Concerto for Groups of Instruments
small orchestra
Composer’s Note
Concerto for Groups of Instruments, scored for five woodwind, six brass, fourteen strings, piano and organ, lasts about twenty minutes without a break, and was completed in February 1976.
It is a dense work, but constantly shifting in its inner detail. The ‘groups’ – wind, brass and strings – occupy their own musical area, and play their own type of music: the woodwind are soloistic with complex individual details making a fluid tapestry of sound; the brass, with less tiny detail, make a broader outline and phrase movement, often establishing specific harmonic areas; the strings fill out the musical space with sustained harmonies and washes of sound, acting as a backcloth to the wind. The piano and organ are used sparingly, and are mainly coloured by an unchanging six-note chord. The rôle of the organ is restricted to suggesting a new perspective.
There are two large sections and a coda. The first section consists of several blocks which balance around pivots, creating the impression of a large revolving cycle, and ending with the strings falling to a soft cluster, joined by the organ to begin the second section – moments of close-up detail and uneasy peace (mostly in woodwind and strings), a gradual growth of intensity and wildness (in brass), a return to dense polyphony and the climax. The coda, on piano and organ, slowly circles around with isorhythms and comes to rest on solo double-bass.
This work was awarded the Royal Philharmonic Society Prize 1977.
©️ Paul Keenan
Performance Materials
- There is only one physical copy of the score (that the family are aware of) and no digital copies at present. The physical copy resides in the RNCM Archives.
- A full set of hand-written parts exist and are stored in the RNCM Archives.
- A full set of parts were typeset when the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra performed this work in 2003. These are available from the Keenan family.