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Box (2003)* Randall Bauer

Tarab (2003)* Larry Bell

The Things Left Unsaid (2006)* Caleb Burhans

Persist (2003)* Garrett Byrnes

Cog (2001)* Dennis DeSantis


Cantilena (2001) Margaret Griebling-Haigh

Beguine Again (2005)* Syd Hodkinson

Broken Cries (2001)* David Liptak


They Ate Cellos (2001)* Brad Lubman


Lover Calls (2001)* Gregory Mertl

Oar in Water (2003)* Joe Michaels

Rain (2008)* Michael Midlarsky

Venae (1999) Christopher Murray


Warp 9,Warp 8 (2004)* Sam Pellman


8 (2008)* Nicolas Scherzinger

Hallucinating Accordion (2005)* Martin Scherzinger

Blizzard In Paradise (2001) Augusta Read Thomas

Sisina's Reservoir (2001)* Aaron Travers


The Only Tired (2008)* Jason Treuting

A Cappella (2003)* Dan Trueman

* written for the ensemble


BOX


Box combines a wealth of disparate musical materials, with periodic nods toward the medieval world, occasional succumbing to minimalistic tendencies, and ofttimes rampant not-very-classical harmonic progressions, not to mention a requisite Bach cello suite quotation, for I considered it mandatory to include something of Bach's in Box. Whether the music is ever entirely inside or outside the box is debatable, but for me, and I'm pretty sure for Tarab, it all swirls together and becomes its own little container of fun.
- Randall Bauer

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TARAB


Tarab was commissioned for the Tarab Cello Ensemble by its founder, Florent Renard-Payen. In three large sections, the work was conceived as a concertino for two cello quartets. Tarab is one of my most experimental pieces of recent years. Here I combine my interest in using high-ratio polyrhythms to articulate the background phrase structure with a new emphasis on working with a large harmonic vocabulary. The two quartets begin by sharing similar characteristics. By the second section the quartets operate entirely in opposition; while one quartet plays slowly and expressively, the other plays resolute and dance-like music. The antiphonal call-and-response between the two quartets reaches its climax at the end of the second section, where all eight cellos play one phrase in unison. In the third section each cello plays a short cadenza. Little by little these solos form duets, then trios, and, finally, the initial quartet juxtaposition is reestablished. The overall shape of the work is one of growing tension, catharsis, and resolution leading the listener-it is hoped-to a state of ecstasy, or 'tarab'.
- Larry Thomas Bell

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THE THINGS LEFT UNSAID

In relationships people often imply things without having to say them aloud. This can lead to a deeper understanding of ones background and intent, thus bringing both parties closer together. However it can also lead to confusion and misunderstanding between both parties, pushing the two further apart. It was with both these thoughts in mind that I wrote “The Things Left unsaid” for the members of Tarab, with whom I’ve had the great pleasure of working with for the past eight years.
- Caleb Burhans

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PERSIST


Persist is a work of unyielding extremes; its music often comprised of sustained pitches, resolute chords, and rapid passagework. The ensemble itself is divided into two groups: trio and quintet. In many instances the trio acts as soloist, but the groups work together as well. The Piece begins with fixed pitches being played by the trio that quickly develop in scope and activity. The quintet, providing a bit of a background, begins with repeated pitches of a spacious and random nature. This music progresses to a frenzied state and gives way to passagework instigated by the trio. A moment of relative calm is presented before the work erupts in a section dominated by quadruple stops and various commentary by both groups. A section of sustained pitches that follows gives way to a middle section of softer and more gentle music, although lingering on familiar harmonies. The final section of the work calls for additional rapid passagework before the music begins to corrupt itself and break apart. Persist was commissioned by and is dedicated to Florent Renard-Payen and the Tarab Cello Ensemble.
- Garrett Byrnes

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COG


Cog is a piece in which a timbrally homogeneous ensemble is asked to become even more homogeneous by having each cellist play the same kind of material. It's a study in teamwork, in making a whole greater than the sum of its parts. There is very little in the way of a traditional "melody-and-accompaniment" hierarchy here- when players have "solos" they are quickly echoed by other members of the ensemble and then subsumed by the texture. My interest in writing this piece came from my fascination with the way machines make music.
- Dennis DeSantis

