Frank Corcoran

Irish Composer

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JAMES JOYCE CENTRE LECTURE .DUBLIN 26. NOVEMBER CORCORAN CONCERT

1. Pythagoras was the great composer – il miglio fabbro.

2. Yet James Joyce was in many respects the greatest Irish composer.

3. Joyce chiselled and turned and fashioned his syllables and word-units and titles and bits of songs
as would a composing Irish artist. He thus achieved his emotional-semantic character-associations or the fragments of memories which he needed in composing great sonorous passages in his sound-world.

4. If he had so wished , he could have reached highest places in his singing, playing and composing of at least Lieder. He chose not to.

5. As I mentioned in my 2005 Trieste James Joyce Summer School lecture, Nora’s father , Tom Barnacle, was known by his nick-name “Gobar i Goney ” – Irish : ” Ag obair i gconai ” = “always busy “; here is Joyce’s opening to Gabriel Conroy’s far-off West of Ireland
“native Doric”, the music of sean-nos song. At the same time we have Steven Dedalus’s Lestrygonian entry , ” Music is maths for ladies…. “. And then in the Trieste Notebook , Stephen Dedalus prefers the “vigour of the mind ” needed in composing literature to any thought of composing music. James Joyce, a great LISTENER, preferred the intellectual rigour of composing words to composing musical structures….

6. In 1917 in Zuerich the James Joyce family had as neighbour in the Seefelderstrasse 73 the composer, Philip Jarnach, who was the secretary of the great Ferrucio Busoni, a major figure in the revolution of musical language in the early decades of the 20th. century . Did Joyce ever discuss the why and how of this revolution or the birth of the early atonal masterpieces of the Second Viennese School ? He did not . Did he show an interest in the compositional bomb that was Stravinsky’s RITE OF SPRING at its Paris premiere on March 31 1913 ? Was he at all interested in the Viennese “Skandalkonzert” with the premieres of Alban Berg’s “Peter Altenberg Lieder ” and Webern’s Opus 6 Six Orchestral Pieces in May of the same year ? Did he ? Had he ever asked himself why John Field was buried in Moscow’s Nevensky Cemetry but not in Leopold Bloom’s Dean’s Grange? Or why Stanford,” the Irish Brahms “, ended his days at Cambridge but not in Dublin ? Why there was no Dublin Bartok or Sibelius ?

7. Joyce had an intimate, urgent yet deeply split relationship with art-music, with any Irish concept of composition as an Irish art. He mirrored his native city’s colonial inheritage in this regard. He was the perfect forerunner of our post-colonial – or non-reception- reception of Irish contemporary composing as art up to this day As Irish art. Of Irich composers as on a par with Irish poets, painters etc. Perfect.

TRY TO HOLD ON NOW IN THE ANNUAL SEASONAL SLIPPAGE

The Holy Season of Flap is almost upon us. How hang on to which Skellig Rock in the December moving tide of lived temporality ? The wash ?
Get back to work. Sculpt. Fashion, chip away at the old block. As daily, daily .Do not let go in the Season. No . ( No
exclamation marks either ! )
Serenity we sing. Tide and time wait not for the carol singer. Lusty humbug threatens with treacly singing and the red wrapping paper industry smiles.
The West’s asleep, all our myths are tired myths. Cease yawning above the deep, the reindeers’ sleep, glee, holy holly. Keep the tones uncontaminated – but how ? Hone the haiku pen, I suppose, a harmless enough ploy.

I WRITE FOUR HAIKUS NOW

This Haiku Will Die. But Not Just Yet ….

I pressed, pumped it in.

All Black Holes smirked their : ” So what ?”
I’ll print my Festschrift.

But if God is light ?

Phota daunce through this white hair.

Rinse your two glasses….

Plato got this right ?

Curve plus curve makes circle.

Yes, we tried loving.

These light-waves bend, kiss.

She plus he, the old story….

Five syllables. Terse.

Poor John Barnes – I remember him in Dante’s fading film now ….

The makers of educational films are not entirely ignorant of the values of money, but essentially they have other ideas in view… But I have an idea — a faith, I suppose it really is — that some of my films — or a single film, or even a single sequence in a film or a shot in a film — will light up a young mind somewhere: — light it up so that nothing — unsympathetic teachers, lack of a decent place to live, or lack of love — can ever plunge it into darkness.”

