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We share Part one of an article written by Claire Farrell on "Exploring Australian Recorder Composition". 
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Orpheus Music News

In this month's Gecko we are excited to share part one of an article by Claire Farrell, "Exploring Australian Recorder Composition". In 2020 Claire published her thesis for her Honours degree in Classical Composition at the University of Tasmania Conservatorium of Music. She investigated the contemporary Australian classical recorder composition scene, catalogued 140 works for recorder by Australian composers written since 2010, surveyed composers and recorder players and much more. Read more below for her detailed findings on recorder composition in Australia. 

In other news, we share Peter Biffin's answer to a common question : "What's the difference between Mollenhauer's Denner model and their Denner-Edition model?" (Apart from the price tag!)

And lastly we have selected some of our favourite trios for your recorder ensembles to explore and learn!
We are pleased to announce that the April Recorder Gathering is going ahead! If you are still thinking of enrolling now is the time before we send out set works.

We are looking forward to seeing old friends and meeting new ones.
Book Now

Denner and Denner-Edition recorders by Mollenhauer
 

The work of Jacob Denner (1681-1735) is the inspiration for both series - however, like any maker, stylistic aspects of Denner’s work varied over his working life. Therefore, while both series are true to Denner’s design ideas generally, there are subtle differences – probably most notable would be that the Denner-Edition has a finer, more rounded beak. 

For recorder-making workshops, one of the main differences between the company’s top model and a lower model is the amount of time each instrument spends in the voicing room. Denner and Denner-Edition instruments are created using identical machines and processes. However, once the outer physical form is complete, the Denner-Edition instruments then receive special treatment in the voicing room. Here an instrument maker begins the process of creating a sound for each instrument, taking into account every nuance in the individual piece of wood. This process goes on over an extended period - making small adjustments, playing, careful listening, more adjustments, leave it awhile, come back.  

In many ways, the Denner-Edition instruments should be regarded as “hand-made” recorders. An individual maker working alone will begin the making process in exactly the same way that Mollenhauer does – using highly sophisticated machinery to produce the physical form in the most accurate way possible. It is the artistic vision of a single individual guiding the voicing process that makes a recorder “hand made”, not that a hand-made recorder is created without the use of machinery (nobody does it that way!!) 

........and what about Mollenhauer's Denner-Line series? There are a selected few of the Denner treble models that are made at A=415Hz as well as at A=440Hz - these are known as Denner-Line recorders, made from pearwood or castello boxwood. They are identical to the corresponding Denner models except for the pitch. All of the Denner-Edition instruments are made at both 415 and 440 Hz.

Find out more about Denner-Edition Models
Find out more about Denner Models
Who was Denner?

Johann Christoph Denner (August 13, 1655 – April 26, 1707), was a famous woodwind instrument maker of the Baroque era.

Born in Leipzig to a family of horn-tuners. With his father, Heinrich Denner, a maker of game whistles and hunting horns, he moved to Nuremberg in 1666.J. C. Denner went into business as an instrument maker in 1678 and was granted rights for the 'manufacture of French musical instruments consisting chiefly of oboes and recorders in 1697. Two of his sons, Jacob and Johann David, also became instrument builders. At least sixty-eight instruments attributed to J. C. Denner have survived to the present day, although the surviving instruments with his name are believed to have come from his sons' workshops.

See our full collection of Denner and Denner-Edition Recorders
Click here to read Part one and Claire's Bio

Exploring Australian Recorder Composition

Background

In 2020, I completed my Honours degree in Classical Composition at the University of Tasmania Conservatorium of Music. My exegesis investigated the contemporary Australian classical recorder composition scene, catalogued 140 works for recorder by Australian composers written since 2010, surveyed composers and recorder players, presented a folio of three original works for recorders, and concluded that the collaborative relationships that have developed between composers and recorder players will facilitate the continued growth of the contemporary classical recorder scene in Australia. This article reflects on my research and shares some of my findings that may be of interest to the broader recorder community.

 

Part One

I first found my way into the world of recorder music when, at the age of 16, I joined my Mum’s small recorder group and learnt to play by muddling my way through Mozart, Bach, and Byrd. Six years later, equipped with better technique, a plethora of new recorder playing friends, and a Bachelor of Music majoring in Classical Composition, I realised that I didn’t know much at all about the compositional possibilities of the recorder, and the broader recorder music scene in Australia. Recorder had always been my hobby, separate from my practice as a composer, but as I began to experiment with the recorder’s creative potential, my interest grew, and coincided with my Honours year at the University of Tasmania Conservatorium of Music. In that fateful year of 2020, my time at home was spent investigating what Australian composers and musicians have been creating with recorders.

