The Luck of the Irish

Composer: Garcia, Simon
Instrumentation: 6 Doubles Basses
Publisher: Recital Music

R.R.P £10

Our Price £8.5

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Product Code: RMD1155
Publishers Number: RMD1155
Language: English

Description

The Luck of the Irish is for the advanced sextet and also exists in a version for Double Bass, Quartet. It has an amazing rhythmic drive and momentum, is a fun and exciting piece exploiting all the colours and timbres available to the Double Bass, Sextet. Simón García writes: ‘The Luck of the Irish is written with an Irish flavour. I wrote it for Barry Green and it was premiered and performed during a ‘Barry Green and friends’ tour in January and February 2013 in the USA. I wrote it with a joyful and carefree feel as if it was a traditional Irish reel or jig. At the beginning the theme is presented with one bass alone, gradually adding the other instruments as if it were a spontaneous meeting (jam) in an Irish pub. In the first part you can recognize some characteristic sounds such as tin whistle, bouzouki´s strumming and bodhran´s rhythms, and in the second part the same theme is processed in a more rhythmic and fun way with an accompaniment reminiscent of the way of the violins accompany Irish folk music.’ “Rhythmic drive is perhaps the most important – and unifying – music element that extends through The Luck of the Irish…Aptly marked ‘Tempo de Reel’, The Luck of the Irish is a jig with fleeting fiddle tunes and energetic rhythmic lines. Bass one and bass two take on the role of duelling fiddlers, alternately playing each of four unique eight-bar themes. This music allows an opportunity for the fiddlers to showcase agile left-hand technique and virtuosic bow control. Bass three and four, meanwhile, provide the rhythmic impetus in the piece. Extra interest is added with their unyielding syncopated groupings of notes…accessible to intermediate and advanced bassists fluent in thumb position and confident with rhythmic playing. Garcia’s command of the instrument is clear. His idiomatic writing allows the performer to take advantage of harmonics and open strings. Frequent repetition and ostinato rhythms will help hold the ensemble together and likely inspire the audience to tap or clap along.” [Philip Alejo/Bass World, ISB]

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