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KORN SYMPHONY for Wind Orchestra by Peter Meechan (Great Britain, 1980)

[#161] August 22, 2022 2015 | Wind Orchestra | Grade 5 | 20’-25’ | Symphony

View Score here


Canadian-based British composer Peter Meechan

Korn Symphony” by Canadian-based British composer Peter Meechan is our Composition of the Week.

The symphony was commissioned by a consortium of 13 bands, led by the Middle Tennessee State University Wind Ensemble and their conductor Reed Thomas, to whom Korn Symphony is dedicated to. The premiere performance was given by the Middle Tennessee State University Wind Ensemble, under Reed Thomas, on October 8, 2015.


Korn Symphony is structured in three movements:

  1. Dirge – Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead

  2. At the Cathedral Gate

  3. Cross of Nails

Its performance time is of 22 minutes and it is scored for large Wind Orchestra, including double bassoon, 2 bass Clarinets, Contrabass Clarinet, 4 trumpet parts, 4 trombone parts, 2 euphoniums, 2 tubas, double bass, piano and 5 percussion parts.


The work is available at www.meechanmusic.com


“The 1940 blitz of the strategically important city of Coventry was as brutal as it was extensive. Over two thirds of the city’s buildings were destroyed during the waves of bombings by the Luftwaffe, and over 500 people perished in the raids. The Nazi code word for Coventry was “Korn”. Many in the city believed that Churchill had prior knowledge of the raids, but in order to protect the Enigma machine – a machine that was able to break the Nazi’s codes, and that would ultimately go on to be a crucial tool in securing victory over Hitler’s forces – he made the choice to sacrifice Coventry and its citizens. It’s a belief that’s held by the city, and many historians, to this day. The first movement takes its title from the W.H. Auden poem “Funeral Blues” a funeral dirge which mourns the loss of someone very close. The poem was written just before the Second World War, but it was echoed in startling reality during the Coventry blitz as the funerals of those lost in previous night’s attacks took place with the Luftwaffe circling overhead. Growing up in a town (which also suffered bombings at this time) only a few miles away from Coventry, childhood visits to the site of the cathedral were not uncommon. The cathedral, which had stood since the early 15th century, was destroyed during the raids, the roof collapsing due to fire. A cross – The Charred Cross – was bound together out of two charred beams that had fallen from the roof and lay on the ground in a cross formation, a replica of which still stands at the altar of the remains of the cathedral, alongside which a new cathedral was built after the war. To this day, The Charred Cross is one of the most recognised images in the UK. The second movement, At the Cathedral Gate, is an incessant movement intended to depict the brutal nature of the air raids, juxtaposed with the quiet burning of embers. A second cross, formed from three nails that had fallen from the burned roof were also formed in to a cross, and can be found in the new cathedral. A further cross of nails was made from the remains of the cathedral and now sits in the Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, Berlin, which was destroyed in Allied air raids during the Second World War. The Cross of Nails has since become a symbol of peace and reconciliation, replicas of which appear in cathedrals across the world. This final movement seeks to represent these themes of peace and reconciliation, combined with stark mourning – a final acknowledgment of Auden’s poem.”

(Program Notes by composer)


Peter Meechan holds an undergraduate degree (BMus Hons) from the Royal Northern College of Music (Manchester, UK), where he studied with Dr. Anthony Gilbert, Dr. David Horne and Adam Gorb, a Master of Arts (MA) degree and a PhD (composition), both from the University of Salford (Manchester, UK), where he studied with Prof. Peter Graham.


His work Perpetua is the winner of the 2022 Sousa-ABA-Ostwald Composition Award from the American Bandmasters Association.


Peter Meechan resides in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.



 

Peter Meechan's latest works for winds include:

  • Dreams Unseen (2021)

  • Taking the Fifth (2021)

  • Loss Verses (2020)

  • Machines (2020)

More on Peter Meechan http://meechanmusic.com

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