Victoria Bond: Soul of a Nation
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Victoria Bond
Genre:
Orchestral
Magazine Review Date: 09/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 62
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: TROY1723
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Violin and String Ensemble 'Soul of a Nation' |
Victoria Bond, Composer
Emanuele Andrizzi, Conductor Frank Almond, Violin Henry Fogel, Narrator Roosevelt University Chamber Orchestra Victoria Bond, Composer |
Concerto for Clarinet and Wind Ensemble 'The Indispensable Man' |
Victoria Bond, Composer
Chicago College of Performing Arts Wind Ensemble David Holloway, Narrator John Bruce Yeh, Clarinet Stephen Squires, Conductor Victoria Bond, Composer |
Concerto for Trumpet and Wind Ensemble 'The Crowded Hours' |
Victoria Bond, Composer
Chicago College of Performing Arts Wind Ensemble Mark Ridenour, Trumpet Ray Frewen, Narrator Stephen Squires, Conductor Victoria Bond, Composer |
Concerto for Flute and Wind Ensemble 'Pater Patriae' |
Victoria Bond, Composer
Adrian Dunn, Narrator Chicago College of Performing Arts Wind Ensemble Gabriela Vargas, Flute Stephen Squires, Conductor Victoria Bond, Composer |
Author: Laurence Vittes
Bond infuses into her portraits lots of rollicking Americana humour and characteristic energy, as in the opening of The Crowded Hours, devoted to Teddy Roosevelt and featuring stunning playing by the Chicago Symphony’s trumpeter Mark Ridenour and involving narration by Ray Frewen.
Each of the four is subtitled a concerto and each demands a virtuoso’s chops but they are equally well described as hybrid entertainments in which the words are brilliantly illuminated by Bond’s kaleidoscopic scoring. The freewheeling range of musical influences, from Yankee fife-and-drum tunes to circus calliopes and Broadway jazz, combine to give size and visceral excitement to the experience.
For Soul of a Nation, the most intoxicating of the four, Bond based her music on an edition of Corelli’s La folia found in Jefferson’s library. The angelic ending under Frank Almond’s soaring violin solo concludes a particularly touching love letter.
The playing by the four soloists must have been a composer’s dream. Each does their best to identify with their theme and is partnered with great enthusiasm by a talented chamber orchestra and wind ensemble from Roosevelt University, where the excellent recordings were made between 2012 and 2017.
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