Frank Corcoran

Irish Composer

THIS BIOGRAPHCAL NOTE IS SERIOUSLY INADEQUATE, FRANK CORCORAN

Corcoran, Frank

(b Borrisokane, Tipperary, 1 May 1944). Irish composer. He studied music, philosophy, ancient languages, and theology at Maynooth, University College Dublin, Trinity College Dublin, and in Rome, and composition in Berlin with Blacher (1969–71). He has served as music inspector for the Irish Department of Education (1971–9), been a guest of the Berlin Artist’s Programme (1980–81), and has taught at the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik, Stuttgart (1982–3) and the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst, Hamburg (from 1983). He was elected to Aosdána, the Irish academy of creative artists, in 1983. He was a Fulbright visiting professor and Fulbright scholar in the USA in 1989–90. His compositions have won a number of prizes including the Studio Akustische Kunst First Prize in 1996 for Joycepeak Music, first prize at the Bourges International Electro-acoustic Music Competition in 1999 for Sweeny’s Vision, the EMS Prize, Stockholm in 2002 for Quasi Una Missa, and the International Federation for Choral Music’s Second International Competition for Choral Composition for Eight Haikus in 2013.

Corcoran has developed a distinct and complex language of aleatory macro-counterpoint in which sound layers are superimposed polyphonically but retain independence through distinctive polymetric, agogic, and dynamic indications. This technique is evident from the early Piano Trio (1978) to Ice Etchings no.1 and Mad Sweeney (both 1996). The later was the first of a series of works initially inspired by Seamus Heaney’s translation of the Irish epic. His many cultural interests are reflected in the texts of his vocal works; the opera Gilgamesh (1990), for example, is based on a Sumerian epic. The Irische Mikrokosmoi for piano (1993) are based on traditional Irish melodies and rhythms. From 1999 until 2009 to he worked on a series of works utilizing the descriptor ‘quasi’. These ranged from orchestral works such as Quasi un canto and Quasi una Visione to solo instrumental works such as Quasi un Basso.

Bibliography

KdG (A. Kreutziger-Herr)

A. Klein: Die Musik Irlands im 20. Jahrhundert (Hildesheim, 1996)

E. O’Kelly: ‘Frank Corcoran’, The Blackwell Companion to Modern Irish Culture, ed. W.J. McCormack (Oxford, 1999)

J. Page: ‘A Post-War “Irish” Symphony: Frank Corcoran’s Symphony no. 2’, Irish Musical Studies 7: Irish Music in the Twentieth Century, ed. G. Cox and A. Klein (Dublin, 2003)

Gareth Cox/Mark Fitzgerald

My PIANO TRIO ( of now so distant 1977, I think it was ) holds a special place in my early output , being the first work I´d regard as a break-through with my macrocountrpoint technique .

Now Zagreb Biennale wants to do it in 2013 ( see letter below )
.
But I have the unwell feeling that those parts ( that Boote Und Bock Berlin copyist did the very first hand-written copying in his best blue (!) ink which, of course, has long since woefully faded !) are not available !

Maybe you could :
search and see IF THERE EVER WAS A PROPER COMPUTER VERSION MADE and if ….

( I do remember an Irish copyist over 10 years ago made a banjaxed job of copying my Trio, just not understanding how to get my 3 separate tempi at all …

And yet, from WHICH parts did Daragh Morgan´s lads play a London (King´s Place) version a few years ago ? – Then there was that Spanish Trio Arbos who did it in Sligo, – again it’s some years ago… ).

2017 GOOD WORK ! FRANK CORCORAN’S RHAPSODIC CELLI !

Rhapsodic Celli: The music of Frank Corcoran

Martin Johnson (cello), Fergal Caulfield (piano)

RTE National Symphony Orchestra, RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra Cello Octet, Gavin Maloney

Release Date: 2nd Jun 2017
Catalogue No: CD154
Label: RTÉ Lyric
Length: 67 minutes

CD

€14,25

Usually despatched in 4 – 5 working days
Downloads
What are FLAC and MP3?
MP3 €9,67
CD Quality FLAC €11,90

No digital booklet included
Contents

Corcoran: Cello Concerto
32:19
€6,99

RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra
Gavin Maloney
Martin Johnson

