Blue Heron | by Frank A. Wallace

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Blue Heron
by Frank A. Wallace

for solo mandolin or violin: please specify in the order box for Printed Edition, PDF includes both
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Preview: a sample of Blue Heron for mandolin

Commissioned: December, 2012, by Robert Margo

Duration: 7 minutes; 3 pages

Instrumentation: classical mandolin

Skill level: Difficult

World premiere: Robert Margo for the Boston Classical Guitar Society March, 2013

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


Violin version, MP3 of Garritan midi violin from Finale

Below is a selection of mandolin music by Frank Wallace including a Garritan virtual mandolin version of Blue Heron.

My mandolin exposure has been extensive since I met and heard the elegant Mare Duo in Boston in 2008. What an amazing instrument in the hands of seemingly countless virtuosi, particularly in Germany and Italy, where the mandolin orchestra reigns. On American ground there are also many great players, tending to be in the bluegrass camp or cross-over. Purely classical mandolinists are more and more prevalent.

From the glory days of mandolin orchestras in early the 20th century, the singular Providence Mandolin Orchestra is still going strong as the leading ensemble of its type in America. Under the direction of Mark Davis for several decades now, the group specializes in new music. Many pieces have been commissioned by the group as well as one of its members, Robert Margo. I am very grateful to Bob for this, my second commission from him. The first was Nocturne for mandolin orchestra.

The Elements | four guitar solos by Frank A. Wallace

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The Elements
by Frank A. Wallace

a poetic essay on the origin of life in four movements for solo guitar
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I saw it yesterday (on Facebook), amazing piece and amazing playing!!!
Atanas Ourkouzounov; Jan 17, 2013

Duration: 12:00 minutes; 12 pages

Instrumentation: classical guitar solo

Difficulty level: High: stretches; repeated notes; dense polyphony; 10-string optional

Written: Winter 2004

Recording: by Frank Wallace on Elemental, Gyre, 2014

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2004 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

The Elements Originally written for 6-string guitar, I have adapted it for 10-string as well. It is a poetic essay on the origin of the Earth. I. Fire I conceive as the original burst of energy that birthed this planet. II. Earth is solid ground featuring repetitive modal chords that accompany a slow melody. III. Air is that moment to reflect and brood on creation itself and IV. Water the careening, tumbling whirling thing we call life.


Soundboard | Vol. 40, No. 3 [Jan. 2015] Wallace, Frank: The Elements.
Antrim, NH: Gyre Publications, 2004 [Gyre 2021]. 12 pp. $15.95,
$10.95 PDF.

This truly epic programmatic work in four movements belongs on the concert stage. It is a magical guitar solo, a culmination of Wallace’s experiments in previous pieces coming to fruition. He describes The Elements as “a poetic essay on the origin of life in four movements for solo guitar.” Those movements are “Fire,” “Earth,” “Air,” and “Water.”

“Fire” features broad arpeggio sweeps, percussion, fast repeated chord accompaniment to a dense melody in thirds over two staves, complex tuplet flurries, and several time signature changes. The piece begins sharply and aggressively to present the spark of the flame, continues with angular harmony to represent the destructive nature of the flame, and gradually weaves its way to a stunning melodic conclusion as the cinders fade.

“Earth” clearly derives from other Wallace gems, notably Pavanne for a Dying Prince and Stubborn Oak. A four-note ground bass and a rhythmic figure in sixths and fourths is repeated to create a platform of stability upon which the composer intertwines several beautiful melodic motifs. This movement features many instances of two against three, the constant pulse-like ground bass line, and a short ad libitum section at the end.

“Air” is sparse to contrast the dense chords of “Earth.” The movement is filled with fermatas, long ringing notes, harmonics, and nine-tuplet arpeggio bursts.

“Water” is an insistent, complex piece that builds from a seemingly simple sixteenth-note figure through a more intricate sextuplet arpeggio idea and ends with fifteen bars of repicco (rapid m-i-m-i rasgueado). This is not calm and peaceful water by any stretch. The right-hand pinkie is used often for upstroke flurries, there are a couple of percussive moments, and time signatures change on occasion. The second string is tuned down to B-flat. An agile right hand is certainly required to navigate this piece.

The edition is gorgeous, as Gyre publications always are. Wallace has carefully included detailed notes throughout the score, from left and right-hand fingerings to percussion explanations, enabling any guitarist to read through and understand how to present these works.

