Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall
Written for the 2014 American Liszt Society Festival
Scored for Piano Solo
Completed in 2014
Duration: 6 minutes
Premiere on June 7, 2014 in Harrisonburg, Virginia
Lori Piitz, piano
Scored for Piano Solo
Completed in 2014
Duration: 6 minutes
Premiere on June 7, 2014 in Harrisonburg, Virginia
Lori Piitz, piano
Program Note
Written for a premiere at the American Liszt Society Festival, I composed Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall this past winter while contemplating one of Liszt’s most haunting works, Nuages gris (“Grey Clouds”). Written in 1881, this piece stands out among Liszt’s solo piano works as a notable departure from his earlier virtuosic style and is representative of his most harmonically adventurous work. Functioning just past the edge of tonality, Nuages gris gains much of its character from a marked prominence of the augmented triad, which drifts chromatically over the course of much of the work without ever approaching any sense of traditional harmonic resolution.
Reflecting on the harmonic language and free-flowing character of Nuages gris proved to be quite influential in the composing of Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall, of which the augmented triad is also a foundational harmony. Many of the sonorities in the piece are built from “tall” augmented chords that stack at the major-seventh rather than the octave, and these chords weave their way through the tapestry of the piece with a similarly chromatic and freely flowing nature.
Composed in part against the background of a gentle late-December snowfall in Harrisonburg, Virginia, Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall also draws from an atmospheric inspiration as does Liszt’s Nuages gris. The piece is presented in ternary form: a solemn and reflective hymn tune is followed by a contrasting section evocative of snowfall, leading to a combination of both hymn and snowfall as the hymn tune returns, now set against the gentle, white background.
Written for a premiere at the American Liszt Society Festival, I composed Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall this past winter while contemplating one of Liszt’s most haunting works, Nuages gris (“Grey Clouds”). Written in 1881, this piece stands out among Liszt’s solo piano works as a notable departure from his earlier virtuosic style and is representative of his most harmonically adventurous work. Functioning just past the edge of tonality, Nuages gris gains much of its character from a marked prominence of the augmented triad, which drifts chromatically over the course of much of the work without ever approaching any sense of traditional harmonic resolution.
Reflecting on the harmonic language and free-flowing character of Nuages gris proved to be quite influential in the composing of Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall, of which the augmented triad is also a foundational harmony. Many of the sonorities in the piece are built from “tall” augmented chords that stack at the major-seventh rather than the octave, and these chords weave their way through the tapestry of the piece with a similarly chromatic and freely flowing nature.
Composed in part against the background of a gentle late-December snowfall in Harrisonburg, Virginia, Prelude: Hymn and Snowfall also draws from an atmospheric inspiration as does Liszt’s Nuages gris. The piece is presented in ternary form: a solemn and reflective hymn tune is followed by a contrasting section evocative of snowfall, leading to a combination of both hymn and snowfall as the hymn tune returns, now set against the gentle, white background.