related works
Boundless (Homage to L.B.) : for string orchestra, harp, keyboards and percussion / Joey Roukens
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Large ensemble (12 or more players)
Scoring:
timp 5perc hp synth/cel str
Piano concerto : 1979/80 / Tristan Keuris
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Piano and orchestra
Scoring:
3333 4231 3perc str pf-solo
Petit concert : (Concertino no 5), pour piano et orchestre, oeuvre 1059, 2004 / Jan van Dijk
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Piano and orchestra
Scoring:
1121 2110 timp perc str pf-solo
Confrontations : concerto for piano and orchestra, 1990 / Tera de Marez Oyens
Genre:
Orchestra
Subgenre:
Piano and orchestra
Scoring:
2fl fl(pic) 2ob ob(eh) cl cl(cl-b) 2fg 4h 3trp 3trb tb timp 3-4perc cel hp str pf-solo
composition
In Unison : Concerto for two pianos and orchestra / Joey Roukens
Other authors:
Roukens, Joey
(Composer)
Description:
Before I started composing I listened to the CDs of the Jussen brothers and was struck not only by the sparkling brilliance of their playing, but also by the fact that they sounded together so perfectly as a duo. Gradually the idea arose to write a double concerto in which the two soloists would not so much sound as two separate soloists, but as it were as one superpianist on one superpiano, which means that there are many unison passages (both pianos playing exactly the same notes). In any case, the unison is an element that appears a lot in my work, perhaps a legacy of the “Dutch music tradition”. My plan was to pursue the classic setup in three parts (fast-slow-fast). While I was working on the piece I was in a period when I played through many Italian baroque toccatas myself on the piano and something of that pianisticity can probably be heard in the pianisticity in this piece.
Perhaps most striking in part I Neon Toccata, an energetic, virtuoso toccata full of whimsical twists and rousing rhythms. It contains harmonies that are reminiscent of a certain kind of pop music that I associate with neon colors: bright, screamy, catchy. At the same time, I keep changing the harmonies in this part in a way that you will never find in pop music.
The slow second movement (What If) is set up in an A-B-A form: the A sections are slow, lyrical and mostly serene; the middle section is faster and builds to a more dissonant, violent climax. Characteristic of this movement are the continuous pulses of repeating notes: in the A sections this is a very irregular kind of pulsation, but in the middle section the pulses become more regular. When the A section returns after the climactic violence, the music has an almost sacred feel, like a dreamed kind of Early Music. The movement ends very ethereally, in the very highest register of the pianos.
Movement III (Dark Ride) is a dark mad ride at a dangerously high pace. It is a raw, chromatic and rhythmic movement that, despite the predominantly tonal harmonies, often has a sharp, dissonant edge. If you listen carefully, you can still hear something of the originally planned rondo form. It contains insanely fast notes, grotesque outbursts and just before the end a wild groovy passage in which the two pianos are left with only timpani.