arpeggios and exciting rhythms. In this case, the first section is representational of the be-calming of a ship in icy waters, full of strange sounds and fear of the unknown, moving to the entrance of the great bird and the excitement of release which leads to a spiritual rise to heaven.

While my main inspiration came from Melville – I site the first use of the albatross as savior and symbol of enlightenment: “…Previously known as a goney bird, the albatross was given its name and subsequent symbolism by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in his poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” In the seven-part piece, a troubled ship in Antarctica is one day stalked by an albatross which then brings the sailors good fortune:

“At length did cross an Albatross,
Thorough the fog it came;
As it had been a Christian soul,
We hailed it in God’s name.

It ate the food it ne’er had eat,
And round and round it flew.
The ice did split with a thunder-fit;
The helmsman steered us through!”

And from Moby Dick, chapter 42, The Whiteness of the Whale, by Herman Melville:

“Bethink thee of the albatross, whence come those clouds of spiritual wonderment and pale dread, in which that white phantom sails in all imaginations? Not Coleridge first threw that spell; but God’s great, unflattering laureate, Nature.* *I remember the first albatross I ever saw. It was during a prolonged gale, in waters hard upon the Antarctic seas. From my forenoon watch below, I ascended to the overclouded deck; and there, dashed upon the main hatches, I saw a regal, feathery thing of unspotted whiteness, and with a hooked, Roman bill sublime. At intervals, it arched forth its vast archangel wings, as if to embrace some holy ark. Wondrous flutterings and throbbings shook it. Though bodily unharmed, it uttered cries, as some king’s ghost in supernatural distress. Through its inexpressible, strange eyes, methought I peeped to secrets which took hold of God. As Abraham before the angels, I bowed myself; the white thing was so white, its wings so wide, and in those for ever exiled waters, I had lost the miserable warping memories of traditions and of towns. Long I gazed at that prodigy of plumage. I cannot tell, can only hint, the things that darted through me then…”

Gyre Publications | Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace

Night Owl
by Frank A. Wallace

for mandolin solo
Written: December, 2012; for Annika Hinsche
Commissioned by: Fabian Hinsche

Night Owl was written as a Christmas present from Fabian to Annika Hinsche in 2012. The request to me was made at our final dinner after 8 days of recording in the summer of 2012 in Wuppertal, Germany. The name was simply an inspiration after I wrote the piece, but Annika identified greatly with the sentiment of being a “night owl” herself. To me the bird represented mystery and power, appropriate to the immense talent and musicality of Annika. I had in my ear the incredibly powerful and haunting sounds of “night owls” that we hear irregularly, but memorably, every summer at our country home in New Hampshire.

Happily, three pieces have followed creating my “raptor” period as a composer. Each follows a binary form of Adagio / Presto and are expressive and virtuosic in nature: Blue Heron for Robert Margo, mandolin; Black Falcon for Edel Muñoz, guitar; and White Albatross for Fabian Hinsche, guitar. I thank Night Owl and Annika for the inspiration that gave rise to all four pieces.

Gyre Publications | Copyright ©2012 Frank A. Wallace

New England Quartets
by Frank A. Wallace?

Three movements for mandolin orchestra in five parts; or quartet without bass
?Written: fall, 2010
Commissioned by: John Zevos for the Timberlane Regional High School Guitar Orchestra in six parts; arranged for mandolin quartet in July 2012 for Mare Duo

New England Sextets were originally conceived as a suite for guitar orchestra of 12 or more. It was subsequently arranged for mandolin orchestra or quartet without bass in which the guitar part takes on a larger roll and is consequently more difficult. The three movements are in contrasting styles, basically slow, fast, slow with the inner movement being a bluesy and clashing vamp and the outer two are in a contrapuntal style, each part playing single lines.

North Branch On an irregular basis I drive to Keene NH on Rt. 9 from Antrim. It is not dramatic, like the Tetons, but it is as beautiful a drive as one could wish for. It begins at Steele Pond, periodically encounters the North Branch River on the right as it tumbles over New Hampshire’s famous granite boulders; raging in a spring thaw, timid and nearly stifled in a late summer heat wave; beautifully filling an ancient Cedar swamp and meandering through many a meadow.

Loveren Mill Off to the right, invisible to the passing car, is the site of old Loveren Mill. long gone, I imagine it’s noisy hay day. Saws filling the mill with timber that were loudly hacked into boards. Not a pretty sight for a tree hugger! Thus the noisy, bluesy chords that characterize this piece.