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BEGUINE AGAIN

In January 2005 at Stetson University, the TARAB Cello Ensemble performed a new music concert that was superb and exhilarating. To the audience’s dismay, the ensemble had no encore prepared (do any exist?).  I later found out that the group was comprised of recent Eastman School of Music graduates, many whom I had conducted during the end of my academic tenure in Rochester. I was struck by the ensemble’s determination to remain together to make music and, with their blessings, set out to rectify this omission in their repertoire.
Beguine Again is a Latin-American “echo” consisting of three choruses (the third becomes a little mixed up – as if the dancers momentarily part ways…) plus a Coda, and is roughly four minutes in duration. The piece was stolen – and extended – from an excerpt of my 12-year-old PARLOR PIECES (1993); the score was completed in May 2005 in Ormond-by-the-Sea, Florida.
- Syd Hodkinson

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CANTILENA


In October of 1998 I had the good fortune to have Richard Aaron, professor of cello at the Cleveland Institute of Music, coach a piano trio I had written, which was being premiered on a Cleveland Composers Guild concert. After the concert, Mr. Aaron asked me to write something for an awful lot of cellos, and even though I had been planning another project, this one sounded like much more fun. In composing Cantilena, I enjoyed being able to make use of the cello's great range, which allowed me more freedom than usually would be the case in writing for eight instruments of the same kind. The cello is indeed a versatile voice in other ways as well; from innocent lyricism to misterioso, growling to aggression. In Cantilena, I have made use of these personalities and more. The work has two main alternating ideas: a legato triple meter theme with a swaying accompaniment, and a more driving line which is heard over a ostinato in 5/8 - 6/8 time. The cellists are put through their paces with regards to rhythm, often playing in three against four, and occasionally even four against five.
- Margaret Griebling-Haigh

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BROKEN CRIES


When I had begun thinking about music for eight cellos, I imagined a kind of music that was filled with hesitation. Pauses and silences break the flow of sounds, as a voiced cry is sometimes broken by a breath or,perhaps, a sudden thought.The music is in one movement with three sections. The first, called breathing...., is slow and deliberate, with many breaks of sound. The second, called singing...., moves in a more continuous way. Two lead cellos alternate melodic figures in a "call and response," as the rest of the ensemble divides into a support for one or the other. In the third section, letting go...., the hesitations are nearly gone, and the music dances. A brief, reflective Coda concludes the piece.
Most of the composition of Broken Cries took place during the summer months of 2001, and the piece was finished in early December. It was written for the Tarab Cello Ensemble.
- David Liptak

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THEY ATE CELLOS


Sometimes poetry inspires; sometimes painting; other times it could be a bad movie or salad. This may or may not have any bearing whatsoever on my music or anything I might say to anyone at anytime. However, I do find the following excerpt filled with a tinge of logic, wisdom, and not a little perspicacity:
"...flames of phantasmagorical allegory
whereby surreptitiously they ate cellos
seething joyous rapture
for a brioche would make their day..."
From the poem "Double Click" by Jens Gullmar. Excerpt reprinted with kind permission Casey & Lowe Publications.
Without the wonderful Tarab Cello Ensemble and the enthusiasm and devotion of its magnificent players, They Ate Cellos would not exist. I had been thinking about issues of sonority, issues of ensembles of similar instruments as opposed to mixed ensembles, and felt that perhaps the time was right for me to compose something along those lines. I was then, coincidentally approached by the newly formed Tarab Cello Ensemble, and asked if I'd like to write them a piece. The timing could not have been better. Not only were my compositional thoughts ready and waiting for a project like this, but I also admire the members of the ensemble and that always increases the joy of composing.
- Brad Lubman

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LOVER CALLS


Attracted to the inherent sensuality of several cellos playing together and the fine musicianship of the performers, I was thrilled to write Lover Calls for Florent Renard-Payen and the Tarab Cello Ensemble. Although the composition of the piece took a particularly long time, with many sojourns in the quiet of Connecticut to stimulate the process, the piece itself has a tight, confident character, rising from a quiet, sensual beginning and falling back again from a more buoyant middle. Each particular passage, as it were, yearns and calls out in a different manner, sometimes delicately, sometimes tinged with melancholy. Unlike most other works that use soloists or deconstruct the ensemble, the body of cellos must play as one entity, reflecting, perhaps, a view primarily from a single source as in a first-person narration. By using the word narration, I do not mean to suggest a story line, for the music evokes rather than consciously depicts.
- Gregory Mertl