Recorders have been firmly present in the Australian music scene for close to a century, and had become established as an instrument with contemporary composition potential by the end of the 20th Century thanks to the work of innovative player-composers including Ros Bandt, Zana Clarke, Ian Shanahan, Malcolm Tattersall, and Benjamin Thorn. As the 2010s were drawing to a close, I decided to focus my investigation, titled Contemporary Classical Recorder Music in the Australian Compositional Landscape, on recorder composition activities between 2010 and 2020 in the hope that this would paint a picture of the scene as it is now. I began my research on the Australian Music Centre (AMC) website, “the national service organisation dedicated to the promotion and support of art music in Australia”. The AMC's recorder music summary provides a brief overview of the scene and lists some representative compositions by Australian composers, mostly written in the 2000s. Searching further through the AMC library, I discovered 29 works for recorder listed since 2010, which was significantly fewer than listed in previous decades. The AMC can only list works if the represented composers themselves update them; however, seeing this diminishing number of recorder compositions spurred my determination to find out if this was an accurate depiction of the trajectory of new music for recorders in Australia.

As I continued my review of the literature, my findings quickly reinforced the need for my study beyond just my personal interest. I found articles, theses, and interviews relating to Australian recorder music, but most predated 2010. The Recorder: A Research and Information Guide, a bibliographic research guide by David Lasocki and Richard Griscom, published in 2012, only listed sources relating to Australian recorder music from before 2000, with the exception of a catalogue compiled by Nicholas Lander for his Recorder Homepage which he continued updating until 2012. Was this because interest in composing for the instrument has diminished, or perhaps more recent activities have simply yet to be documented? Upon searching Australian academic databases for more recent scholarly research, I found one research paper written since 2010, a Master’s thesis by Australian recorder player Joanne Arnott, Recorders and Electronics: An Introduction to the Performance of Electroacoustic Music. Arnott’s thesis concludes that “the continuing involvement of recorders and recorder players in the electroacoustic music scene will solidify the recorder’s place as a truly modern instrument in a modern context” (p.102). The ideas explored in this thesis provided the catalyst for my growing idea that recorder music is evolving away from traditional forms, and I turned to primary source material for answers. In her 2013 Peggy Glanville-Hicks Address, recorder virtuoso Genevieve Lacey observed that “the reality of being a recorder player based in Australia is that there is no ready‐made job for me here as a performing musician. Nothing exists unless, together with others, we create it.” True to Lacey’s words, I began to find artist websites, album releases, concert programmes, and fascinating collaborations, and discovered a prolific group of Australian recorder players and composers actively creating music for recorders, many in quite exploratory forms. Thus, my hypothesis was formed: There has been a sustained interest in the creation of contemporary classical recorder music in Australia over the last decade, but it has not been fully documented. So, I set out to do just that.

To guide my research, I developed three research questions:

1. What are the driving factors behind the creation of contemporary classical recorder music in Australia?

2. Who is programming/performing this music?

3. Are there any social and/or practical limitations in the process of creating recorder music that need to be overcome?

I addressed the first two research questions through a deep-dive into the music being created. Using the AMC library, Orpheus Music’s catalogue of Australian music (kindly provided to me in spreadsheet form by Peter Biffin), and web-based primary source material, I catalogued all of the works I could find that were composed by an Australian composer, composed between 2010 and 2020, and fitted into the contemporary classical genre, excluding pedagogical music. To fit the scope of my study, the works must have been either publicly performed, published, or released as a professional recording. In total, I catalogued 140 works written by 61 Australian composers; a significant increase from the 29 works I found on the AMC library at the time of conducting my research.

My catalogue revealed some interesting trends: Orpheus Music was responsible for publishing 83 of the 140 works, representing nearly 60% of the catalogue thanks to their efforts over the years to facilitate and promote new Australian recorder music. 74% of the 61 composers had only written one work for recorder. The other 26% of composers who had written two or more works were either published by Orpheus Music, such as Benjamin Thorn and Lance Eccles; recorder player-composers, such as Ryan Williams and Natasha Anderson; or have collaborated with the same professional recorder player/s multiple times, such as Chris Williams and Mark Oliveiro who have both collaborated with Alicia Crossley. Many of the composers I catalogued were based in either Victoria or New South Wales (NSW), which was unsurprising as they are the two most populous states. NSW, however, is home to over half the composers I found, suggesting that highly active individuals and music entities can create a self-sustaining microcosm of creative opportunities. I could see this particularly reflected in the work of Alicia Crossley, who was involved in commissioning at least 17 new works by Australian composers, many based in NSW, between 2010 and 2020.

