
The Women Composers Challenge Week 4

Welcome to week four of our community-driven challenge on women composers! In week three, we heard some music by Madeleine Cottin, Annette Kruisbrink, Maria Linnemann, and Ida Presti. Hopefully, many of you are saving up what you are working on for this last week, and so we will have many more posts to enjoy!
So, the goal is to choose a piece (or several pieces), and to work on it throughout the course of the challenge, posting videos or audio files of your progress along the way.
Or maybe you are a woman composer, and you would like to take this opportunity to share some of your work with the community.
The challenge will last for four weeks, ending on Saturday, May 3rd. A new discussion thread will be posted for each week of the challenge.
If you are looking for a place to start your search and pique your interest, Candice Mowbray has an excellent website on the subject. Here is a link.
If any beginners would like some suggestions for your playing level, feel free to ask the community by posting a message here.
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Gisèle Sikora – Daybreak
I'll kick off this week with a composer I had not heard of until yesterday. I found this in one of Annette Kruisbrink’s books of works by women composers. According to Kruisbrink, Sikora lived in Belgium, where she taught at the music school of Lanaken. She played both the guitar and accordion, and her compositions were mainly for these two instruments. Her dates are 1952-2006, so she died rather young. This very short piece (I really wish it were longer) has obvious jazz influence. It’s really fun to play, especially the faster second half.
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I finally managed to sit down in my study and record some stuff.
I started with a few studies by Jana Obrovská, a set of 10, actually a coproduction with her husband Milan Zelenka so I hope it’s in line with the challenge theme. I think the musical language is Jana’s. As mentioned in the edition I found in Prague, these ‘Snadné Etudy’ (Easy studies) aim to give beginner students (used to Sor and Giuliani etudes) some introduction to untraditional chord-/ harmony changes within a limited technical range (1974, before we heard the Brouwer studies). I tried sight reading, they’re pretty easy, yet the unpredictability makes it fun to work on.Tomorrow I will continue and hopefully succeed to record Ahimsa and Danse Rythmique
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Presti - Etude III (Apr 27)
Here is an update on this. I'm really trying to play the chords very evenly, and not arpeggiate any of them. It gets hard in a few spots, either because the left hand is tricky, or because the chord has open strings, or simply because it is toward the end I am getting tired.
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Two short pieces from Album pour les tout-petits, Op. 103, by Mél Bonis (1858-1937).
There's a great documentary of women composers by pianist Kyra Steckeweh, and Mél Bonis was one of the artists she featured. Melanie Bonis, who used the male pseudonym Mél, was a student at the Paris Conservatoire where she studied under César Franck and was a classmate of Claude Debussy. She formed a relationship with a fellow student, but her parents disapproved and forced her to drop out and marry a twice-widowed man 25 years older with five sons. She eventually got back to music (and to her fellow student, happily), but it's clear there was a lot of conflict in her life with her family, her religion, and her passions. I wonder if any of that is why Prière sounds so tense and different from other "prayers" I've heard in music by Barrios, Hand, Grieg, etc.