Monadnock Towards the end of this 30 minute trip one sees the not-so-majestic Mt. Monadnock, mysteriously the most climbed mountain in the world. For this Californian, I always thought this mere bump in the horizon was not worthy of the crown – until last August my son finally challenged me. The mountain almost won! But I made it and discovered its power. On top, it is truly a king! With a 360 degree view, bitter winds, and barren rocky nooks for cold climbers to nestle in, it deserves its reputation. My piece can be seen as a hike to the top that starts with a distant view of its rolling and lovely profile.

Gyre Publications | Copyright ©2010 Frank A. Wallace

Robert A. Margo, CMSA Mandolin Journal
Mare Duo, “Gargolyes: Mare Duo plays Wallace,” www.gyremusic.com

“Wallace’s voice is modernist, rhythmically and harmonically adventurous but never aggressively so; technically, the music often stretches the mandolinist (and guitarist) considerably beyond their comfort zones (a good thing, in my opinion). This is especially true in the remarkable work for mandolin and guitar “The Coming of Arthur” (written for the Mare Duo) and “Night Owl”, a demanding piece for solo mandolin written for Annika Hinsche. Wallace is fond of programmatic titles, such as the recording’s namesake (for two mandolins and guitar); and the beautiful “New England Quartets” (M1, M2, GDAE mandola, guitar), whose three movements evoke scenes and sounds from New England’s past and present(this piece also exists as a quintet for mandolin ensemble, and in a version for guitar orchestra)…The performers are among the crème of the crop of the modern German mandolin scene; it is difficult to imagine superior recordings of any of these pieces. The recorded sound is also unusually good – lifelike, balanced, and sonorous.”  Read complete review

“…the range of moods and colors … is quite astonishing. … an exquisite canvas…produce palpable excitement. The quick juxtaposition of single plucked notes and tremolo in Night Owl was further evidence of this composer’s imagination. …stylistic variety… such that my interest never flagged for a moment during the course of the CD, a fact abetted by the consummate skill of all the performers. One hears some really virtuoso playing during the course of these two CDs.” — David DeBoor Canfield, from Fanfare Nov/Dec 2014  Read complete review
“Fabian Hinsche is among to the most outstanding guitarists, not only in Germany…with his wife [Annika, mandolin] the sound is exceptional…they are playing the music of Frank Wallace, fantastic compositions…I think they belong to the very best!” — Hubert Käppel
“A wonderful CD with a great instrumentation. Annika Hinsche is a “full-blood musician“. She has a wonderful sounding tone and knows to present the music and the musical expression with her masterly technique in often accomplished ways. Mare Duo has a great sense of sound, a perfect playing-together and an uncommon high-leveled musicality. To listen to and to look at both musicians is thrilling. They always both manage to present the listener the content of the music through their sounds and gestures.

Wallace as a composer fascinates me. When I read his scores and listen to his music I am surprised with the richness of sonority he gives birth to through special constellations in his instrumentation. There are wide and spacious sounds. His music is modern but characterized by beautiful harmonies, colors, and a lot of vivacity in pitches and rhythm. His music tells stories. One can see that for example in the duo piece „The Coming of Arthur“. In this work the story of King Arthur is told musically in three movements. With the fanciness the composer puts into his work it is actually easy to hear the chaos at the beginning when Arthur arrives at his court, the waves of fire during his birth and the happiness and dance during his wedding party. — Prof. Marga Wilden-Hüsgen

Having spent over 35 years dedicating myself to the possibilities of what the mandolin might be able to do, I have come to one conclusion…More than anything else, the mandolin is in need of great new musical composition. Music that speaks from the heart of contemporary life as we know it today, but also pays tribute to the long and rich history that our instrument has.

I am personally very excited about the idea of what these three musicians might be able to give us, provided the right setting and the proper support.

Annika and Fabian Hinsche (Mare Duo) with their wonderfully united sound, their broad musical backgrounds and their boundless energy as a guitar and mandolin duo combined with Frank Wallace’s rich compositional style, which seems to float freely and unselfconsciously between contemporary and early music inspirations, and his experience as a player of plucked stringed instruments will, without a doubt be a winning combination. — Mike Marshall

Suite Hartt | three guitar solos by Frank A. Wallace

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Suite Hartt
by Frank A. Wallace

three guitar solos; op. 80, #10
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Duration: 14 minutes; 9 pages

Difficulty level: advanced technically and musically

Instrumentation: solo guitar

Written: March, 2014 for Christopher Ladd and Richard Provost

Commissioned by: the Hartt School of Music Guitar Department at the University of Hartford, CT with assistance from the Augustine Foundation

World premiere: April 12, 2014 at the Hartt School, Hartford, CT

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2014 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


The middle movement of Suite Hartt – A Wisp in the Dark

Suite Hartt was conceived after the completion of the chamber suite As It Could Be, my largest work to date. Two solos were included in the suite, but they begged a third when played alone, out of their original context. Thus was born Shadow of the Sun, the completion of this subset of the original chamber music:

