The Prayer of Elijah
Program Notes
The Prayer of Elijah is the slow, middle movement of ...and they gathered on Mount Carmel,
a surround-sound work based on the great contest in ancient Israel between Elijah and the prophets of Baal
recorded in I Kings 18.
The work was begun in March 1994 in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, while the composer was an artist-in-residence at the Atlantic Center for the Arts,
and was completed in Knoxville, Tennessee, the following March. The work received its premiere in 1995 by the University of Kentucky Wind Ensemble
under the direction of Dr. Richard Clary and has been recorded
by the Valparaiso University Chamber Concert Band under the direction of
Dr. Jeffrey Scott Doebler. This composition has been supported with grants from the American Music Center and Meet The Composer.
The prophets of Baal having failed to call down fire to consume their sacrifice, it is now Elijah's turn to call upon the God of Israel.
The composer imagines an almost unearthly quiet, intensified by a low wind, as all eyes turn to Elijah.
In contrast to the ranting and raving and blood-letting of the false prophets, Elijah utters a quiet prayer.
The effect of the brass blowing air through their horns, the "whistling" of the plastic tubes being twirled, and the synthesizer "string"
inverted pedal point creates the sense of eerie silence. The euphonium intones a prayer, which echoes about the mountain (offstage saxophones).
Melody is the predominant parameter of this movement to contrast the emphasis on rhythm in the first. The euphonium solo is a development of
thematic material presented by the clarinets in the previous movement.
This page last updated on 07/27/07
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