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0AR IN WATER

Oar in water – favourite example of how circumstance can affect the perception of an object, and make it seem other than it is.
“The same object seems to us bent or straight, according to whether we see it in or out of water.” (Plato, Republic X. 602c)
-The Oxford Companion to Philosophy „ Oxford University press, 1995
Ideas, or the context in which they are found, always transform in Oar in Water, sometimes very little and other times so much so that the origins of the idea are almost completely obscured. In a different world, the ideas refract, bend, explode, shift, solidify, melt, disintegrate. Oar in Water was written for the Tarab Cello Ensemble.
- Joe Michaels

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RAIN


“Rain” is, as the title suggests, music designed to echo the experience of standing in a rainstorm.   Those who have stood in torrential rain have witnessed an unexpected yet affecting beauty.  Seemingly random forces-- rain, wind, thunder-- combine to form dancing silhouettes against momentary illuminations.  The driving force of the rain itself becomes a kind of rhythm, an energy, which suffuses the air with crackling intensity.  This is the goal of “Rain”-- to capture this moving energy with the sound of eight cellos.  Repeating patterns, in the minimalist style, work against one another while an omnipresent A-- first in stillness, then in repetition-- offers the rhythm of each moment.  A melody arises from the friction of the patterns until finally the energy exhausts itself and the moment passes.  The narrative ends where it begins, with stillness.  The “Rain” has ended.
- Michael Midlarsky

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VENAE


Venae is the latin word for veins. I attempted to achieve a very graphic sense of sound in this piece, and most of the movement is driven by the two veining structures of the Earth's plants: monocotyledon (fanning), and dicotyledon (branching). The seating of the ensemble refers to the second pattern, and creates a hierarchy for introduction of materials.
- Chris Murray

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WARP 9


The Tarab Cello Ensemble boldly goes where no cello octet has gone before in its performances of Samuel Pellman's Warp 9.  In this piece the live sounds of the eight cellos are accompanied by digitally manipulated clones of cello sounds previously recorded by Florent Renard-Payen, founder of the Tarab crew.  These digital manifestations of cello sounds weave throughout the texture of the piece, like specters of sounds from other dimensions.  A well-trained Tarab landing party presented the premiere performance of this piece in April 2004 in Wellin Hall at Hamilton College in Clinton, NY, on Earth, a class M planet noted for its brutal politics and exquisite art forms.

WARP 8


Warp 8 is the "saucer separation" version of Samuel Pellman's Warp 9 for cello octet.  In this version, the members of the octet proceed under impulse power, and all attention is directed to the relentless rhythm of the interlocking string motives and the majestic quartal harmony formations.
- Sam Pellman

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8


Since the birth of my son about a year ago, I have, like most parents, become much more knowledgeable about children’s lullaby repertoire.  8 began as a simple set of variations that explore the vast catalog of color available with eight cellos. Perhaps because I was working on a set of variations, or because my wife and I sing a great deal to our son, the lullaby, "Ah vous dirai-je, maman," crept into my mind while working on this piece.  Thus, to me, 8 is a coming together of two worlds, the coexistence of the calm, serene world of a set of variations on a children’s lullaby by Mozart, with that of my own harmonic, rhythmic, and textural musical language.  8 was composed for and premiered by the Tarab Cello Ensemble, and the piece is dedicated to them with sincerest thanks and admiration.
-Nicolas Scherzinger

