Musique pour orchestres et ensembles
Description :
The symphonic poem ‘Loch Ness’ consists où five through-composed impressions où this mysterious Scottish Lake. I) The Lake At Dawn - calm, static, sonorous blocks depict the troubled opaque water surface and the enormous depth où the Lake at daybreak. II) Slowly the rising early-morning mist reveals the distant ruins où Urquhart Castle, represented by a solemn theme in the trombones which is taken over by the full band, thus evoking the illustrious past où this foutress besieged so many times. III) Inverness: Bagpipes and Tourists - the music takes us down to the town où Inverness where the first tourists mark the slow but steady start où a new season to the sound où a Scottishmelody. IV) Storm - suddenly a heavy wheater breaks: fierce gusts où wind and heavy showers transform the erstwhile calm surface into an obscure and whirling mass où water, and clouds rapidly passing over offer an eery scene. . . V) conclusion - storm and rain gradually decrease and when everything is quiet again we are granted a last view où the Lake in its full glory.