I. Introduzione, energico
9:14
€1,88

II. Canto, impennata
11:40
€2,53

III. Violenza selvaggia
6:17
€1,29

IV. Conclusione
5:08
€1,29

Corcoran: Rhapsodietta Joyceana
2:30
€1,29

RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra
Gavin Maloney
Martin Johnson

Corcoran: Rhapsodic Bowing for 8 Celli
8:41
€1,88

RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra Cello Octet
Gavin Maloney
Martin Johnson

Corcoran: Duetti Irlandesi for Cello and Piano
23:45
€10,32

RTÉ National Symphony Orchestra
Gavin Maloney
Martin Johnson

I. In Aonar Seal
2:47
€1,29

II. Séan Ó Duibhir An Ghleanna
3:08
€1,29

III. Príosún Cluain Meala
2:43
€1,29
Show 5 remaining tracks for Corcoran: Duetti Irlandesi for Cello and Piano

About
Related

Soloist Martin Johnson explores Frank Corcoran’s writing for cello in all its nuances, from the swagger of a concerto and the rhapsodic polyphony of his work for eight cellos through to composer’s arrangements of folk tunes for cello and piano informed by the rhythmic patois of the Irish language. Frank Corcoran has lived and taught in Germany for most of his professional life but has retained a profound connection with the literature and traditional music of his native country. It is this distance from and relationship with Ireland that informs so much of his music: directly, as in the case his short Rhapsodietta Joyceana for solo cello and, more subtly, in the tensile interplay between soloist and orchestra in his first Cello Concerto.

There is inthe public consciousness an awareness of 20th century Irish writers and poets, but
most would be slower to
retrieve or recognize the names of composers working in the
same era such as J. F. Larchet (1884
1967), or later composers to which Frederick May belongs such as Rhoda Coghill (1903
2000),
Archie Potter (1918

1980), Brian Boydell
(1917

2000)
and Aloys Fleischm
ann (1910-1992) or even later composers, many still composing now, such as

Frank Corcoran (1944), and the list
continues.

CORCORAN CELLO CONCERTO ON NDR KULTUR BROADCAST 2.12.2017

Prisma Musik

Thema: Kleine Schule des musikalischen Hörens
Frank Corcoran hört das Cellokonzert von Edward Elgar

“Elgars langsame Passagen zerreißen mich innerlich gerade … Es ist wie das Destillat einer Träne”, gestand Jacqueline du Pré einmal, die vielleicht berühmteste Interpretin dieses Werks. Kurz nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg entstand das Cellokonzert, das man einmal die “Elegie auf eine untergegangene Zivilisation” genannt hat, in der ländlichen Abgeschiedenheit seines Landhauses in Sussex. Das Werk markiert gleichsam den Gegenpol zu “Pomp and Circumstance” in Elgars Schaffen, eine Musik des Abschieds, verhaltener und sparsamer in den Mitteln als alle Orchesterwerke der Vorkriegszeit.

20:00 Nachrichten, Wetter

22:00 Variationen zum Thema
Musikbeispiele zum Themenabend
Edward Elgar:
Konzert für Violoncello und Orchester e-Moll op. 85
Steven Isserlis, Violoncello
Philharmonia Orchestra London
Leitung: Paavo Järvi
Klavierquintett a-Moll op. 84
Pihtipudas Kvintetti
Frank Corcoran:
Cellokonzert
Martin Johnson, Violoncello
RTE National Symphony Orchestra
Leitung: Gavin Maloney

SCRIBBLE ERGO SUM – SOME MOPPINGS UP and SOME MOUSE DROPPINGS

1. A lightening bolt fortissimo this afternoon nearly killed me.

2. The kitten was savaged the day after you left.- Two gigantic
magpies sharpened surgical beaks.

3. My music makes “sense” of cosmic indifference, of early
childhood Hell AND Heaven /

4. It “explores” my “Ireland” – an onion, my salami slices .

5. See Beckett´s “The light gleams an instant -and it is gone “.

6. Yes, my now for ever silent GILGAMESH YEARS were 1985 – 88 ;
yes, death in life and life in death.

7. Henry Vaughan´s “They are all gone into the world of
light / And I alone sit lingering here ” which I quote in my TRAUERFELDER )

8. My 7th. c. Iron Age Ireland ( with its druids and shamanic saints )

9. If German had been my language , I´d long ago have had a go
at writing ” Experimental Theatre “.

10. Yet several orchestral works of mine have – unbeknownst to me -long
become just that.

11. My most violent works fight against , cajole, wish to bamboozle,
YELL against ( my ) DEATH !

12. And yet ,not withstanding, it is true also that the best music HAS TO ( Boulez and
Mozart et al.) get rid of ” Ich” …. How’ll I achieve this ?