The instrumentation of the works I found also gave insight into the current trajectory of recorder composition. Predictably, the most popular instrumentation was recorder ensemble; however, the next most common combination used by composers was recorders and technology, which made up 17% of the works I found. Outside of the Orpheus Music Publications, which have a specific target audience of recorder ensembles, this percentage rises to 40%. This shows that, outside of composing for the standard combinations, composers are using recorders in unique ways to establish their place in the contemporary classical composition scene, and perhaps also to overcome some practical barriers that the recorder faces, which I will discuss later.

At the beginning of my investigation, I chose the terminology ‘contemporary classical’, often used interchangeably with ‘art music’, which broadly encompasses tonal, post-tonal, and experimental music, to classify works for inclusion in my catalogue. However, I found it difficult to classify the works I found, largely because many of the projects embarked on by composers and recorder players explore a significant breadth of styles. These styles included traditional tonal harmony, evident in the work of Lance Eccles; experimental graphic scores, such as Eve Klein’s Codextant (2015) for two recorders and electronic soundscape; the “instrumental, audio-visual and acousmatic works” of Natasha Anderson; and works such as Conversations with Ghosts (2013) by Paul Kelly, James Ledger, and Genevieve Lacey, that blur the lines between singer-songwriter and contemporary classical. Similarly, the diversity of styles being explored across the work of individual Australian composers is evident in Ryan William’s album of structured solo improvisations, Wanderings, which contrasts with his Renaissance/Jazz-inspired composition, Felt (2018) for Renaissance recorder quartet. The fluidity of styles I encountered shows that the recorder players are occupying an evolving and versatile space in new music. In addition to the many Orpheus Music Publications, it was exciting to see entire albums of commissioned works by Australian composers being produced, including Alicia Crossley’s Addicted to Bass (2011), for bass recorder, percussion and live electronics, featuring works by Mark Oliveiro, Andrew Batt-Rawden, Alex Pozniak, Chris Williams, Tristan Coelho, Elias Constantopedos and Hayden Woolf; and Duo Blockstix’s Works for Percussion and Recorder (2017) featuring works by Daniel Rojas, Paul Cutlan, Peter McNamara, Julian Day, Damian Barbeler, Mark Oliveiro, and Tim Hansen. These represent only a selection of the works I investigated, and already since completing my Honours degree I have been made aware of other individuals, such as Racheal Cogan, who are creating new and experimental music for recorders. Similarly, at the time of my research, Alicia Crossley was still working on her latest album, Bass Instincts (2021) for bass recorder, electronic soundscapes, and percussion, which has recently been released and features works by Australian composers Anne Boyd, Jessica Wells, Holly Harrison, Alice Chance, Lisa Cheney, Amanda Cole, and Fiona Hill.

As the catalogue developed, I began to discover that the driving factor behind the creation of new recorder music is collaboration. This is mainly fuelled by the recorder players themselves, who are also usually responsible for commissioning and programming the music, which aligns with the observations Genevieve Lacey made in her Peggy Glanville-Hicks Address. Indeed, a core group of Australian recorder players has been responsible for commissioning much of the last decade’s new music for recorders: Natasha Anderson, Joanne Arnott, Alana Blackburn (who, alongside Arnott, forms the Australian Recorder Project), Alicia Crossley (and Duo Blockstix), Genevieve Lacey, Ryan Williams (and the Horsley and Williams Duo) and the Recorder Co-op, consisting of Williams, Hannah Coleman, Ruth Wilkinson, and Alexandra Bailliet-Joly. Additionally, the work of Orpheus Music in championing Australian music through their publications and their annual Composition Competition has led to the creation of new repertoire that is enjoyed by recorder groups across the country.

 

Part two will be released in the next edition of Gecko Newsletter. 

 Sheet Music 

Below we share some easy to advanced trios available from Orpheus Music. 
Trios International

Eight Folk Song Arrangements for Descant - Treble - Tenor Recorders. 

Price: $15.75

Buy Now
A Curious Suite for 3 recorders 

Contemporary Suite for Recorder Trio based on Alice and Wonderland. Includes comprehensive introductory notes and a table of notations used in the works. Interesting contemporary pieces to play which are reasonably challenging.

1. Hinab, Hinab, Hinab (Down, Down, Down)
2. Jeder bekommt einen Preis (All Must Have Prizes)
3. Wer bist denn du? (Who Are You?)
4. Schlange, sage ich (Serpent, I Say Again)
5. Abendsuppe (Soup Of The Evening)
6. Weg mit ihren Kopfen (Off With Their Heads)

Price: $31.45

Buy Now
Estampie
 

Medieval composition for 3-4 recorders. This medieval estampie comes from the Robertsbridge Codex (London BL add.28550) dating around 1320 originally for organ. Ideal for SATB and ATB recorder consorts. 

Price: $38.33  

Buy Now
Lima Lagu
 

Lima Lagu (“Five Pieces”) is a work for one to three recorders which explores Indonesian scales. Comes with in-depth notes on composer, pieces and performance notes. 

