Machine (Higdon)

Machine is a single-movement orchestral encore piece by the American composer Jennifer Higdon. The work was commissioned in 2003 by the National Symphony Orchestra through a grant from the John and June Hechinger Commissioning Fund for New Orchestra Works.[1] It was first performed by the National Symphony Orchestra under the conductor Giancarlo Guerrero on March 6, 2003.[2]

Composition

Machine has a duration of roughly 2 minutes and is composed in one short movement. Higdon described her inspiration for the piece in the score program notes, writing, "I wrote Machine as an encore tribute to composers like Mozart and Tchaikovsky, who seemed to be able to write so many notes and so much music that it seems like they were machines!"[1][3]

Instrumentation

The work is scored for an orchestra comprising piccolo, flute, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, and strings.

Reception

Reviewing the world premiere, Ronald Broun of The Washington Post wrote, "It is one long, loud, freight-train crescendo with hellishly snapping winds and jumping-bean rhythms, and it sweeps relentlessly forward for just under three minutes, then stops on a dime. For sheer unpretentious fun it was just the ticket."[2]

gollark: After 200 years, at least several tens of thousands, actually.
gollark: The value of stocks tends to go up a bit over time (in aggregate, for individual ones or shorts amount of time maybe not), and the magical power of compound interestâ„¢ makes that significant.
gollark: Not really. Regular people can buy stocks. Probably only large companies are doing HFT, though.
gollark: Apparently finance might be an application for it, since fibre optics are somewhat significantly slower than light, and the satellites' laser/microwave links wouldn't be, and the minor latency advantage would provide an edge in high frequency trading.
gollark: Wokerer: modulate some kind of neutrino generation thing, and have a detector on the other end, so you can just send signals straight through the earth.

See also

References

  1. Higdon, Jennifer (2003). Machine: Program Note. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  2. Broun, Ronald (March 7, 2003). "Guerrero and the NSO, In Symphonic Symbiosis". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  3. Motsinger, Carol (November 21, 2014). "Don't miss Asheville Symphony Orchestra Saturday". Asheville Citizen-Times. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
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