Equally gorgeous are Wallace’s renditions of these pieces available on his latest Gyre CD, Elemental (2014). This is a virtuosic set and should only be attempted when the player is at ease with rhythm, meter, and
especially right-hand technique. At thirteen minutes it is an ideal modern work to include in a concert program, where a performer can do much to highlight its programmatic contrasts. At the same time, each movement is substantial enough to shine alone if extracted.

– David Isaacs

Below are comments on The Elements performance on YouTube.

Joel vanLennep has made a comment on I. Fire – from The Elements by Frank Wallace
EXCELLENT, Frank – both in the music itself and in the playing! I am impressed! Congratulations! J.

This is fantastic Frank! Both composition and interpretation, it can’t be more perfect!
Cheers,
Dr. Eduardo Minozzi Costa

I saw it [The Elements] yesterday (on Facebook), amazing piece and amazing playing!!!
Atanas Ourkouzounov; Jan 17, 2013

Thanks for sharing this with me! Video looks and sounds great – really great playing!
Cheers, Rupert [Boyd]

Pascal Jugy has made a comment on III. Air – from The Elements by Frank Wallace
J’aime ce temps suspendu dans lequel on s’abandonne à la rêverie. Loin des grands discours et des démonstrations, juste une impression de bien-être et de sérénité qui fait du bien.

I love this suspended time in which we abandon ourselves to dream. Away the rhetoric and demonstrations, just a sense of well-being and serenity that is good.

Triángulo | for guitar, violin and flute by Frank A. Wallace

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Triangulo
by Frank A. Wallace

trio for guitar, violin and flute; PARTS INCLUDED
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Written: fall, 2002

Duration: 4 minutes; 8 pages

Instrumentation: flute, violin, classical guitar

Difficulty level: moderate

World premiere: by my students at the Mariposa Museum in Peterborough NH in spring 2004

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2002 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

I wrote Triángulo for Duncan McGovern, a wonderful young man who had been my student for several years. His best friend was a violinist, and another student at the Two Rivers Music School was a fabulous flute player. Duncan did not want to perform solo at a student recital, so I suggested that I write a piece for him to play with his friends. He accepted the proposal, and with some trepidation, gave a great performance in the spring of 2003 with his friends at the Mariposa Museum in Peterborough NH.

Eight years later I got notice that a purchase of Triángulo on this website had failed. Fortunately, the potential customer wrote and I apologized for any technical problems and sent him the music for free. This led to a wonderful friendship with Bo Isholm, music director of the Music School of Tórshavn, Faroe Islands. Bo subsequently led us to Kristian Blak and the Summartónar Music Festival – together they invited Duo LiveOak to visit the Faroes for a week of concerts and teaching (and exploring) in June 2011. Part of their gift to us was this performance of Triángulo.

Please see the performance of Mi Jardín de Calla from this same concert.

Woman of the Water | voice/guitar CD by Duo LiveOak

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Woman of the Water
Duo LiveOak

Songs by Frank A. Wallace Gyre 10082
Nancy Knowles, soprano
Frank Wallace, lute, guitar, baritone
Released January, 2004
Guitars by Ignacio Fleta, 1964 and Dake Traphagen, 1997; 10-course lute by Joel van Lennep, 1981

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.

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All Gyre compositions are ASCAP

Copyright ©2004 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography by Nancy Knowles, desgin by Nancy Salwen.
All rights reserved.

01 Pearly Everlasting

A Single Veil
02  Radiance  Rumi 1:14
03  A Falling Darkness  Shem Tov Ben Palquera 2:18
04  A Single Veil  Eugene Guillevic 1:38
05  Towards the Sun  Nancy Knowles 1:59
06  Love Comes Quietly  Robert Creeley 4:19

07  Dake’s Song 3:21
08  Débil del Alba 6:41

Bestiary
09  The Sloth   Theodore Roethke 2:47
10  The Cow   Roethke 0:31
11  The Lady and the Bear   Roethke 3:15
12  The Star-nosed Mole   Nancy Knowles 1:24
13  The Snake   Roethke 0:54
14  The Serpent   Roethke 3:29

Woman of the Water poems by Theodore Roethke
15  The Young Girl 1:15
16  Her Words 1:42
17  The Apparition 2:50
18  Her Reticence / Her Longing 4:04
19  Song 1:36
20  The Moment 4:02
21  The Restored 2:35
22  Meditation 2:06

All compositions ASCAP, copyright Frank A. Wallace, and available for purchase here on www.gyremusic.com.

