Cloud Dance

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Harrison Collins

General Info

Year of Published: 2022
Publisher: C. Alan Publications
Difficulty: Advanced
Duration: 00:07:30
Cost: $70.00

Instrumentation

Player 1: Crotales & Glockenspiel & Castanets
Player 2: Glockenspiel & Castanets
Player 3: Vibraphone 1
Player 4: Vibraphone 2 & Lead Pan & Wind Chimes
Player 5: Marimba 1 & Thunder Tube or Auxiliary Cymbal
Player 6: Marimba 2 & Thunder Tube or Auxiliary Cymbal
Player 7: Marimba 3 & Thunder Tube or Auxiliary Cymbal
Player 8: Marimba 4
Player 9: 5 Timpani & Suspended Cymbal
Player 10: Rain Stick & Guiro & Bongos
Player 11: Wind Machine & Tam-Tam & Cabasa
Player 12: Suspended Cymbal & China Cymbal & Maracas
Player 13: Large Thundersheet
Player 14: Bass Drum
Player 15: Piano

Program Notes

Where I reside in North Texas, the summer of 2022 was terribly hot and dry. Nearly every day was over 100 degrees, and there was no rain for months. When the first rainstorm of the season finally came in mid-August, and brought with it a lovely 75 degree temperature outside, I was so glad to see it that I decided to go outside, sit down in my driveway, and just enjoy being rained on. I sat out there for half an hour, and I found myself watching the massive dark gray storm clouds shifting around. It was enrapturing to watch them change shape and collide into one another only to take new forms and repeat. It was like they were dancing. As soon as I arrived at that metaphor, I began hearing musical ideas in my mind, and so when I went inside, I sat down and began writing feverishly—it was like I could hardly keep up with the ideas taking shape in my mind. A week later, I had completed Cloud Dance.

Cloud Dance begins in the rainstorm I sat down in, emulating the sounds of rolling thunder, falling rain drops, and gently stirred wind chimes. It develops into a dance in which several central ideas are developed as if they were rain clouds being moved by the wind, shifting shapes, and colliding into one another only to take on new forms and repeat the cycle. Eventually, the dance reaches a fever pitch in a crash of thunder, and the work ends as the storm does: with the rain slowing to a stop and the warm summer sun beginning to peek out from behind the clouds.

Works for Percussion by this Composer

A Page from the Book of Nature - Percussion Quintet
Cloud Dance - Percussion 15
Four Architectures in Normal, Illinois - Percussion Quartet
Magic - Percussion Octet
There and Back - Mallet Quartet

Reference