Karim Al-Zand: Music: The Waiting Game
The Waiting Game
a choreographic scene for dance
The work is divided into four linked sections, each with its own characteristic dance music: the first is rather slow and brooding, with periodic interruptions; the second, after a tentative beginning, is somewhat playful and humorous; the third section is a delicate and wistful dance; and the finale is rhythmic and boisterous. The Waiting Game also features a distinctive non-Western instrument: a kalimba (pictured at left), played by the percussionist. The kalimba originates in Africa and is constructed of metal tines affixed to a resonating chamber (traditionally a hollowed-out gourd). The tines are plucked with the thumbs (the instrument is often called a ‘thumb piano’) to produce its characteristic soft ‘pinging’ sound, which can be heard prominently in the third dance of The Waiting Game. The title of the work relates to a choreographed dance scenario which develops in tandem with the piece: a man and woman flirt as they wait at a bus stop.
DATE
2005
DURATION
10 minutes
INSTRUMENTATION
flute (piccolo), clarinet (B-flat, A, bass clarinet), violin, cello, harp, percussion
COMMISSION
Musiqa and Dominic Walsh Dance Theater
PREMIÈRE
April 30, 2005, Zilkha Hall, Houston TX
Leone Buyse, flute | Michael Webster, clarinet | Maureen Nelson, violin | Norman Fischer, cello | Paula Page, harp | Andrea Moore, percussion | Carlos Miguel Prieto, conductor
AUDIO
SCORE
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