Cry Among the Clouds
A Wisp in the Dark
Shadow of the Sun

Eight works composed in winter 2014 comprise As It Could Be, a chamber suite commissioned by and dedicated to the Hartt School of Music Guitar Department and its founder/director Richard Provost on the occasion of their 50th anniversary. The project was conceived at dinner following a concert of the New England Guitar Quartet at the Hartt Festival in the summer of 2013. My interest in writing chamber music melded perfectly with Dick’s desire to plan a celebration/concert for the Anniversary. Dick suggested using The Man with the Blue Guitar by Wallace Stevens (a resident of Hartford, CT) as a source of lyrics for a song to include. This incredible testimony to art and its role in changing society became inspiration for the music and titles. The possibilities for chamber music with guitar, guitar orchestra and ensembles are only beginning to be fully realized.

Thank you Dick (and all your colleagues) who brought the guitar out of the dark ages and into a brilliant new community of creativity and progress through your courage, hard work and vision. Thanks to the Augustine Foundation for their support of this project. Let us imagine a future as it could be: “Things as they are / Are changed upon the blue guitar.” [Stevens]

Copyright ©2014 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Spring Symphony | for guitar ensemble by Frank A. Wallace

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Spring Symphony
by Frank A. Wallace

three movements for guitar quartet or ensemble in four equal parts; PARTS INCLUDED
I. Andante / II. Pesante / III. Allegro
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Duration: 13 minutes; 28 pages

Difficulty: Moderate; mostly single notes for guitars; some intricate rhythms and fast scales in thrid mvt.

Instrumentation: four standard classical guitar parts (some divisi optional sections)

Written: October, 2014

Commissioned by: New Hampshire Music Educators Association; special thanks to John Zevos

World Premiere: January 10, 2015 by the first NH All-State Guitar Ensemble conducted by Scott Borg

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2014 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

 

 

These midi sound files are produced by Finale Garritan Personal Orchestra

Why Symphony?

Spring Symphony is a three movement work for guitar ensemble conceived of as a symphonic work for advanced high school or college ensembles. Symphonic is not a word associated with guitar, but I want to convey the richly detailed textures of the score and to encourage performers to think big and colorful.

Commission for All-State

The piece was commissioned for the first New Hampshire All-State Guitar by the NH Music Educators Association. NH is only the fifth state to have an All-State group for guitar. It was the brain-child of John Zevos, director of the Timberlane High School guitar program in Plaistow NH. John was a student of mine briefly about 20 years ago when he was getting his undergraduate degree at Plymouth St. College. He has been a great friend ever since and a model of energy and enthusiasm for his students and me alike.

Spring into color

It was a great honor that John asked me to write this piece for the first ever performance by a group of All-State Guitar students. I wanted the event to be joyous and festive and so I hope the work conveys those feelings with great color. My working title was “Fall Symphony,” simply since I was writing it in the fall. But on completion I realized that the opposite season symbolizes the emotions and grandeur of the piece, as well as the promise of youth.

Read more on the Gyre Blog entitled “The Guitar Symphony

Elemental | CD by Frank Wallace

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Elemental: Frank Wallace, his own new works, vol. III
Hermann Hauser, 1931 guitar

Gyre 10172 |

Also available at Strings-by-Mail and as MP3 downloads at iTunes, Amazon

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Download Complete Notes: Elemental CD Notes

Recorded: September 2013 at the Hillsborough Center Congregational Church, NH

Released: March 1, 2014

Strings: La Bella Argento

Microphones: Schoepps omnis and Neumann U87 through an Orpheus interface

Engineering and mastering: Frank Wallace

Photographs, artwork and design: Nancy Knowles

Credits: This recording is made in memory of Edmund Brelsford. Thanks to Edmund and Veronica Brelsford for the opportunity to play this incredible guitar; Hermann Hauser for making it and his grandson Hermann for bringing it back to life; my sons, my parents and all my in-laws for their support; the congregation of the Hillsborough Center Congregational Church; those who have commissioned or inspired works on this recording: Norbert Dams, Edel Muñoz, Detlev Bork, Marek Pasieczny, Thomas Schuttenhelm; the NH Council on the Arts and most of all my wife Nancy, for her endless love, understanding and inspiration.

