andrew harrison

concert

concert music

Click here to hear samples of Andrew's concert music. Click here to purchase one of Andrew's scores.

Concert works:

Antistress! - for solo cello

ChIMPs No. 1 - for solo cello

Piano Fantasia No. 1 - for solo piano

“His Piano Fantasia No. 1 is a big work, using a fully developed technique and incorporating some improvisational elements within tightly controlled parameters...” Larry Sitsky, Australian Piano Music of the Twentieth Century

Transition for 2 Strings - for violin and double bass

Lady and the Tram - for tenor and piano

El-Jay - for three percussionists

Vier Klarinetten mach viel Krach! - for clarinet quartet

Veränderung - for flute, alto saxophone, horn, trumpet, trombone, cello, piano, double bass and drums

Subterranean - for large improvising orchestra


 

About the music samples...

Veranderung – part 1

Julian Thompson: cello

This recording of Part 1 of Veranderüng is a solo cello cadenza-like section, which outlines most of the compositional material which is used in the ensemble section that follows it (not heard here). This particular performance was recorded at the Australian National University School of Music, in Canberra, Australia.

Download the score of Veranderüng, Part 1 here

ChIMPS No. 1

Hugh Livingston - cello

ChIMPS No. 1 was composed whilst I was working with Professor George Lewis in San Diego, California. The objective of this composition was to construct a musical language that gave improvisers trajectories upon which to construct a performance. The performer determines the 'significance' of an action or consequence in the moment, and is guided by a series of 'codes' and directives concerning pitch, dynamics, register and intervals as they perform the piece. The title of the work, ChIMPS, is derived from C(h)ello IMProvisation Study. This recording is of the premiere performance by Hugh Livingston at the University Of California, San Diego Music Department.

Piano Fantasia No. 1

This piece was written in 1997, and subsequently revised in 2005. It is dedicated to the late jazz pianist and composer Andrew Hill, who is my favourite jazz musician. The first and third movements are fully notated, whilst the second movement requires the performer to improvise within a series of compositional structures.

Download the score of Piano Fantasia, Movement 1 here (pdf)