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Solar Sonata, Voyager, Op. 33

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Ensemble
2024
17 min.

Alto Flute

Alto Saxophone

Baritone Saxophone

Bass Clarinet

Clarinet

Flute

Piano

Piccolo

Trumpet

Violin

More Details

Program Notes
During the height of the space race in the 1960s and 70s, NASA was presented with a rare opportunity that only occurs once every 175 years: the outer planets had aligned in such a way that a spacecraft could use their gravity to slingshot between each planet in a single trip. Not wanting to miss an opportunity to finally visit the largest and most distant members of our solar system, the Voyager 1 and 2 space probes were launched in 1977 and flew by Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune, taking plenty of iconic pictures of the gas giants and their moons along the way. With their primary mission complete, the two Voyager probes embarked on a new, far more uncertain path: they were to leave the solar system and cross into interstellar space. And in 2012, they were successful, with Voyager 1 cementing its status as the most distant manmade object from Earth. This monumental moment in human scientific advancement led me to ponder what it truly means to “leave” our solar system, and what it would be like for any human to undergo such a “voyage.” Thus, the Solar Sonata was born: a dramatized musical account of the one-way passage into the endless void between the stars. For our fictional astronaut, the journey is quite exciting and filled with many cosmic wonders: the dark, frozen worlds of the Kuiper Belt, the termination shock that marks the end of our sun’s energetic influence, and the interstellar medium itself. But for the Voyager probes, their signal growing weaker and more distant by the day, the reality is unfathomably cold, empty, and lonely. Yet forever they sail on into the infinite.
Recording Notes
Voyager was commissioned and premiered by the 2023-24 MSM Tactus chamber ensemble at their yearly concert on April 12th, 2024, in Neidorff-Karpati Hall, Manhattan School of Music.
Record Label
n/a
Ensemble Name
2023-24 MSM Tactus Chamber Ensemble

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