CD Notes
My inspiration as a composer of songs is John Dowland. His lute songs were inspired by the lyric word and the great polyphony of his time and yet he brought new instrumental color to his writing, such as tremolo in one fantasy. While some guitar composers may have come close to his high level of solo composition, none have matched the depth and elegance of his songwriting, save perhaps Benjamin Britten, whose output was tiny in comparison. As a rare heir to the renaissance tradition of singer/instrumentalist/composer, I aim to bring back the richness of the art song to the classical guitar repertoire. It is odd that our popular culture has championed the guitar as the ultimate accompaniment to the voice, but as yet the classical world has not embraced this magical combination.

As a songwriter I am blessed by having not only a soprano, but also a poet, as my partner. Nancy has long been the creative force behind the programming for our concerts. Now she helps me shape my song cycles, from the choosing and sequencing of texts to writing new poems conceived for a specific work. For the newest cycle on this recording, and its title piece, Woman of the Water, Nancy put together a moving group of poems by the late American poet Theodore Roethke (pronounced ret-kee). The poems are from The Far Field, Roethke’s last book of poems, published in 1964, one year after his death. In the context of our settings, the poems trace the passions of a woman who lives by the sea, from her awakening young body and the beginnings of love, through longing and frustration to union and joy in her later years. In his lifetime Roethke was honored with many awards, including the Pulitzer Prize; in spite of recurring bouts of depression, he produc ed an inspiring body of work. It is interesting to imagine Woman of the Water as an allegory of his own soul’s journey. The lute was chosen as a more graceful, or feminine accompaniment to this delicate tale. The lute part is not unlike those of Dowland; my SATB orientation creates simple but rich chords, yet with impressionistic flourishes and instrumental fantasy. Throughout, a repetition of motives and chord progressions unify the work as a whole.

The recording opens with Pearly Everlasting, a lament on the death of our musical partner, John Fleagle, who founded LiveOak with us in 1976. Nancy wrote the poem during the last month of his life. The style of this duet combines many influences, from medieval drones to 17th century lute writing with dense counterpoint freed from any metrical ties. One of John’s favorite tunes, Comment Qu’a Moy by Machaut, weaves through the various counterpoints.

A Single Veil sets a wide collection of verse from several cultures and eras. Opening with a brief raga-like statement of melody, an homage to Rumi’s Persian roots, the songs progress through anger and dissonance, to a final lullaby with parallel thirds and simple, folk harmonies welcoming the arrival of peace. This piece is particularly poignant for us, as it debuted a few weeks after 9/11/01. Its texts (and tunes) helped us through that difficult time.

I composed Dake’s Song for guitar builder Dake Traphagen as a piece to show off the beauty of his guitars. Débil del Alba (Tenderness of the Dawn) was conceived as a duet for guitar and dancer; I wrote it for my son Adam Wallace and dancer Jessyca Dudley. The title comes from Pablo Neruda.

Bestiary was composed as a little circus piece to round out our concerts. The beasts are from Roethke once again, as well as Star-nosed Mole of Nancy’s creation. The musical language of each varies greatly from the slow imitation and waddling rhythms describing The Sloth; an English country tune with some off-color harmonies presenting The Cow; a 15/8 meter bringing on The Lady and the Bear; while the dark world of The Star-nosed Mole is gently crawled through on a 12-tone row; and The Serpent just has to sing in some shade of blue.

Gyre Publications
Copyright ©2004 Frank A. Wallace
Cover design by Nancy Salwen
All rights reserved.

Listen to entire album on Spotify
Listen to A Single Veil song-cycle from Woman of the Water CD

–David Vernier, CLASSICS TODAY
Composer/guitarist/baritone Frank Wallace and soprano Nancy Knowles have been performing together as Duo Live Oak for years and have built quite a following for their unique programs that often include original works by Wallace, either for solo guitar or for voice. This one features an entire Wallace program, with several texts provided by Knowles, the rest by various poets, primarily 20th-century American Theodore Roethke.

The songs are all well suited to Knowles’ clear, warm-colored, wide-ranging soprano, and the musical settings reveal a strong focus on long-lined, lyrical melody. The guitar accompaniments obviously were conceived by one who not only knows the instrument, but is a master of it. Wallace uses articulation effects that exploit the instrument’s multi-faceted technical and timbral possibilities–and indeed the guitar parts are an equal partner with the voice, supportive but often highly independent melodically and rhythmically (and often very busy). There’s also a fascinating array of styles and influences at play here–none of which dominates…Spanish, Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and especially the polyphonic lute-song style of Dowland are happily evident and effectively employed.