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HALLUCINATING ACCORDION


This work is one of a series of works called African Alchemies. These are based on (idiosyncratic) analyses of the musical grammar of various genres of African music. They reflect an attempt to Africanize Western music instead of Westernize African music. So, just as Africans have done (to great effect) with various “Western” musical instruments, these instruments are treated as if they were “African” instruments -- a Buganda xylophone, a Sotho accordion, a Xhosa voice, a Shona mbira, a Zulu guitar. The movements should be played without break. The first movement (once called "Enchanters of Grief") is based on single-stringed bow music of the San people of the Kalahari in southern Africa. The cello is plucked in ternary groups as two-beated patterns run agilely along. This basic mechanism issues a constantly shifting quality of echo that recalls the sound of distant drumming. The second movement, (once called “A Prayer-Wheel to Suck Water from Nowhere”) is patterned after the time-transcending music of mbira dza vadzimu of Zimbabwe. Although there are no actual quotations, the interlocking contrapuntal threads are built on the cross-penetrating harmonic symmetries of the music of the Shona mbira: a circular space that returns upon us. The third movement (once called " After the Bow Song") is an interlude for solo cello casually imitating an African singing style associated with the uhadi bow from the Eastern Cape. The fourth movement begins with the mere beating of time and then conjures the spirit of high tempo accordion music once more, this time as it intersects with the sound of African guitar music (notably the interlacing counterpoint of maskanda from Kwazulu Natal). The joyful cross-rhythmic polyphony of the opening is offset by an extended dance section in near-unison, which morphs finally into the final section, a lyrical ‘song of chords’ that recalls, in slower motion, the suspended patterns of the second movement: the song of an exile seeking recollections of home; a gamboling gamut and gammon of associations; seeking to remember the color of fire?
- Martin Scherzinger

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BLIZZARD IN PARADISE


When I was asked to write this work for eight cellos by the Library of Congress for the Kindler Foundation, the project immediately resonated with my interests. The cello is my favorite instrument; I have always featured it in my orchestral or chamber music compositions. (If I could do life all over I would want to play the cello!) I was delighted at the prospect but having written so much music for cello, I wanted to find a "new sound world" that was completely honest and personal yet also one that would push my development as a composer.
Most of my cello works are lyrical, cantabile, passionate, and bold adventures. (I love the bow arm!) But the score of Blizzard in Paradise contains a great deal of pizzicato tremolos and some Bartok pizzicato. For the first four minutes, all the cellos play only pizzicato, alternating between rhythmic-unison and rhythmically-disparate sections. This results in a wonderful sound like rain on the windowpane during a blizzard. The opening section ("Paradise") explores long lines, mellifluous writing, and colorful sonorities.
Blizzard in Paradise shows off all eight cellists evenly, both in technical difficulty (the work generally explores the higher registers of the instrument) as well as in the lyrical sections.
- Augusta Read Thomas

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SISINA'S RESERVOIR


Sisina's Reservoir derives its title form Baudelaire's poem, Sisina, about an angel who, despite her aggressive and warlike nature is extremely tender and sympathetic. To quote
...Sisina's like that--except the wild girl
Has a soul as loving as it is incensed,
And her courage, roused by cannonfire and drums,
Will yet relent to passionate appeal,
And her incandescent heart still keeps,
For the deserving, a reservoir of tears.
The piece itself is composed of two antiphonal groups of four cellos, each group consisting of a soloist and three accompanying cellos. The soloists play out a sad and bitter drama, united at the beginning by a single melody, but gradually becoming more estranged as the piece goes on, until finally, they are complete strangers, The other cellos, meanwhile, play nothing but natural harmonics throughout, serving as the reservoir of tears. I imagined these accompanying cellos as weeping for the two soloists; in a way, I believe we all hope that, in some of our darker moments, someone is weeping for us. Sisina's Reservoir is affectionately dedicated to the Tarab Cello Ensemble.
- Aaron Travers

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THE ONLY TIRED


I like games. I like sound. I like organization. And I like Tarab.
This piece organizes the sound of Tarab by playing games and toying structures from a quote that has been on my mind.  In playing these games over the past few years, it has become clear that the stronger the words, the stronger the music that finds its way out of them. In this case, I owe a debt to Rosa Parks, who said, “the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.” 
-Jason Treuting

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A CAPPELLA


A Cappella is a short, intimate piece, probably best heard from within the ensemble, where the subtle details of each instrument are transparent, summing up to a meditative, immersive whole. Inspired both by the sheer beauty of the sound of a cappella vocal ensembles (which is surely exceeded by the sheer beauty of eight cellos!) and by the abstract textures of some electronic music. A Cappella begins where an earlier piece of mine, Counterfeit Curio, finishes, belaboring possibilities that were at first inaccessible. A Cappella was composed for the Tarab Cello Ensemble in January 2003.
- Dan Trueman

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