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2014 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
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The Elements, op. 29 (2004)
01) Fire – 4:53
02) Earth – 3:32
03) Air – 3:28
04) Water – 3:56

05) A Heavy Sleep, op. 76 (2013) – 4:37

06) Black Falcon, op. 74 (2012) – 9:19

The Bells, op. 61
07) d’Orleans – 1:29
08) d’Angelus – 4:42
09) In the Well – 5:35

Sonata One, op. 32 (2005)
10) Allegro Apassionato- 4:23
11) Grave – 3:49
12) Prestissimo – 3:00

Passing in the Night, op. 71 (2012
13) ‘Round the World – 2:09
14) Don’t say Goodbye – 2:17
15) Par 9 – 0:55
16) Say Au Revoir – 1:06
17) I’m still your Pappy – 2:56

TOTAL TIME: 62:08

Liner Notes

elemental [??l??m?nt?l] adj
1. fundamental; basic; primal the elemental needs of man
2. motivated by or symbolic of primitive and powerful natural forces or passions elemental rites of worship
Collins English Dictionary – © HarperCollins Publishers

I once had the honor of spending a night at the home of master luthier Nico van der Waals. An extremely cordial man, it was a pleasure to meet him and to talk about instruments and music. I will never forget descending the stairs late at night to find him alone in the living room, head bowed in hands, listening to Gustav Leonhardt playing Bach.  It was a sacred act—an intensity of listening I’m not sure I had ever witnessed.  It is in this spirit that I made this recording. Elemental signifies the root, the essence, the building blocks of life and physical being.  It reflects the raw and powerful dis-passion of nature as portrayed in the first work, The Elements: Fire, Earth, Air and Water.  (The fifth element, The Void, is what lies between the notes.)  The third recording of my solo works for classical guitar, Elemental is contemplative, earthly, dramatic at times, lyrical occasionally.  Perhaps the most all-inclusive description would be textural, or abstract.  I employ many compositional styles and techniques, from tone row fragments to modal polyphony and drones.  My favorite is to derive pitch sets from names—my starting point for A Heavy Sleep, The Bells and Passing in the Night.

I recorded this CD on an extraordinary instrument. In 1929, smitten by Andrés Segovia’s concerts in Geneva, the young violinist Blanche Honegger (1909-2011) 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 I.  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 left France, ultimately settling in Vermont, where they were among the founders of the Marlboro Music Festival.  There Blanche Moyse became renowned as a conductor. Her Hauser guitar, which had not weathered well the long journey, eventually came into the hands of my good friend Edmund Brelsford.  When I first played it in the early 1990s it had not fully rediscovered its voice after initial work on it by David Rubio.  In 1999 Hermann Hauser III, the master’s grandson, undertook a major restoration.  To celebrate the guitar’s revival, I was given the honor of performing several concerts on it, and there it was:  a sunburst of sound, with colors of every hue, and a decay like none other  —each tone ever-so-reluctantly melting into the next. Its true voice, muted for fifty years, sings again.  Enjoy!
Frank Wallace

The Music

The Elements
by Frank A. Wallace, 2004
op. 29, a poetic essay on the origin of life, in four movements for solo guitar

Originally written for 6-string guitar, I have adapted The Elements for 10-string as well which will be recorded on a future CD. It is a poetic essay on the origin of the Earth. I. Fire I conceive as the original burst of energy that birthed this universe, big, chaotic. II. Earth is the eventual congealing of solid ground which features repetitive modal chords that accompany a slow melody. III. Air is spacious, a moment when the potential of life has emerged and a time to reflect on creation itself and IV. Water the careening, tumbling, whirling thing we call life.

A Heavy Sleep
by Frank A. Wallace, 2013
op. 76, commissioned by and written for Detlev Bork

A Heavy Sleep was commissioned by and written for German guitarist Detlev Bork on the occasion of Benjamin Britten’s 100th Anniversary. The title and motivic content of the piece were derived from Britten’s monumental work Nocturnal from 1963. It seemed fitting that since Britten’s masterpiece was inspired by John Dowland’s great song, Come Heavy Sleep, I should in turn find my musical inspiration in the gestures and harmonic language of the Nocturnal.

Black Falcon
by Frank A. Wallace, 2013
op. 74, commissioned by and written for Edel Muñoz

I first met Edel Muñoz at the 2011 St. Joseph Guitar Festival – he was back to do his “winner’s concert”, but I missed it. Fortunately, we met again at Classical Minds in Houston in June 2012 at which point we got to hear each others’ concerts. Edel is one of the most suave and subtle but powerful players I have ever heard. I was thrilled that he asked me to write a piece for him.
I had developed some techniques of generating ideas over the past few years that worked extremely well, but for some reason I tossed those ideas out the door and just wrote from pure inspiration. This is the result, a piece making use of the octatonic scale, my first use of the “diminished” scale in a piece that alternates between dramatic chordal outbursts and flowing bass melodies. Overall Black Falcon is in two sections: Larghissimo in 4/2 and Allegro in 12/8.
The Bells?by Frank A. Wallace, 2010?op. 61, three preludes for solo guitar?Dedicated to: Thomas Schuttenhelm, Norbert Dams and Marek Pasieczny

d’Orleans The round Orleans, Beaujancy is woven into a spacious fabric of dissonant chords, melody pealing high above in harmonics. I re-discovered this piece after it lay dormant for over a year, having totally forgotten this little “experiment” in dissonant chord structures. I was pleased to find how much sonority was possible. The major 7th interval is used repeatedly and creates it’s own beating vibrato.