…[T]his very well recorded and expertly performed program is welcome…for the adventurousness and skill exemplified by both of these dedicated and personable artists in a field of music all too rarely appreciated by public and record companies.

– Jane Eklund, The Monadnock Ledger (NH)
It’s a bit like inhabiting a mythical world, listening to these new songs by Frank Wallace… Woman of the Water offers the texture of early music combined with lyrics gleaned from poems by the likes of Theodore Roethke, Rumi and Robert Creeley, in addition to several by Knowles. Performed with the range and intensity of Duo LiveOak, the result is exquisite. On lute and classical guitar, Wallace brings a lyrical complexity to the music that’s quite remarkable: you hear simultaneously the whole and all the parts of the whole, each note distinct. And Knowles’ singing–rich, swooping and sublime–is a tangible reminder that the voice is, indeed, an instrument, one she plays with elegance and grace.

– John W. Lambert, Classical Voice North Carolina
In over 25 years of writing about music on recordings and in concerts, I have rarely been as captivated and enchanted by any item as this new CD from Duo LiveOak, a new – to me – ensemble… This is a first-rate chamber music duo with a new and refreshing twist. Its artists are steeped in early music, and Wallace’s songs and duets, deftly accompanied, evoke memories of our distant cultural past, ever so gently wrapped in occasional quasi-contemporary enhancements… The CD’s only major drawback is its brevity, for it ends sooner than any reasonable person who hears it would wish…Go for it!

Frank Wallace his own new works CD

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Frank Wallace, classical guitar
his own new works, vol. 1
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.
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Released: July 2000

Guitar by: Ignacio Fleta, 1964

MP3 downloads or CD available at CDBaby or iTunes or Amazon.

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2000 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

All compositions ASCAP, © Frank A. Wallace, except The Stubborn Oak, Tuscany Publications, BMI, are available for purchase here on Gyre.

From the Windy Place
01  The pilgrim’s road 2:57
02  Sand and sky 2:16
03  In the shadow of the church/The Gift 3:08

from Sketches
04  Etude 7 0:53

The Stubborn Oak
05  Prelude 2:25
06  Adagio & Chorale 5:27
07  Fugue 3:31

from Sketches
08  Prelude 1 0:42
09  Prelude 4 1:22

Sweet Ladyslipper
10  Prelude 7:14
11  Pavane for a Dying Prince 3:37
12  Complainte 3:45
13  Estampie 4:04
14  Cantiga 2:47
15  Zar 2:36

Quadrangle
16  Prelude and Fantasy 4:21
17  Rhapsody 4:21
18  Meditation (Prelude 3) 2:58
19  Blues Too 1:59
20  Suite Blues 3:53

Total time 64:26

Friends #5-10 by Frank A. Wallace

 

MP3s  for his own new works are available at iTunes

Critical Review
The breadth of his musical activity recalls an earlier age, when a complete musician engaged in a broad range of creative activities as a matter of course. The works are melodically attractive and rhythmically exuberant… His playing is solid and expressive, with a commitment to every phrase…Wallace’s music is exciting, unpredictable, and fresh, as in the “Prelude and Fantasy” from Quadrangle. In its more introspective moments it can also be quite touching, as in several of the slow movements…Guitarists will be interested to hear these pieces, and they will certainly appeal to a broad listening public.
– Steven Rings, American Record Guide

Critical Review
This recording of original compositions was written and played by Frank Wallace, who is an outstanding guitarist… He plays with authority, exhibits a great deal of acoustic presence, and offers clear, uncompromising musical ideas. His sound is simply wonderful… the tone of the guitar is luxurious…Not only is the guitar playing very good, but the repertoire presented is listenable and worth performing.
– Stephen Waechter, Soundboard

Critical Review
A former professor of classical guitar at the New England Conservatory, Frank Wallace is a New Hampshire-based guitarist and vocalist who [performs with Duo LiveOak]. His own guitar music is crafted with idiomatic skill and sensitivity, abetted by his keen ear for textural variety. The modern Spanish guitar school informs the aggressive flamenco-like strumming in the “Rhapsody” movement of Quadrangle and the three-movement Stubborn Oak. By contrast, spacious chant and glimpses of blues imbue From the Windy Place, while the five-movement Sweet Ladyslipper ventures out into more elaborate rhythmic terrain. Listen for instance to the concluding Zar movement, which almost sounds like a snippet from early Yes, or perhaps an E-minor Grateful Dead jam. Jazz-oriented modality influences Quadrangle’s four movements–the first one suggests Larry Coryell and John Dowland in jubilant dialogue… the composer’s elegant virtuosity and Gyre’s gorgeous sonics help ensure a pleasant and comfortable 64-minute listening experience.
– Jed Distler, classicstoday.com

