Headbanger (2001)

Posted on Tuesday 11 January 2005

for orchestra (picc.2.2.ca.3.2.cbsn - 4331 - timp - perc(2) vib/xylo/glsp/drum kit/tgl/3 wdbl/5 tpl.bl/2 c.bell/water gong/ch.cym/tam-t/timbales/3 roto-toms or tom-t/2 bongos/BD - harp - strings)

also available in a version for wind band, also available in a version for brass band.

duration: 6 minutes


Audio Excerpt
Programme Notes

    Headbanger, commissioned by Symphony Australia, is a six-minute orchestral fanfare. The term “headbanger” usually describes an adherent of heavy metal music, and seems to come from the motion of severe head-shaking employed by audience members at heavy metal concerts.

    It is unlikely that many of the audience members will be induced to bang their heads upon hearing this piece. However, they may be able to hear some musical gestures that could be associated with heavy metal or rock music - such as an often-’heavy’ bassline based around a repeated drone note, many bass-drum figures, generally loud dynamic levels, and quite aggressive rhythmic motives. Headbanger is not at all entirely a piece of heavy metal popular music. It also displays a number of quieter sections, including a passage for three clarinets utilizing slow glissandos.

    Headbanger is the latest instalment in a series of short orchestral works specifically written around particular objects of our time (the late twentieth/early twenty-first century). Other works include RPM, Boom-Box and Auto-Electric.

    Programme notes by Matthew Hindson. First performance: 23.11.01, Australia, Adelaide Town Hall: Adelaide Symphony Orchestra/Kristjan Jarvi


CD Recording Available?

    A recording of this piece has been made by The New Zealand Symphony Orchestra for Trust CDs. It should be released sometime in 2005.


Other information
    This work featured in Veitstanz: Shake Rattle and Roll, a ballet choreographed by Berndt Schindowski, performed by Ballet Schindowski in Gelsenkirchen, Germany (January - March 2004).



No comments have been added to this post yet.

Leave a comment

(required)

(required)


Information for comment users
Line and paragraph breaks are implemented automatically. Your e-mail address is never displayed. Please consider what you're posting.

Use the buttons below to customise your comment.


RSS feed for comments on this post | TrackBack URI