d’Angelus I was honored to be asked by Norbert Dams to write a piece for his 60th year in which he planned to do 60 concerts around the world. I had composed d’Orleans on a whim two years before and knew I wanted to write more “impressionistic” pieces in this vein. Norbert’s piece uses a series of notes generated by his name and the name of his publishing house, Daminus: FGBBEBC DAEC DAEAFEC and a chromatic variation A#BDA#C#DE CAAD# CAAFA#FD#.

In the Well The third piece, written for Marek Pasieczny, is the most complicated. It is comprised of major 7th intervals, note sets determined by Marek’s name, and an unusual version of the round “Ding dong bell, pussy is in the well” that I learned years ago from a wonderful family of singers, George and Lucy Semler.

Sonata One
by Frank A. Wallace, 2005
op. 32, three movements in a romantic 12-tone style for solo guitar: Allegro, Grave, Presto

As with many guitarists my age, Julian Bream’s “20th Century Guitar Music” album of the late 60’s was a tremendous influence on me. Though my eventual path led to the study and performance for many years of Renaissance music, I never lost my love for the pieces by Britten, Martin, Smith Brindle and Henze on that magnificent recording. Certainly this Sonata #1 came from years of holding those sounds in my heart. The powerful rhythm and harmony emerged in the midst of several tours in which I was debuting two song cycles in the winter/spring of 2005. It surprised me.

Passing in the Night
by Frank A. Wallace, 2012
op. 71, five short guitar solos
Commissioned by: Beatty Music Scholarship Competition??Passing in the Night is five short movements dedicated to my father. It was written in Würzburg Germany August 15-18, 2012 while I was on a composition retreat after 13 concerts in Spain. Anxious to write in general and specifically to fulfill a commission for the Beatty Youth Competition, I did not expect to receive notice that my 94 year old father had a fever and had stopped eating. The words of Amanda, a shape note hymn by Justin Morgan, still resounded in my ears from my recent performance in the magical Romanesque San Martín de Frómista: “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.”

The five works encompass various styles, perhaps influenced by my travels through several countries and by my father’s love of travel. The first “‘Round the World,” is inspired by friend and fabulous Bulgarian composer/guitarist Atanas Ourkouzounov. The second, “Don’t say Goodbye” recalls the stark harmonies and gracious melodies of Justin Morgan and the American shape note school. The titles are both quotes of my father during my last visit when Dad told us of his recent (imagined) trip “’round the world.” A few months earlier he would have elaborated greatly in detail, exotic surely, but as his body weakened after eleven years of struggle, his mind, or perhaps just his voice, couldn’t illumine the imagined trip. On parting Dad said, “Don’t say goodbye, say au revoir. I’m still your Pappy!” After the meditative second piece, Don’t say Goodbye, a quirky little Par 9 evokes his impossible dream of joining the pro golf circuit at age 90. Or rather, it is the feeling in me of how odd it was to feel happy that he had dreams, yet sad that he was so divorced from reality. Which is better? ??Joyous dancing and love of life infuse the the last two pieces, celebrating a life well lived, Say au Revoir and I’m Still your Pappy.

Au revoir Pop!

Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Since Wallace is a virtuoso guitarist, he understands the finest details, the possibilities and limitations of his instrument. And he exploits every opportunity to emphasize or refine or hold back or exult the vocal character, to assert the melodic voicings or percussive effects of the guitar in ways that, yes, reward your ears, your decision to sit and listen. For this is truly listening music, which is not to say it’s “easy” listening music. No, that is not what Wallace is concerned with. Nor is he concerned with “difficult”. Rather, he’s concerned with poetry, something you’re not surprised at the more you listen, and with exploring and expressing what must come from the guitar–as he imagines and breathes and soulfully feels it. “Elemental” is a perfect description of this music, and in the liner notes Wallace briefly discusses his intentions, motivation, and inspiration for creating these compositions. There’s lyricism, meditative reflection, sharp assertiveness, gorgeous billows of harmony, bursts of sparkling, ringing harmonics; there’s boldness and even brashness, juxtaposed with the most tender warmth and delicacy. Wallace leads us along, never leaving us wondering where we are or what’s going on.  read complete review at Classics Today | review by David Vernier
…a recital of music by the composer-performer guitarist, Frank Wallace. In this case, the composer is the equal of the performer, or vice versa, and both are very good…The work exudes drama, and sustains interest throughout…distinctive compositional voice… virtuoso playing…a firm recommendation.   read complete review – David DeBoor Canfield | FANFARE Sept/Oct issue 2014
Above all he is concerned with the sonorities of the guitar, and as a performer he employs a huge range of timbre and dynamics…all on an epic scale…Wallace has a unique and compelling voice as a composer, and he is a superb player. He uses a 1931 Hauser guitar, a magnificent instrument ideal for his works that explore so many different sonorities.” read complete review American Record Guide | July/August 2014 | KEATON
From brittle cutting chords to silky melodic lines, Wallace has a very wide range of expressive and coloristic abilities on the guitar. The expressive qualities are equally matched by virtuosic playing in rapid flourishes and voice separation. / Frank Wallace plays his own works with inspiration, determination, and a wealth of creativity. With top notch playing and excellent compositions, this synthesis is a spectacular success. / …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.
Read the full review: This is classical guitar | Bradford Werner
An epic work. This album signifies not only a major musical statement by composer Frank Wallace, but a much needed sonic statement by Guitarist Frank Wallace. The colors, nuances and textures he brings to life are exactly what set the guitar apart as a conduit of artistic expression. This album should serve as a reminder to all that the inherent powers of the instrument reside in the quality of its voice. Elemental delightfully demonstrates what a Master guitarist can do with a seemingly unlimited tonal palette.
Aaron Green, luthier
“The music is incredible and the versatility of musical styles and genres is incredible. Your synthesis of style is remarkable… I felt transported to the world of Albeniz, de Falla and Montsalvatge one minute and another I was in a new and unknown realm. — Orlay Alonso, Seconda Prattica
“Your CD is mind blowing… Your evolution as a composer and player continues to astound me.  Your playing is immaculate.  The guitar sounds magnificent.  I find the compositions cerebral, intense, complex, and intriguing.  I have been spending so much time with late 1990s-early 2000s Wallace, I feel like you are almost completely a different composer from then.” — David Isaacs, professor of guitar
“The music is definitely elemental — powerful and poetic!” — Jonathan Richmond, writer and music critic
“I’m just now listening to your new CD Elemental. God it is good!!! Really – it is just a terrific combination of composition, performance and recording. Oh and the art work’s not bad either!” — Mark [Davis] Director of NAME and the Providence Mandolin Orchestra
This video has a brief discussion of my compositional style followed by a performance of Dreams on a Lullaby on the 1931 Hauser guitar that is featured on Elemental – watch it in action!

Here are several selections from the CD played on the ’31 Hauser as well as various vintage instruments from Aaron Green’s Vintage Classical Guitars.

My Vital Breath | mandolin orchestra by Frank A. Wallace

My Vital Breath
by Frank A. Wallace

for mandolin orchestra; PARTS INCLUDED
PUBLISHED AND SOLD BY Trekel Edtions

“Obra premiada en el Concurso Internacional de Composición José Fernández Rojas 2013” Prize-winner in the José Fernández Rojas 2013 International Composition Competition sponsored by ConTrastes Rioja, Logroño, Spain.

Preview: a sample PDF of My Vital Breath

Duration: 9:20 minutes; 22 pages

Difficulty level: Difficult ensemble rhythms and several soloist sections

Instrumentation: mandolin 1, mandolin, 2, 8ve mandola, guitar, double bass

Written: June, 2013 in honor of Benjamin Britten’s 100th Anniversary (11/22/13) for NAME (New American Mandolin Ensemble); dedicated to Mark and Beverly Davis

World premiere: May 29, 2014 in Bruchsal, Germany by NAME

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP.

Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.
New American Mandolin Ensemble 2014

A live performance by the New American Mandolin Ensemble of Frank Wallace’s composition, “My Vital Breath.” Recorded on June 6th, 2014 at the Doopsgezinde Kerk in Steenwijk, Netherlands. Video recording by Henk Houtschild, and audio recording and video editing by Emiel Stopler.


My Vital Breath is a prize-winner in the International Competition José Fernández Rojas 2013 which is sponsored by ConTrastes Rioja in Logroño Spain. “Obra premiada en el Concurso Internacional de Composición José Fernández Rojas 2013”. It was written for the New American Mandolin Ensemble (NAME) in June of 2013 and in memory of Benjamin Britten on the occasion of his 100th anniversary.

Two events inspired the work, firstly a commission from German guitarist Detlev Bork to write a work for Britten’s 100th. A Heavy Sleep was debuted by Detlev on November 9, 2013 in Heidleberg Germany. Shortly after I wrote the piece in April, my dear friend Mark Davis asked me to join his New American Mandolin Ensemble, with the stated purpose that it would be the first professional orchestra of it’s kind in America. It only seemed fitting to me to write a piece worthy of such a project. My Vital Breath was the result and in it I borrowed certain ideas from A Heavy Sleep – thus it’s title and dedication to Britten (as well as Mark and Beverly Davis). The titles are both from Dowland’s song Come Heavy Sleep which Britten used for his monumental masterpiece Nocturnal.