Critical Review

Lou Arnold writes for the BCGS newsletter

El Canto | mezzo, baritone & guitar by Frank A. Wallace

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by Frank A. Wallace
vocal duet for mezzo, baritone with guitar, op. 35b
PARTS INCLUDED; lute/vihuela version also available
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lyrics: poem by Mexican artist Jaime Goded

Written: 2003

Language: Spanish

Duration: 4:20 minutes; 8 pages

Instrumentation: mezzo-soprano, baritone and guitar

Difficulty level: Moderate ensemble parts; 3rd string = F#; 10-string guitar optional

World premiere: August 5, 2005 at the International Guitar Festival, Arequipa Peru, by Duo LiveOak

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2003 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Elizabeth Merrill, mezzo; Christian Waugh, baritone; Jeremy Lyons, guitar in recital at Peabody Conservatory in Griswold Hall on Sept. 22, 2012

We met Jaime Goded through his art in San Miguel in the summer of 2001 while there on vacation. Jaime has a beautiful studio on the plaza where we met his wife, Evelyn, and gave her a CD in admiration of Jaime’s work. The next day she returned with this poem, hand-written, as a gift to us. I wrote the song four years later for the Arequipa Guitar Festival, where Duo LiveOak debuted it.

Gyre Publications
Copyright ©2003 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

La Canción

Ocurre la forma del azul
con la mirada
que marca el paso
del crepúsculo
y pretende proseguir y se detiene;
las manos y su fuerza musical
aprietan
escuchando de la boca
el parpadeo.
Inicia el canto.
Empieza la musica.
El dibujo es la poesía dispuesta
y la escultura organiza la danza.
Inicia el canto
que no acaba.

Jaime Goded
Marzo de 1999
San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, México

The Song

The shape of blue emerges
with the glance
that marks the approach
of dawn
and it pretends to follow
but it holds back;
its hands
and its musical strength
holding
listening to the mouth’s
fluttering.

The singing begins.

The music commences.
Drawing is poetry willing
and sculpture
organizes the dance.
The song begins
that never ends.

translation: Nancy Knowles

Sketches I | simple etudes for classical guitar by Frank A. Wallace

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Sketches Book I
by Frank A. Wallace

thirty etudes of easy to moderate difficulty for solo guitar Performance notes included.
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Download Sketches II here.
Download FLAC files of both books as recorded by Frank Wallace here.

View a growing list of blogs/videos on works from Sketches and more at FrankWallace.com. Search the web for #techandtone.

Abode by Frank A. Wallace from Sketches I.


 

Written: 1997

Duration: 30 minutes; 21 pages

Instrumentation: classical guitar

Difficulty level: easy to moderate; first and second year students

Recording: as FLAC download or CDs available on special request; performance by the composer

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©1997 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


Introduction

Sketches I comprises thirty etudes of easy to moderate difficulty for solo guitar. Most are 1/2 to a full page long and are intended as evocative, colorful additions to a more rigorous collection of progressive exercises, etudes and pieces. They can be part of the pedagogy of very young players or they can be used as creative and stylistic variants for older or more advanced students.

These studies teach fundamentals of technique and beautiful tone. Rest stroke, free stroke, arpeggio and two-part playing are all presented while simultaneously introducing what might normally be considered more advanced concepts: legato shifts, accents, vibrato, rest stroke with thumb, laissez vibrer and sympathetic vibration. Portamento, expressive dynamics and tempo variation can be directly considered when the musical work is satisfying but not technically demanding. It is my intention in these works to catch an inspiration, a breath, a character, to create a beautiful moment for my students and friends to enjoy. What more can we do? Why not teach beautiful creative playing form the beginning.

Please visit my blog to read more details about these concepts. They can bring these simple pieces to life and become part of your musical practice and maturation. Articles accompanied by video demonstrations are at: http://www.frankwallace.com/category/techandtone/.