– John Barnes, 1966

Gramophone. Whose Master’s Voice ?

Corcoran Mad Sweeney
Another opportunity to get to know one of the most distinctive voices in Irish contemporary music, Frank Corcoran
Show View record and artist details
Author:
Michael Stewart
Corcoran Mad Sweeney

Mad Sweeney
Music for the Book of Kells
Wind Quintet
Sweeney’s Vision for tape

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Hard on the heels of Marco Polo’s issue of symphonies by Frank Corcoran – reviewed above – comes another disc of music by this fascinating composer. Corcoran, who was born in Tipperary in 1944, is a name in contemporary music who has eluded me until the appearance of the disc of the symphonies, and on the evidence of that disc I would certainly rank him as a major discovery of last year. He probably wouldn’t thank me for the comparison, but the best way to characterise his style might be to call him the Maxwell Davies of Ireland. I found the symphonies powerful, original and highly organic in structure. Black Box’s new disc offers us the chance to explore some of his music for smaller ensembles, as well as a remarkably atmospheric piece for tape.
Mad Sweeney for speaker and chamber orchestra is a setting of Seamus Heaney’s translation of an early Irish text about a 7th-century king from northern Ireland who went mad at the battle of Maigh Rath in AD 637, and who thereafter spent the rest of his life living wild as a fugitive and outcast. The Sprechgesang-style speaking part is delivered here in fine dramatic fashion by Corcoran himself, and this is marvellously entwined within the complex musical argument provided by the chamber orchestra. I was continually drawn back to this piece and found much to discover on repeated hearings. Less gripping, I thought, was the percussion piece Music for the Book of Kells which Corcoran describes as ‘a terse musical discourse’ and as ‘not programmatic but rather an abstract structure in its own right’. The trouble with ‘abstract’ percussion music of this kind is that it can have a tendency to dilute a composer’s individuality.
The Wind Quintet is in some ways a rather enigmatic, though nevertheless fascinating and thought-provoking piece that almost demands repeated hearings in order to penetrate its surface. It uses a technique which Corcoran calls ‘macro-counterpoint’ and seems to have a fascination with the opening phrase from Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring which is quoted early on and thereafter hinted at throughout. Described by Corcoran as ‘a four-movement, late-20th-century electronic symphony’, Sweeney’s Vision is a subtle and highly effective tape piece, which I would say successfully encapsulates Corcoran’s ideas about ‘mythic sound’ and ‘Irish dream landscape’. Superb performances and excellent recorded sound – Corcoran fans will not bedisappointed.’

HOW UPDATE A CELLO’S TONE

Martin Johnson on Frank Corcoran’s Cello Concerto
from Contemporary Music Centre Plus 9 months ago Not Yet Rated

Cellist Martin Johnson talks about and performs extracts from Frank Corcoran’s Cello Concerto (2012).

Written for Johnson, it will be premiered by him and the RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra with conductor Kenneth Montgomery on 13 March 2015 at the National Concert Hall, Dublin.

SWEET LADY JANE

contemporary music blog

Contemporary
Published 18 April 2015

Sunday 19th April from 17:00 – 18:00 . In Contemporary the Dutch radio premiere of the cello concerto by Frank Concoran (1944).

frank corcoran

JOYCEPEAK MUSIK

Frank Corcoran, James Joyce and the Poetics of Myth: A Celebration of Frank Corcoran at 70
November 26 @ 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm
The James Joyce Centre, 35 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1, Ireland+ Google Map
[Frank Corcoran, James Joyce and the Poetics of Myth: A Celebration of Frank Corcoran at 70]

The James Joyce Centre, Benjamin Dwyer and the Association of Irish Composers are proud to present this very special concert celebrating the life and work of Irish composer Frank Corcoran. Featuring a keynote address by Benjamin Dwyer, a number of performances by world-class musicians and even a few world premières for good measure, this is sure to be a fitting tribute to one of Ireland’s most renowned contemporary composers. Places are free and can be booked at the bottom of…
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