My intention for My Vital Breath was to write a piece with no limitations, one that a professional “orchestra” could shine on.  It’s relation to Britten is more important than I originally realized myself. I have often been told that my style is close to Britten – we both reveal a deep love for Renaissance music in our work. My favorite piece for guitar, or rather the piece I think is the greatest ever written for guitar, is the Nocturnal. It explores so many textures in inventive and intriguing ways.  I wanted to do the same.  I think as a composer I am more interested (right now) in texture and gesture than melody and harmony. So there are many duos, trios and dialogues between various parts.  Every instrument has crucial rolls to play throughout.  It is an orchestral concept where the various combos create colors that evolve, contrast, clash and create movement and emotion. Outburst is a psychological side of the piece – where not every phrase is necessarily related to the previous or next, but may be simply a moment of dis-connection – a thought that suddenly overwhelms the moment. Again, my love of Dowland and Britten’s Nocturnal color the whole piece and define the ending.  Britten ends his set of variations with the Dowland theme whereas I end My Vital Breath with a simple melody that finally emerges from the complexity, one that was derived from the name of Britten himself and is played in unison by the whole group.

Come heavy sleepe the image of true death;
And close up these my weary weeping eyes:
Whose spring of tears doth stop my vitall breath,
And tears my hart with sorrows sigh swoln cries:
Come and posses my tired thoughts worn soul,
That living dies, till thou on me be stoule.

Come shadow of my end, and shape of rest,
Allied to death, child to his blackfac’d night:
Come thou and charme these rebels in my breast,
Whose waking fancies doe my mind affright.
O come sweet sleepe; come, or I die for ever:
Come ere my last sleepe comes, or come never.

Erster Verlust | Schumann arr. by Frank A. Wallace

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Erster Verlust
by Robert Schumann

“First Loss” is from Album for the Young, arranged for guitar by Frank A. Wallace; PURCHASE INCLUDES: PDF of score and FLAC recording by Frank A. Wallace from The Romantic Guitar on a C.1860 Soto y Solares guitar.
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Written: Album for the Young, Op. 68, was composed by Robert Schumann in 1848 for his three daughters. The album consists of a collection of 43 short works. Unlike the Kinderszenen, they are suitable to be played by children or beginners. Wikipedia

Duration: 2 minutes; 1 page

Difficulty level: Moderate

Recording: by Frank Wallace on Gyre: The Romantic Guitar EP [this recording is included in the download] and Four Spanish Guitars CD

All Gyre compositions/editions are ASCAP.

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


White Albatross | guitar solo by Frank A. Wallace

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White Albatross
by Frank A. Wallace

for guitar solo
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Fabian and Frank

Duration: 6:30 minutes; 4 pages

Difficulty level: Advanced

Written: September 29, 2013

Commissioned by: Fabian Hinsche, Dusseldorf, Germany

World premiere:

Recording: by Fabian Hinsche on the Mare Duo CD Gargoyles released May 2014 on Gyre

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

White Albatross

from Rime of the Ancient Mariner - The Albatross by Doré

Engraving by Gustave Doré.

The creation of this piece was inspired by the happy coincidence of my reading of Moby Dick and a visit from Fabian Hinsche and his wife Annika – together the spectacular Mare Duo from Dusseldorf, Germany. Fabian is a guitarist and aspiring writer who draws musical inspiration from literature. I had already found several passages in Moby Dick that suggested song to me, the language is so rich in sound. As Fabian and I discussed what kind of piece would round out the CD we were working on together, I immediately thought of Melville.

The title came quickly, though I rarely name pieces before they are complete. Fabian had commissioned a piece for Annika only a year ago which has the name Night Owl. Two other solo works came shortly after and retained the usage of raptors as names: Blue Heron, for mandolin solo, and Black Falcon, also for guitar. The imagery of the albatross is strong in Moby Dick, and thus the name was critical to the conception. All of the “raptor” series are in binary form: a slow and free introduction, moving into a virtuoso display of scales, arpeggios and exciting rhythms. In this case, the first section is representational of the be-calming of a ship in icy waters, full of strange sounds and fear of the unknown, moving to the entrance of the great bird and the excitement of release which leads to a spiritual rise to heaven.

