Karim Al-Zand: Music: Hollows and Dells
Hollows and Dells
for viola & piano
Hollows and Dells was written for English violist Ivo-Jan van der Werff. The title is taken from an evocative line by Vladimir Nabokov: “…the hollows and dells of memory, over which the sun of my infancy has set.” The piece springs from some of my own formative musical memories, particularly those from the school I attended for most of my childhood. Though the boarding school was in Canada, its music, atmosphere and traditions felt very British (or at least how I imagined British private schools to be). Our music classes sang a steady repertoire of folksongs from the British Isles. Perhaps most memorable to me was our spirited renditions of Green Grow the Rushes, Ho!, a lively “stacking song” in which every new verse is appended to the one before. (The holiday carol The Twelve Days of Christmas uses this same structure.) The first movement of Hollows and Dells, “I’ll sing you one, oh!,” borrows the cumulative form of that song, and contains a few veiled references to its folk inspiration. The second movement “O still, small voice” is a musical reflection on my favorite Anglican hymn, a congregational anthem we sang at our daily morning chapel services. Dear Lord and Father of Mankind is set to the tune Repton, a charming and graceful melody credited to English composer Hubert Parry. Fragments of the tune can be heard throughout this short musical fantasy. The last movement bridges the musical traditions of Great Britain and America (much like the piece’s dedicatee). It is a raucous “reel” that draws on old time fiddle traditions and idioms, both Irish and Appalachian, to create a rousing dance finale.
SCORE + RECORDING VIDEO
DATE
2013
DURATION
12 minutes
INSTRUMENTATION
viola, piano
COMMISSION
Ivo-Jan van der Werff
MOVEMENTS
1. I’ll sing you one, oh! [stacking song]
2. O still, small voice [fantasy on Repton]
3. Reel en rondeau [fiddle dance]
PREMIÈRE
December 8, 2013, | Ivo-Jan van der Werff, viola | Simon Marlow, piano
AUDIO
SCORE
PDF