General directions

The primary goal of this book is to offer very expressive music with simple technical demands. Expressive playing involves special techniques just as the commonly sought goals of speed and accuracy in scales, arpeggios and tremolo. Experiment wildly with tempos, dynamics, colors, vibrato, portamento, etc. The book is organized into six sections, with commentary following on the next three pages:

Singe String Etudes I – lyrical position shifts; melody and accompaniment
Four Thumb Songs – flexibility and fluidity, variety of timbre with thumb
Free Stroke Songs – arpeggio and melodic use of free stroke
Jazz and more – practice in two-part playing
Six Blues – more practice in two parts with accents in different voices
New Suite in D Major – introduction to form: three movements with a variety of textures and moods – precursor to Sketches II which is comprised of five suites and a set of variations

Thumb Songs from Sketches I by Frank A. Wallace

Thumb Songs tutorial

Single String Etude tutorial

Española | guitar solo by Frank A. Wallace

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Española
by Frank A. Wallace

three short movements for solo guitar
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Written: 2006

Duration: 4 minutes; 5 pages

Instrumentation: classical guitar

Skill level: intermediate, some quick scales

All Gyre compositions are ASCAP
Copyright ©2006 Frank A. Wallace
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

Writing music for beginners and intermediate players is always a joy for me. It’s a challenge to make a worthwhile musical statement and create a vibrant sound on the instrument, but maintain a modest level of technical challenge. Española was conceived like the suites in Sketches II as a more extended form that can demand more concentration and variety of expression from the student.

Lanterns of Fire CD | LiveOak & Company

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LiveOak and Company
Love and the Mystic in Renaissance Spain
Grant Herreid, tenor, soprano lute, vihuelas de mano
Jane Hershey, viola da gamba
Nancy Knowles, soprano
Frank Wallace, vihuelas de mano

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.

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Languages: Spanish and Latin

Released: 1996 on Centaur CRC 2316

Copyright ©1996
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.


Part I:  The Shepherd in Love

01  Recercada segunda Diego Ortíz, c.1510
02  Kyrie(L’Homme Armé) Juan de Antxieta, d. 1523
03  ¡A hermosa! Juan Vásquez, c.1500-c.1560
04  Véante mis ojos anonymous, 15th century
05  De dónde venís amores Juan Vásquez
06  Noche oscura San Juan de la Cruz, 1542-1591 [reading] Niña, erguídeme los ojos Alonso, Cancionero de Palacio
07  Dama, mi grande querer Moxica, Cancionero de Palacio
08  Con el viento anonymous,
09  Mano a mano anonymous, Cancionero de Palacio
10  Pase el agoa anonymous, Cancionero de Palacio

Part II: The Shepherd in the Tree

11  Recerda primera (La España) Diego Ortíz
12  Gloria (LHomme Armé) Juan de Antxieta
13  Diferencias (Conde claros) Enrriíquez de Valderrábano
14  Quien no sabe de penas anonymous
15  Juyzio fuerte Triana, Cancionero de Colombina
O ascondida verdad Troya, Cancionero de Palacio
16  Fantasía #8 Luys de Milán, 1536
El pastorcico San Juan de la Cruz
17  Pleni sunt coeli Alonso de Mudarra /Josquin des Prés
18  Está la reina del çielo anonymous, Cancionero de Palacio
19  Vexilla regis / passio domini Pierre de la Rue, c.1460-1518
20  ¡Ay! nada me responde María de San José
21  Caligaverunt oculi mei Tomás Luis de Victoria, 1548-1611
22  Tenebrae factae sunt anonymous, Ms. 382, BPB*

Part III The Shepherd in Heaven

23  Recercada sexta Diego Ortíz
24  Sanctus (L’Homme Armé) Juan de Antxieta
25  Templa, Bras, ese psalterio anonymous
26  Et resurrexit (L’Homme Armé) Morales/Fuenllana, 1554
27  Llama de amor viva San Juan de la Cruz
28  Dic nobis, María anonymous, Cancionero de Colombina
29  Alegría, alegría Juan Ponce, fl. 1500-1520
30  Dios immortal Francisco Guerrero, 1528-1599
31  Agnus dei (L’Homme Armé) Juan de Antxieta

CD Notes
Producer: Antonio Oliart
Engineers: John Newton, Antonio Oliart (Soundmirror)
Recorded May 1995 at the Campion Center, Weston MA, USA

Approximate total duration: 66 minutes

Vihuela in A John Rollins 1984
Vihuela in G Joel van Lennep 1990
Vihuela in E Nico van der Waals 1986
Lute in D Larry Brown 1988
Viol in G Peter Tourin 1985
Viol in D Barak Norman, c.1680

Guest Artists
*Grant Herreid, tenor, lutenist, and windplayer, is a versatile musician on the early music scene, performing with several groups, including Hesperus, Piffaro, Ex Umbris and Artek. He has been music director for many productions of the Mannes Camerata in New York City, and for the Amherst Early Music Festival.