While my main inspiration came from Melville – I site the first use of the albatross as savior and symbol of enlightenment: “…Previously known as a goney bird, the albatross was given its name and subsequent symbolism by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in his poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” [The engraving on this page is from an early edition.] In the seven-part piece, a troubled ship in Antarctica is one day stalked by an albatross which then brings the sailors good fortune:

“At length did cross an Albatross,
Thorough the fog it came;
As it had been a Christian soul,
We hailed it in God’s name.

It ate the food it ne’er had eat,
And round and round it flew.
The ice did split with a thunder-fit;
The helmsman steered us through!”

From Intro to Critical Reading

And from Moby Dick, chapter 42, The Whiteness of the Whale, by Herman Melville:

“Bethink thee of the albatross, whence come those clouds of spiritual wonderment and pale dread, in which that white phantom sails in all imaginations? Not Coleridge first threw that spell; but God’s great, unflattering laureate, Nature.* *I remember the first albatross I ever saw. It was during a prolonged gale, in waters hard upon the Antarctic seas. From my forenoon watch below, I ascended to the overclouded deck; and there, dashed upon the main hatches, I saw a regal, feathery thing of unspotted whiteness, and with a hooked, Roman bill sublime. At intervals, it arched forth its vast archangel wings, as if to embrace some holy ark. Wondrous flutterings and throbbings shook it. Though bodily unharmed, it uttered cries, as some king’s ghost in supernatural distress. Through its inexpressible, strange eyes, methought I peeped to secrets which took hold of God. As Abraham before the angels, I bowed myself; the white thing was so white, its wings so wide, and in those for ever exiled waters, I had lost the miserable warping memories of traditions and of towns. Long I gazed at that prodigy of plumage. I cannot tell, can only hint, the things that darted through me then. But at last I awoke; and turning, asked a sailor what bird was this. A goney, he replied. Goney! never had heard that name before; is it conceivable that this glorious thing is utterly unknown to men ashore! never! But some time after, I learned that goney was some seaman’s name for albatross. So that by no possibility could Coleridge’s wild Rhyme have had aught to do with those mystical impressions which were mine, when I saw that bird upon our deck. For neither had I then read the Rhyme, nor knew the bird to be an albatross. Yet, in saying this, I do but indirectly burnish a little brighter the noble merit of the poem and the poet. I assert, then, that in the wondrous bodily whiteness of the bird chiefly lurks the secret of the spell; a truth the more evinced in this, that by a solecism of terms there are birds called grey albatrosses; and these I have frequently seen, but never with such emotions as when I beheld the Antarctic fowl. But how had the mystic thing been caught? Whisper it not, and I will tell; with a treacherous hook and line, as the fowl floated on the sea. At last the Captain made a postman of it; tying a lettered, leathern tally round its neck, with the ship’s time and place; and then letting it escape. But I doubt not, that leathern tally, meant for man, was taken off in Heaven, when the white fowl flew to join the wing-folding, the invoking, and adoring cherubim!

This is a sample from the CD Gargoyles, played by Fabian Hinsche.

The Romantic Guitar – EP

Price: $8.99
by Frank A. Wallace
romantic guitar music of the 19th century played on original instruments, three magnificent guitars: 1822 Panormo, 1854 Gutiérrez and 1860 Soto y Solares; music by Mertz, Aguado, Diabelli, Giuliani and Bateman.

Purchase on: iTunes; Amazon; Rhapsody

Recorded: Tracks 1-9 were recorded at Hillsborough Center Congregational Church in Hillsborough NH at various times from 1997-2002 by Frank Wallace. Tracks 10-15, also on the Gyre CD Schubert and Mertz, were recorded fall 1998 at the New Hope Methodist Church, Methuen MA by Christopher Greenleaf.

Instruments: classical guitars by Manuel de Soto y Solares, c. 1860 [1-6]; Manuel Gutiérrez, 1854 [7,8,9,15]; Louis Panormo, 1822 [10-14]

Duration: 55:38

Instruments: classical guitars by Manuel de Soto y Solares, c. 1855 [1-6] Manuel Gutiérrez, 1854 [7,8,9,15] Louis Panormo, 1822 [10-14]

1. Minuet, Dionisio Aguado 2:31
2. Erste verlust, R. Schumann [arr. Wallace] 2:00
3. Larghetto, Mauro Giuliani 1:19
4. Minuet, Anton Diabelli 2:10
5. An die entfertne, Johann Kaspar Mertz 3:39
6. Matraca, Mertz 1:35
7. Shaker Dance, W. O. Bateman 3:21
8. Fandango, Aguado 7:49
9. Mignonne Variations, Mertz 6:56
10. Abendlied, Mertz 3:58
11. Unruhe, Mertz 2:00
12. An Malvina, Mertz 4:01
13. Romanza, Mertz 3:29
14. Capriccio, Mertz 2:03
15. Elegy, Mertz 8:39

Gyre Publications
Copyright ©2013 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.