2005

The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice

for viola and piano

Video

Premiere

19 February 2006
Toby Appel, viola / James Godsworthy, piano
Companion Pieces – Music for Piano, Viola and Voice
Reisinger Concert Hall, Sarah Lawrence College

Bronxville, NY

23 February 2006
Toby Appel, viola / James Godsworthy, piano
Greenwich House Arts / North River Music Series 20th Anniversary Concert
The Renee Weiler Recital Hall
Greenwich House Music School

New York, NY

Work Details

Duration:

ca. 4½ minutes

Publisher:

Biscardi Music Press
No. B48-05-1

Distributor:

Theodore Front Musical Literature, Inc.

Dedication:

Written in memory of violist Jacob Glick

Sample Pages

Collection

This piece was included as part of this collection from NewMusicShelf, Inc..

Curated by violist Michael Hall, this collection of 20 works for viola is ideal for active performers looking for exciting new repertoire, teachers searching for fresh contemporary works for their studios, or student performers seeing out unique and culturally-relevant new works to fulfill 21st century repertoire requirements.

These works, 18 of which were composed in the 21st century, represent a broad range of compositional styles from composers living and writing today, and were curated for intermediate through advanced players.

This volume includes works by: Chester Biscardi, Nicolas Bizub, Mario Carro, Chong Kee Yong, Andrea Clearfield, Diana Cotoman, Peter Dayton, Rob Deemer, Marianna Filippi, Stacy Garrop, Rachel Grimes, Marisa Sharon Hartanto, Martin Hebel, Michael Kovell, Tony Manfredonia, James Mobberley, Antonio Celso Ribeiro, Alyssa Weinberg, and Evan Williams.

Selected Press

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“This is an elegiac and impassioned soliloquy for solo viola…”

A-Z of String Players

David Milsom
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“Biscardi’s Incitation to Desire (Tango) evokes the steamy sultriness and sad nostalgia of the Argentinian dance.”

Piano & Keyboard

John Salmon, 1997
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“‘The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice’ for viola and piano impresses with stylistic grace, distant from the imperviousness of much contemporary music.”

Il Gazzettino

Cultura & Spettacoli, March 2015
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“…we move to a more open, resonant, and emotionally forward world in the later music. This is particularly true of The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice, which quotes a phrase of Schumann, and integrates it into its own fabric with the seamlessness of a dream.”

Fanfare

Robert Carl, January 2012

Click to View All Press Quotes

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Outstanding performances include Biscardi’s The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice. This is an elegiac and impassioned soliloquy for solo viola, inspired by Andrea Camilleri’s 2003 novel La voce del violino (The Voice of the Violin) and composed in memory of Jacob Glick, a violist and teacher who championed eighteenth-century viola d’amore music but also premiered over 200 works and encouraged study of new music.

— David Milsom, A-Z of String Players

“The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice” for viola and piano impresses with stylistic grace, distant from the imperviousness of much contemporary music. The work, as stated in the title, quietly unveils the possibility of transforming the viola into a silky inspiration, into a melody also made up of harmonics, with fascinating interconnections with the piano that is an equal and dynamic partner.

— Cultura & Spettacoli (Mestre, Italy), Il Gazzettino (March 2015)

[From] the earlier works of the set . . . we move to a more open, resonant, and emotionally forward world in the later music. One gathers from both his program notes and the music itself, that Biscardi deeply loves the repertoire, finds inspiration from it, and often builds his pieces as responses to particular works. This is particularly true of The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice, which quotes a phrase of Schumann, and integrates it into its own fabric with the seamlessness of a dream.

— Robert Carl, Fanfare: The Magazine for Serious Record Collectors (January 2012)

Finally, the only nondescript thing about The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice is the title itself, which is taken from a line in an obscure mystery novel. Like Companion Piece, it is a lyrical, slightly melancholic and rather lovely short, written in memory of Jacob Glick, the violist father of American soprano Judith Bettina.

— Byzantion, MusicWeb International Classical Reviews (September 11, 2011)

The Viola Had Suddenly Become a Voice (2005), title from an Andrea Camilleri mystery novel, is a short piece for viola and piano written in memory of violist Jacob Glick. It opens with a quote from Schumann’s Piano Quartet, with Schumann changing back and forth into Biscardi in the form of more quotes from his own music.

— Allen Gimbel, American Record Guide (November/December 2011)