Phantasiai
for Saxophone Quartet
Instrumentation
Saxophone Quartet
Program Note
Phantasiai was commissioned by Sinta Quartet, Inc. with generous support and sponsorship from:
Bruno and Erika Yoshioka, Mark and Mary Ann Graser
In Stoic philosophy, Phantasiai (fan-TAY-zee-eye) refers to an impression, appearance, or the way in which something is perceived. This work is the result of the impression my favorite saxophone quartet, Fantasy Etudes by William Albright, has made on both myself and the saxophone community. Over the nearly thirty years since its premiere, the work is performed regularly and considered to be among the greatest works in the repertoire. One of the strengths of the piece, apart from the immense virtuosity required, is Albright’s ability to showcase the saxophone through a wide variety of disparate styles and techniques. In his program note, he mentions the inclusion of these styles as intentionally conceived “against type” for the usual “polite” saxophone.
Now, several decades later, Phantasiai is conceived as “against-against type” in that, in large part due to the influence of Albright’s work, what is considered a typical saxophone style, sound, or genre has vastly expanded to the point where a “typical” saxophone sound no longer exists. The saxophone can do anything, and do it really well. These six movements are, in my mind, a spiritual “Book 2” of the Fantasy Etudes.
1. 94 Steps to the Brink
This title is taken from a sign on a trail down to the edge of the Tahquamenon Falls in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. After reading, you can’t help but count each step as you walk down to the falls, edging closer and closer to the brink.
2. Radio Row
Radio Row was the nickname for Cortland Street in New York City from the 1920s to the 60s. The street housed several radio equipment vendors and repair shops, becoming a frenzied hub for radio technology throughout the city. This movement pays homage to this through several musical quotations of works featured in very early radio history, from Handel’s Largo (broadcast in 1906 to ships sailing the Atlantic) to “Vesti la giubba” from Pagliacci (broadcast in 1910 from the Metropolitan Opera, sung by Enrico Caruso). These works, in addition to a handful from “Jelly Roll” Morton and Mozart, are interspersed with warbling multiphonics phasing in and out of the texture like radio static.
3. Highway Hypnosis
Highway Hypnosis is the phenomenon of managing to drive an automobile for long distances, doing everything safely and correctly, while afterwards having no recollection of the drive. This movement, beginning with one final holdover quotation from Radio Row, recedes into an undulating texture with glacially unfolding harmony. The rhythm, while muted and indistinct, creates an uneasy and evasive groove that is hard to pin down.
4. Fever Dream
The grooves in this movement are decidedly not hard to pin down. It is an homage to 1970s Funk and Disco, occasionally overcome with bouts of overzealous chromaticism.
5. Cavatina
A cavatina is a short song with a simple character. Much like Beethoven’s Cavatina from the op. 130 string quartet, this movement serves as a “calm before the storm” of the final, tumultuous movement.
6. Never Signed, Never Sent
This title comes from an unsent letter from Abraham Lincoln to General George Meade, detailing his profound disappointment in his inability to pursue General Lee’s army after the Battle of Gettysburg, which may have well ended the war. The letter, uncharacteristically heated and vitriolic, was never meant to be sent to Meade, but rather written as a way to exorcise Lincoln’s anger. This movement is in the form of a tarantella, a frenzied and relentless dance mythically known as a kind of exorcism to “sweat out” venom after a bite from a tarantula.
Premiere
May 2024, Kerrytown Concert House, Ann Arbor, MI
Commissioned by
Sinta Quartet