**Violplayer Jane Hershey teaches at the Longy School of Music, the Powers Music School, and directs the Tufts University Early Music Ensemble. She studied at Longy and at the Hague Conservatory with Wieland Kuyken. She performs with many groups on the East Coast including Emmanuel Music, Arcadia Players, Handel and Haydn Society, New Quartet and Hesperus and with violplayer Laura Jeppeson.

The singing soars, capturing the joys and melancholy of Renaissance Spain…and the instrumentals are nothing less than inspired. Lanterns of Fire is one of the best compilations of Spanish vocal music available.

– Marc Cramer, Renaissance Magazine

Schubert and Mertz CD | Duo LiveOak

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Duo LiveOak performs
Songs of Franz Schubert and guitar works of Johann Kaspar Mertz
Nancy Knowles; soprano
Frank Wallace: 19th century guitars, baritone

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Copyright ©2000 Frank A. Wallace and nancy Knowles
Cover photography and design by Nancy Knowles
All rights reserved.

01 Romanza Mertz 3:29
02 Wehmut Schubert 2:56
03 Capriccio Mertz 2:03
04 Harfenspieler 1 Schubert 3:36
05 Harfenspieler 2 & 3 Schubert 3:32
06 Unruhe Mertz 2:00
07 Der Schiffer Schubert 2:30
08 Schäfers Klagelied Schubert 2:59
09 Jägers Abendlied Schubert 2:03
10 An die musik Schubert 2:37
11 Meeres stille Schubert 1:33
12 An Malvina Mertz 4:01
13 Erlkönig Schubert 4:54
14 Der Leiermann Schubert 2:57
15 Greisengesang Schubert 4:31
16 Abendlied Mertz 3:58
17 Mignon I Schubert 2:29
18 Mignon II Schubert 3:05
19 Dithyrambe Schubert 3:14
20 Wiegenlied Schubert 2:19
21 Wandrers Nachtlied Schubert 1:42
22 Elegy Mertz 8:39

Total time 72:01

CD NOTES
Singers have always loved singing to the guitar, with its intimate resonance, and for both singers and guitarists, Schubert?s lieder are a dream repertoire. The emotional power and complexity of melody, poetry, and accompaniments alike are legendary. On the guitar, the play of finger on string, with its resulting variations in tone and attack, affords a nuance of _expression which is not available to the piano. In accompaniments for Schubert?s songs these qualities more than make up for the more limited range and dynamics of the instrument.

In the late 18th century, the new six-string guitar existed side by side with the five-string, the six course, as well as the now-waning five-course (baroque) guitar. By the year 1807, fueled by the influence of Giuliani, 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 many guitar works of Giuliani, Molitor, and Aguado.

In 1821, in his first publication of Schubert lieder (Opus 1-7), Schubert’s publisher Diabelli (a guitarist himself) chose to issue four of his songs in guitar versions. These editions not only helped Schubert?s efforts to establish himself as a songwriter, but it also appealed to the growing contingent of guitarists in Vienna. Judging by the plate numbers, there were two cases (Der Wanderer, D 493 and Morgenlied, D 773) in which Diabelli’s publication of the edition with guitar accompaniment seems to have preceded the piano version.

This simultaneous printing of select Schubert songs with both guitar and piano accompaniment became a pattern as Schubert became respected as a lieder composer. Over two dozen of his songs were published in his lifetime with guitar accompaniments and many more followed his early death as his fame increased. There was clearly a market for these guitar settings, as shown by the multiple printings of them in the early 1800’s not only by Diabelli but also by such houses as Pennauer, Sauer and Liedesdorf, J. Czerny and Cappi.

Although there are still some today who debate that Schubert played the guitar, others say that Schubert not only played but composed on the guitar when he couldn’t afford a piano, playing under a blanket in bed, because he couldn’t afford heat either! According to Percy Scholes in the 1943 Oxford Companion to Music:

“One of Schubert’s friends, Umlauf, records that he used to visit him in the mornings before he got out of bed, and usually found him with a guitar in his hands: ‘He generally sang to me newly composed songs to his guitar.”?

Another source says that his principal possessions were a few books, a guitar and a pipe. Further evidence of his interest in and understanding of the guitar is his 1813 setting of a Cantata to guitar accompaniment (D 80) honoring his father?s name day. Also, in 1814 he added a cello part to Wenzel Matiegka’s Notturno for flute, viola and guitar.

