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- Silbury_Air abstract "Silbury Air is a musical composition for chamber ensemble by the English composer Sir Harrison Birtwistle.Written in 1977 and revised in 2003, it takes as its inspiration the prehistoric mound of Silbury Hill in Wiltshire, with its connotations of the spiritual and mysterious: the precise function of Silbury Hill remains unknown. However the mood of the piece is not contemplative. It is described by the composer as "a compound artificial landscape or 'imaginary landscape', to use Paul Klee's title...presenting musical ideas through the juxtaposition and repetition of 'static blocks' or... objects." Across the two-part structure Birtwistle first focuses on the rhythmic and processional, despite the absence of what those rituals might be. Birtwistle has stated that the piece follows a strict logical pattern, but chooses not to disclose what that is, much as Silbury Hill has never revealed its purpose to archaeologists. In the second half the "Air" of the title emerges on the flute, before moving to the woodwind, at a tempo independent of the pulse of the rest of the ensemble. Four chords on the harp bring the work to a conclusion.A performance lasts around sixteen minutes.Silbury Air was commissioned by the Koussevitzky Foundation to mark the centenary of Serge Koussevitzky's birth. The premiere was given by the London Sinfonietta under Elgar Howarth at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on 9 March 1977.".
- Silbury_Air wikiPageID "23866653".
- Silbury_Air wikiPageLength "1855".
- Silbury_Air wikiPageOutDegree "17".
- Silbury_Air wikiPageRevisionID "482372718".
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Category:1977_compositions.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Category:Compositions_by_Harrison_Birtwistle.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Chamber_ensemble.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Chamber_music.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Composer.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Elgar_Howarth.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink English_people.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Flute.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Harp.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Harrison_Birtwistle.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink London_Sinfonietta.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Musical_composition.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Prehistoric.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Prehistory.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Queen_Elizabeth_Hall.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Serge_Koussevitzky.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Silbury_Hill.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Wiltshire.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Woodwind.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLink Woodwind_instrument.
- Silbury_Air wikiPageWikiLinkText "Silbury Air".
- Silbury_Air hasPhotoCollection Silbury_Air.
- Silbury_Air subject Category:1977_compositions.
- Silbury_Air subject Category:Compositions_by_Harrison_Birtwistle.
- Silbury_Air hypernym Composition.
- Silbury_Air type MusicalWork.
- Silbury_Air type Work.
- Silbury_Air type Composition.
- Silbury_Air type Work.
- Silbury_Air comment "Silbury Air is a musical composition for chamber ensemble by the English composer Sir Harrison Birtwistle.Written in 1977 and revised in 2003, it takes as its inspiration the prehistoric mound of Silbury Hill in Wiltshire, with its connotations of the spiritual and mysterious: the precise function of Silbury Hill remains unknown. However the mood of the piece is not contemplative.".
- Silbury_Air label "Silbury Air".
- Silbury_Air sameAs m.076yp0q.
- Silbury_Air sameAs Q7514302.
- Silbury_Air sameAs Q7514302.
- Silbury_Air wasDerivedFrom Silbury_Air?oldid=482372718.
- Silbury_Air isPrimaryTopicOf Silbury_Air.