
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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Gubaidulina April Day Musical Toys #5 Oh Boy!
What a mess! It has taken me the entire month to transcribe this 1 page piece and get it to this point. I thought I had it more under control until I listened to the video. I don't think I should have posted it like this but I wanted to at least contribute something. I think this is well worth listening to a recording of this in its original.
It is very chromatic and 'spikey' and there are a lot of minor 2nd interval which are a real challenge to play as well as many leaps. I feel I have a feel for it (even though that is not apparent in this video) though there is at least one section that I have figured out musically. I also have a lot not trouble rhythmically especially the first section. Oh well....
If I can get a better recording before Eric blows the whistle I'll post it.
Sofia Gubaidulina was a Russian composer that was out of favor with the Russian Music authorities. According to an NPR piece on her life and music ;
She was able to study composition in Moscow, where she played some of her unconventional music for the revered composer Dmitri Shostakovich. He encouraged her by suggesting that she continue down her "incorrect path" — in other words, don't compromise. That path led to music awards, but also official blacklisting by the Soviet Composers' Union, which denounced her music as "noisy mud." In 1973, a person believed to be a KGB operative tried to strangle Gubaidulina in the elevator of her apartment building. She scared him off by asking him why he was taking so long to kill her.
That was one feisty lady! She died on March 13th of this year at the age of 93 (so take that KGB).
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Maria Luisa Anido - Nana
This is apparently based on a melody by Alfonso el Sabio (Alphonse the Wise in English). It very much reminds me of Llobet's arrangements of Catalan folk songs, which makes sense as Anido was a student of Llobet.
There are some harmonics in the piece that I have taken out (in measures 32-34), playing them instead as regular notes. They are accompanying notes, not melody, and I found that trying to play them as harmonics was not only very difficult, but was detracting from the melody. Maybe if I worked on them for longer, I could pull them off.
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I suppose this is the official "end" of this challenge, but I see no reason why people cannot keep posting music by women composers here. I, for one, plan to continue working on some of these pieces. Unfortunately, we have no means of having a Watch Party on our own.
I'd like to propose that we begin a new challenge next Saturday, May 10th, on the theme of Dance, which received just one fewer point in our voting than this challenge received. I certainly can get the ball rolling each week, posting a thread, but if someone else wants to take up that task, you would be very welcome.
What say the community?