I. Saih Angklung for solo recorder

II. Pelog Lima for solo recorder

III. Slendro Nem for two recorders

IV. Pelog Barang for three recorders

V. Pelog Nem for three recorders

Price: $43.00

Buy Now
Concerto II - Handel

Well known Concerto by Handel, arranged for two altos and bass recorder. 

Price: $31.40

Buy Now
Trio Spielbuch II fur Drei Blockfloten

A great collection of 18 Compositions from the Renaissance through to mid 18th Century for three recorders.

Price: $42.00

Buy Now
Sonata a tre - Quantz
 

Baroque Sonata arranged for 3 x Bass Recorders. Includes biographical notes about the composer.

1. Vivace
2. Largo
3. Rigaudon
4. Minuet
5. Gigue

Price: $21.00

Buy Now

Trio (Op133/II) - James Hook

Famous Baroque/Classical Trios for Soprano, alto and tenor recorders. . Includes short preface.

1. Allegretto
2. Andantino e sempre piano/
3. Allegretto

Price: $18.90

Buy Now
Trio in F Major - Corelli

Famous traditional Baroque Sonata arranged for two trebles and tenor recorders. 

1. Vivace
2. Allegro
3. Allegro
4. Grave
5. Allegro

Price: $27.82

Buy Now
Seaside Favourites

Eight Great Trios that will transport you to the beach! There is a good variety of pieces in this collection. The score is in quite large print and the parts are easy to read and nicely presented. Some of these pieces use semiquaver patterns in both simple and triple time - some are more tricky than others. Suitable for pupils with about 2 years experience on the recorder.

 The Keel Row
Blow the Man Down
Drunken Sailor
Fire Down Below
The Leaving of Liverpool
The Waters of Tyne
Portsmouth
The Sailors Hornpipe


Price: $19.95

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Jazz Recording

8 jazz influenced pieces for 2 Descants  and a Treble.

Song for a young lady
Struggling Two-Step
In Memoriam The Beatles
Swinging pipes
Blue Waltz
Doggy's flirt
Trouble for treble
Crazy flutes


Price: $19.50

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Driehout

Contemporary Piece that uses treble at 415Hz, with tenor and bass at 440Hz. Employs avant-garde techniques and notation including glissando, sputato, flutter tonguing. Includes explanation of symbols.


Price: $32.29

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Kriminaltango and Tea for Three
 

2 contemporary pieces for Descant - Treble - Bass. By composers Rosin and Beutler. 

1. Kriminaltango

2. Tea for Three (Waltz)

Includes foreword in German only.

Price: $35.17

Buy Now

Recorder Accessories

BACK IN STOCK!

This best seller is back in stock at Orpheus, buy now to avoid missing out! 

Adrian Brown's Popular Recorder Manual. With useful information on how to keep your recorders in good condition, to do minor repairs, and, above all, how to improve the tuning. Comprehensively illustrated with photographs, as well as some line illustrations that take away much of the mystery about recorder acoustics.

The book manages to be rigorous and scientific, with diagrams showing, for instance, which part of the bore affects which notes, but is eminently practical, and everything is clearly explained.

Detailed explanations include: playing in a wooden recorder, daily care, maintenance - oiling, clogging, cleaning the block and wind-way, replacing the block, joints, tuning and how different woods affect the recorder. 

Buy Now
Useful recorder accessories:
Recorder Cases
Recorder Straps
Recorder Stands
Recorder Thumb Rests
Recorder Cleaning Brushes
Recorder Maintenance Kits
Recorder Oils and Greases

 
Click here to read past issues of Gecko. 
Click here to see the Prize winners for the OMCC21 and Orpheus Music more well-known publications. 
Click here to read our 2021 best sellers and Interview with Alicia Crossley.
Click here to read our Ruth Wilkinson interview and Back to School Edition. 
Click here to read our Recorder Exam Guide. 
Click here for our C fingering (descant and tenor) studies.
Recorder Societies
 
Australian Societies
SSRP Sydney Society of Recorder Players 
CREMS  Canberra Recorder and Early Music Society 
REMSW  Recorder and Early Music Society of Western Australia Inc.
VRG  Victorian Recorder Guild
The Hobart Society of Recorder Players Inc.
NQRS North Queensland Recorder Society
Recorders Brisbane Brisbane Recorder Players Hub
Society of Recorder Players (SA) Inc.
EMA The Early Music Association of NSW
EMSV Early Music Society of Victoria 
EMSQ Early Music Society of Queensland 
IRA Illawarra Recorder Association (Wollongong)



 
New Zealand Societies
SRPNZ Society of Recorder Players NZ Inc
REMU Recorder and Early Music Union
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