The 19th century romantics? passion for the guitar was so intense it was dubbed ?guitaromanie?. 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.”

The guitar’s popularity was intense for three or four decades before it began to wane. The Bratislavan guitarist/composer Johann Kaspar Mertz (1806-1856) belonged to this latter period but did not adhere to the typical post-classical style. He made significant contributions to the colors and harmonic language of the guitar repertoire, having been clearly influenced by his pianist wife, Josephine Plantin, and her knowledge of Mendelssohn, Schumann and Chopin. It is with Mertz that we first see titles such as Lied ohne Worte (Song without Words), Abendlied (Evening Song), and Unruhe (Unrest), showing his desire to create poetic sketches. Thus the title of one collection of his works, Bardenklänge, is literally “Bard Sounds”. While it was popular in his day to write variations on popular and operatic songs, Mertz also wrote six arrangements of Schubert songs. One assumes that as a precocious young player of both guitar and flute, Mertz started out on a six-string guitar. But like many of his contemporaries, he ended up preferring the increased range of the eight- and then the ten-string guitar. He was popular both as a composer in Vienna, where he was a leading member of the Vienna school of guitarists, and as a touring performer (Prague, Berlin, Dresden, Moravia, Poland, Russia). In 1856 Mertz won the coveted award for guitar composition in Brussels.

Frank Wallace plays from the Chanterelle edition of Mertz’s works (Monaco, 1983, Simon Wynberg, editor).

Of the seventeen songs on this CD, ten are Wallace?s own transcriptions from the piano version and seven are by Thomas F. Heck. (See footnotes on playlist.) Though many have transcribed Schubert?s songs, we are particularly indebted to Thomas Heck and his performance edition Franz Schubert: Sixteen Songs with Guitar Accompaniment, Tecla Editions, 1980. Detailed notes about these songs and their publishing history can be found in his publication.

THE GUITARS

Louis Panormo 1822
Of a three-generation family of instrument builders active from 1734 to 1890, Louis Panormo was born in Paris in 1784. His father, Vicenzo Trusiano, was born in Palermo and settled in London in 1772. Of Vicenzo?s four instrument-building sons, Louis was the most famous, building guitars in Bloomsbury from 1819-1854. He is known as the only builder outside of Spain at the time who built in the ?Spanish style?, with fan strutting, a development attributed to José Pagés of Cadiz. Fernando Sor worked with Panormo to develop this system in his guitars, giving them their rich rounded tone.

Manuel Gutiérrez 1854
The street in Sevilla made famous by Antonio de Torres Jurado, Calle de la Cerrajería, and its neighboring street Calle de la Carpintería, was already the center of elite guitarbuilding when Torres arrived in 1845. José Serrano, Diego Salazar, and Manuel de Soto y Solares1 all had workshops on Calle de la Carpintería. According to Domingo Prat, Torres shared a workshop with Manuel Gutiérrez who had worked at Calle de la Cerrajería #36 from the early 1830s.

It is assumed that this fine older builder Gutiérrez shared many of his secrets with Torres, as is evidenced in the indisputable similarities between the 1854 Gutiérrez used on this recording and the 1857 Torres (FE 07) in the Yale University Musical Instruments Collection, both shown below. These instruments are alike in size, shape and lightness of construction, with the exception of the Gutiérrez deeper body (over 100mm!). Both instruments 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. Their sound is remarkably similar, in spite of the different woods for the back and sides (Gutiérrez, Brazilian rosewood; Torres, cypress). Both are rich, dark, full and complex in sound. Torres has been quoted as saying, “it is impossible for me to leave [my] secret behind for posterity…it is the result of the feel of the tips of the thumb and forefinger communicating to my intellect whether the soundboard is properly worked out…?”

Similar techniques were clearly used by Gutiérrez to refine the top of our guitar, whose thickness varies widely from 1.4-2.2mm. The only way to pass on such a “feel” is through the age-old hands-on master/apprentice system, which had thrived in Spain since the Middle Ages. Like their predecessors, these lightly-constructed instruments are built to be played in spaces that have the natural amplification of hard walls, tile floors and high ceilings, allowing for a playful dialogue with the space that is sadly missing in our time. From many years of performing and recording renaissance music with lutes and vihuelas in resonant halls, we believe that this very experimental period, before the race was on for power and projection in bigger, deader halls, was really a golden age of guitar building. Just listen to the complexity of the sound of these instruments…

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