Fratres
Fratres | |
---|---|
Instrumental music by Arvo Pärt | |
Form | Variations |
Composed | 1977 |
Scoring | varied |
Fratres (meaning "brothers" in Latin) is a musical work by the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt exemplifying his tintinnabuli style of composition.[1] It is three-part music, written in 1977, without fixed instrumentation and has been described as a "mesmerizing set of variations on a six-bar theme combining frantic activity and sublime stillness that encapsulates Pärt's observation that 'the instant and eternity are struggling within us'".[2]
Structure
[edit]Structurally, Fratres consists of a set of nine chord sequences, separated by a recurring percussion motif (the so-called "refuge"). The chord sequences themselves follow a pattern, and while the progressing chords explore a rich harmonic space, they have been generated by means of a simple formula.[3]
Fratres is driven by three main voices. The low and high voice are each restricted to playing notes from the D harmonic minor scale (D, E, F, G, A, Bb, C#); the middle voice is restricted to the notes of the A minor triad (A, C, E). The entire piece is accompanied by drones in A and E, which are primarily heard in the refuge between each sequence.
The chords are created by the movement of the three voices: the low voice starts at C#; the high voice starts at E. Both the low and high voices are moved up or down the D harmonic minor scale at the same time, with the direction of the movement depending on the position within the sequence. The middle voice starts at A and plays a different pattern (A, E, E, C, C, C, C, A, A, E, E, C, C, A). The generated chords create harmonic ambiguity, since both C# and C are present, yielding an A major or A minor feel.
Versions
[edit]Although often performed by violin and piano, versions for larger ensembles, such as a string quartet or chamber orchestra, are also common. Performances by early music specialists have also been endorsed.[4]
Versions for ensembles include:
- chamber orchestra (1977)
- four, eight, twelve, etc. cellos (1982)
- string quartet (1989)
- winds and percussion octet (1990)
- string and percussion orchestra (1991)
- band of metal instruments (2004)
- three recorders, percussion, and cello or viola da gamba (2009)
- saxophone quartet (2010)
Versions for solo instrument and accompaniment:
- violin and piano (1980)
- cello and piano (1989)
- violin, string orchestra, and percussion (1992)
- trombone, string orchestra, and percussion (1993)
- cello, string orchestra, and percussion (1995)
- guitar, string orchestra, and percussion (2000)
- viola and piano (2003)
- four percussionists (2006)
- viola, string orchestra, and percussion (2008)
In films
[edit]The composition has been used for many films and documentaries. Notable usages include:
- 1987: Rachel River directed by Sandy Smolan
- 1992: Sneakers directed by Phil Alden Robinson
- 1996: Mother Night directed by Keith Gordon; Fratres is performed by Tasmin Little (violin) and Martin Roscoe (piano)
- 1997: Winter Sleepers directed by Tom Tykwer
- 1999: eight-part PBS documentary New York: A Documentary Film directed by Ric Burns
- 2001: A Knight's Tale directed by Brian Helgeland,
- 2005: six-part BBC documentary Auschwitz: The Nazis and the 'Final Solution' produced by Laurence Rees, used the composition performed in 1997 by the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, conducted by Tamás Benedek
- 2006: La Morte Rouge directed by Victor Erice
- 2007: There Will Be Blood directed by Paul Thomas Anderson
- 2013: To the Wonder directed by Terrence Malick
- 2013: The Place Beyond the Pines directed by Derek Cianfrance
- 2013: Violette directed by Martin Provost
- 2015: El Club directed by Pablo Larraín
- 2017: documentary film Mountain directed by Jennifer Peedom
- 2017: Félicité directed by Alain Gomis
In other compositions
[edit]Jazz pianist Aaron Parks incorporated elements of Fratres into his composition "Harvesting Dance," heard on his album Invisible Cinema and on Terence Blanchard's album Flow.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ Zivanovic, Rade (2012). "Arvo Part's Fratres and his Tintinnabuli Technique". 40 S. hdl:11250/138506.
- ^ Arvo Pärt, Sinfini Music website
- ^ Linus Åkesson (2007-12-03). "Fratres". Retrieved 2007-12-03.
- ^ "Fratres (concert)". Arvo Part Centre. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
- ^ Frank J. Oteri (2014). "Aaron Parks: Make Me Believe A Melody". Retrieved 2014-06-17.
External links
[edit]- The 1997 release by the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra, used in the 2005 BBC documentary Auschwitz: The Nazis and the 'Final Solution'
- An Official Video of London-based violinist Lana Trotovšek performing the version for violin and piano with pianist Yoko Misumi
- Free recording of Fratres for Cellos Archived 2012-10-14 at the Wayback Machine by the Columbia University Orchestra.
- A Remixed version for Violin and Piano by Beats Antique of Oakland California
- Mari Samuelsen with the Trondheim soloists NRK1 Christmas concert in Vang church 2011 and 2012