Code: JP5068
ISMN: 979-0-3019-0440-4
Romans des Rois is a three movement work written
specifically to augment the particularly scanty
repertoire of a lovely combination of instruments.
The oboe and horn combine beautifully in so much of the
orchestral repertoire, but have sadly been quite
under-represented as partners, along with piano, in
chamber music.
The French title of the piece translates to mean
"novels (or stories) of kings". Overall, the composer
sought to capture the regal and expressive qualities of
the horn and oboe. She intended the piece to be
challenging and colorful, and yet enjoyable to perform
and to hear.
The first movement, Rites, opens and closes with a
declamatory duet between the two wind instruments,
punctuated by short, sharp chords in the piano. The
monarch is establishing his authority! There is much
joyful music to follow, although the harmonies are
sometimes tinged with sadness. The music then relaxes,
before some capricious statements from the oboe
eventually become more serious and foreboding, and lead
up to the climactic ending.
The second movement, Reves, is dreamier, as the title
would suggest. After a free beginning, it eventually
becomes a romantic but somewhat unsettled waltz before
reverting to the nebulous tonality of the opening and
then fading out - with a question mark!
The piece ends with a lively movement entitled Rondes
(rounds) which is imitative and dance-like, and yet
still authoritative in nature. Respite from all this
activity comes in the form of a misterioso section, with
the piano in widely spread octaves at the extremes of
its range. After the final recapitulation of the
opening material, a grand coda in irregular meters is
heard. The piece ends very much as it began, with
strong statements in oboe and horn and those
now-familiar accented chords in the piano. Total
duration: approximately 22 minutes
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