SMALL CHAMBER ENSEMBLE - Soul Garden (2000) - Solo viola, 2 vn, va, 2 vc

Duration - 13:00

viola solo, 2 violin, viola, 2 violoncello.

 
Commissioned by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center

American composer Derek Bermel’s “Soul Garden,” a 2000 work for solo viola and string quintet, represents the confluence of two mainstreams the romantic-modern waters that originated in Europe and the blues-jazz-gospel waters that flowed from African American communities. The most striking and pervasive effect in the piece is the use of sliding notes, or quarter-tones, to emulate the vocal inflections of African American music. But “effect” isn’t quite the right term because these inflections are not separable, conceptually or compositionally, from the core musical ideas Bermel’s highly complex but fully controlled approach to harmony and rhythmic structure&.nearly every moment is both appealing and challenging, familiar and strange. It is music by a composer who thinks deeply about where music comes from, how it is made and what it is for.
— San Antonio Express-News
Like many of his pieces, this essay for solo viola and a string quintet (a quartet with an extra cello, in this configuration) draws freely from several musical worlds. The music’s surfaces are painted in the coloration of blues and gospel.&The work’s underpinnings, though, use rhythmic and harmonic techniques more germane to contemporary concert music, and the tensions between those languages give the music its poignancy. The bluesy turns of the solo viola line, played with a warm tone and an almost vocal inflection by Paul Neubauer, suggest a simple, direct approach to tonality. Yet the quartet writing, with its hazy, tonally ambiguous shimmer, pulls in the opposite direction.
— New York Times
Even more striking was Soul Garden for viola and string quintet, whose origins lie in African-American gospel music. With soloist Rachel Roberts emulating the vocalism of an alto gospel singer answered by the church baritone represented by an ensemble cellist, the result lies in the tradition of Aaron Copland’s popular Americana in its immediacy and sense of respectful parody.
— The Guardian (U.K.)
...his seductive culture-crossing ‘Soul Garden’... bends pitches with jazzy style.
— Harlow Robinson, The Boston Globe

Score & Parts Rental

North/South America, Asia (Peer)
Europe, Australia, New Zealand (Faber)

Find all of Derek Bermel’s works on Peer Music Classical.


Program Notes

Derek Bermel's concert works have been deeply inspired by African-American music: jazz, blues, R&B and hip-hop have all influenced his writing. In Soul Garden he uses precisely notated glissandi and quarter-tones to capture the quality of gospel music. Substituting a quarter-tone for its corresponding chromatic counterpart connotes for Bermel an emotional, even sensual, inflection: the solo viola solo is made to resemble a burnished alto gospel singer; the cello a rumbling church baritone.

The work exploits the tension stemming from what Bermel calls the rub, the juxtaposition of the African pentatonic and European diatonic scales. Melodically and harmonically rooted at first, Soul Garden slowly moves away from its tonal center. By the viola cadenza, the glue holding the piece together is gesture, an element common to all of Bermel's works; yet each of these gestures can be traced back to the viola's opening motive. Bermel thus pays tribute to the Beethovenian ideal of generating the entire motivic content of a movement from an initial melodic seed. And in the cadenza, one hears a dialogue reminiscent of both call-and-response in gospel music and J.S. Bach's multidimensional solo writing; one example of how Soul Garden unearths common ground between disparate traditions.

Soul Garden was commissioned by the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center for violist Paul Neubauer, who premiered it with cellist Fred Sherry and the Miami String Quartet on April 16 and 18, 2000 at Alice Tully Hall , New York City. It was recorded on CRI CD 895 by Neubauer, Sherry, and the Borromeo String Quartet, now available from New World Records.