- Stringendo - by Susan Pierotti
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Satie's Gnossienne series of piano pieces, like his Gymnopedie, are reflective and deceptively simple. The bulk of Gnossienne - no. 4 consists of short phrases of descending scale passages interspersed with repetitive semi-quaver ones over undulating qu9-vers in the piano. Beginning in D minor, with just one major chord in the whole piece, the subtle, slow-moving harmonies convey a sense of Eastern cultures.
The arranged violin part is an exact transcription of the right-hand line of the original, but Moraru's accompaniment is more florid that the original left-hand part, disturbing, perhaps even negating, the stillness of the original. Moraru extends the piece by repeating another twenty or so bars. Allowing for a range of expression and interpretation, this would be an atmospheric and unusual encore to a recital, especially one of music by French composers.
https://issuu.com/austa_stringendo/docs/stringendo_46-2_october_24/53
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