13. The best work at the same time also PRAISES glory, “Quasi Una Visione”.

14. Ditto ditto fights against ever-present and never sleeping
SELF-DESTRUCTIVITY !

15. Yes, also Stability v. dizzying chaos /

16. Ten years ago I HAD NOTHING !

17. My music can mock, can grin at or CELEBRATE THE GLORIOUS BEAUTY of a
tone, of three, of a motiv, a phrase…

BELFAST THE CRESCENT May 12 2018. 19.30 Hard Rain Soloists

For larger forces, two of the HRSE commissions
for this season appear here.
Greg Caffrey’s
work,
..for peace comes dropping slow
, takes
inspiration from one of Yeats’ most famous
poems. The other newly commissioned work,
A Battuta
, is the latest creation coaxed from
the pen of Derry born
Kevin O’Connell
. It is
fitting that a “Pierrot format” ensemble such
as HRSE should give the world premiere
performance of
Frank Corcoran’s
own
” Nine
looks at Pierrot ”

FRANK CORCORAN ON NDR KULTUR 2016

Prisma Musik

Kleine Schule des musikalischen Hörens

Samstag, 03. Dezember 2016, 20:00 bis 22:00 Uhr

Frank Corcoran hört das Streichquintett C-Dur von Franz Schubert

Der irische Komponist Frank Corcoran im Porträt.
Frank Corcoran hat unter anderem auch an der Hamburger Hochschule für Musik und Theater Komposition und Musiktheorie gelehrt.

Das Werk gehört zu seinen letzten und gilt Kennern als Gipfel dessen, was in dieser Kunst überhaupt möglich ist. Generationen haben sich den Kopf darüber zerbrochen, wie Schubert zum Beispiel die magische Stimmung des Adagio-Satzes erzeugt hat.
Der irische Komponist Frank Corcoran versucht in der Kleinen Schule des musikalischen Hörens den Geheimnissen dieser Musik auf die Spur zu kommen, die einem unbegreiflichen Schaffensrausch auf dem Kranken- und schließlich Sterbebett entsprang.

FRANK CORCORAN CHRISTMAS CAROL IN DUBLIN CHRIST CHURCH CATHEDRAL

An Irish Carol, Christmas Trees, and a Rose
St Canice’s Roman Catholic Church, Kilkenny
8 December 2017 7:30pm

Book Now
Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin
9 December 2017 8:00pm

This Christmas, join Chamber Choir Ireland for An Irish Carol, Christmas Trees, and a Rose, a very special seasonal concert taking place in Kilkenny and Dublin.

For this years programme, we present the wonderful Christmas Story by the German composer Hugo Distler. Distler (1908-1942) is one of Germany’s finest 20th-century composers outside the modernist tradition, and his music is still much performed there. The fact that it remains less well known elsewhere is puzzling, as it is beautiful, tonal, subtle, and very well written by a composer with a clear voice of his own. The Christmas Story is one of his best pieces, closely modelled on the music of Schütz at the time when that composer’s music was in full revival. The Christmas narrative is told in chant-like solos with choral interventions (as in Bach’s Passions), while threaded through the whole work are a series of choral variations on the lovely Christmas hymn ‘Es ist ein Ros entsprungen‘.

This work is joined by a beautiful grouping of carols by contemporary Irish composers; Rhona Clarke, Gerald Barry, Frank Corcoran, Eoghan Desmond and Eric Sweeney.

O Tannenbaum—Gerald Barry
Lullay My Liking; Make We Merry—Rhona Clarke
When Christ was Born of Mary Free—Eric Sweeney
Coventry Carol; A Babe is Born—Eoghan Desmond

An Irish Carol—Frank Corcoran

The Christmas Story—Hugo Distler
Chamber Choir Ireland
Paul HillierConductor