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Duration: 4 minutes
UN TOUT PETIT TROMPE-L'OREILLE
(1992) Despite all the foregoing business about fears and phobias, one of the pleasant ironies in connection with my writing the piece reprinted here, Un tout petit trompe-l'oreille, is that not only was it my very first attempt to compose for the guitar but it also stands to this day as the only piece that I have ever composed at a single sitting, taking a little over an hour and a half one Sunday morning in April 1992 in Rome. The motivation to write the piece was quite simple. My wife and I had just spent several days in a farmhouse outside of Siena as guests of our friends the novelist Robert Littell and painter Victoria Salvy. The time we spent there was idyllic, with splendid weather, wonderful daytrips to Siena itself, and equally wonderful meals accompanied by clear, crisp, red wine made from grapes grown in the fields just outside the house itself. Upon returning to Rome, where we were living at the time, I decided I wanted to send some sort of thank you gift, and on the next Sunday morning an idea came to me. Bob Littell is an amateur guitarist, and, in the armed forces, had been a cryptographer. Victoria specializes as a painter of trompe-l'oeil. So I hit upon the notion of writing Bob a piece that he could play and to honor the trompe-l'oeil tradition by encrypting in the music the melody of a national anthem that might be familiar to both of them. Now as to which national anthem that would be, I won't say, though I will go so far as to offer the clue that it resonates with one of Bob's most recent books. Of course, as these things will turn out, the piece isn't quite as easy as I had hoped it might be, and Bob had some trouble with it (and at one point, he asked for some coaching from a neighbor, none other than Harrison Birtwistle), but I do think that my basic intention to keep things simple is what made it emerge so quickly and what helped me overcome my fear of the instrument.
Since writing this piece, I have done two other pieces with guitar. One is a new version of a pair of songs in Portuguese entitled Canções modernistas, now scored for soprano, guitar and cello. The other is another vocal work, though considerably more epic in nature: a dramatic cantata for soprano, four flutes, four guitars and four bassoons called Sons of Noah (Three Lost Chapters of the Bible), with text by Philip Littell after a short story by the great Brazilian novelist Machado de Assis. This half-hour long work has been recorded by the Los Angeles-based group Xtet, with Lisa Stidham, soprano, conducted by Donald Crockett, for New World Records.
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