Music Publications
[Order Form]
[Name Index]
[Classified Index]
 
 
A-R Home
Digital Audio
Publications
List
Production Services
Guest Book
E-Mail A-R
 

Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor
Symphonic Variations on an African Air
Edited by John L. Snyder
N 43 ISBN 0-89579-597-3  (May 2007) xii + 143 pp. $148.00
  ISBN 978-0-89579-597-7 (13-digit)  

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875–1912) was in his time among the foremost figures in British music. He burst onto the Victorian concert stage in 1898 with Hiawatha—temporarily eclipsing even Elgar—and remained in the public eye the rest of his short life. His orchestral work, Symphonic Variations on an African Air, composed in 1906, is based on an African-American song, "I'm troubled in mind." The work is interestingly structured, achieving a unity and direction rarely found in variation forms. More than eighty years ago the British musicologist Herbert Antcliffe lamented "the infrequency of... performances" of the work that "in size . . . and . . . demand for orchestral resources, is the biggest of all Coleridge-Taylor's purely orchestral works." The piece is engaging, with enchanting melodic invention, a harmonic language that is both characteristically chromatic and modally tinged, and a fine sense of orchestral color. As Antcliffe says, "To those who really wish to know Coleridge-Taylor . . . no single work of his will reveal him more fully."

Performance parts are available for rental: N43R

Music Sample