• Missy Mazzoli
  • Dark with Excessive Bright (Concerto for Contrabass and String Orchestra) (2018)

  • G Schirmer Inc (World)

Commissioned by the Australian Chamber Orchestra and Aurora

  • db + str (min 4.4.3.3.1; max 12.10.8.6.4)
  • Double Bass
  • 13 min
    • 14th February 2025, The Royal Danish Academy, Copenhagen, Denmark
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Programme Note

Composer note
While composing Dark with Excessive Bright for contrabass soloist Maxime Bibeau and the Australian Chamber Orchestra, I continuously listened to music from the Baroque and Renaissance eras. I was inspired in no small part by Maxime's double bass, a massive instrument built in 1580 that was stored in an Italian monastery for hundreds of years and even patched with pages from the Good Friday liturgy. I imagined this instrument as a historian, an object that collected the music of the passing centuries in the twists of its neck and the fibers of its wood, finally emerging into the light at age 400 and singing it all into the world. While loosely based in Baroque idioms, this piece slips between string techniques from several centuries, all while twisting a pattern of repeated chords beyond recognition. "Dark with excessive bright," a phrase from Milton's Paradise Lost, is a surreal and evocative description of God, written by a blind man. I love the impossibility of this phrase, and felt it was a strangely accurate way to describe the dark but heartrending sound of the double bass itself. Dark with Excessive Bright was commissioned by the Australian Chamber Orchestra and the Aurora Orchestra in London.

— Missy Mazzoli

Media

Complete World premiere recording with Australian Chamber Orchestra and Maxime Bibeau, soloist
The creative collaboration between Australian Chamber Orchestra principal bass Maxime Bibeau and composer Missy Mazzoli

Scores

Score

Features

  • Catalogue Classics: Samuel Barber – Adagio for Strings
    • Catalogue Classics: Samuel Barber – Adagio for Strings
    • Adagio for Strings by Samuel Barber is one of the best-known and most beloved concert works of all time. Derived from the middle movement of his String Quartet, Op. 11, it was premiered in 1938 by Arturo Toscanini conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra. As the US struggled to emerge from the Great Depression and the prospect of war in Europe loomed, Adagio for Strings provided its audiences with a space to access their emotions, through radio broadcasts and performances across the Americas.

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