Florence Price: Memory Mist - Digital

SKU: GSP60518DGT
Digital Device Download for piano (edited by John Michael Cooper).
Not printable

Price:
Sale price$12.00

Payment & Security

American Express Apple Pay Diners Club Discover Meta Pay Google Pay Mastercard PayPal Shop Pay Venmo Visa

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

Additional Info

  • Composer
    Florence Price
  • Publisher
    G Schirmer Inc
  • Arrangement
    Piano (PF)
  • Format
    Score
  • Genre
    20th Century
  • Text
    John Michael Cooper

Description

Also available as Printed-to-Order on paper: GSP60518SCO


For piano (edited by John Michael Cooper)

Memory Mist typifies Price's gift for combining succinctness with musical pith: it is only fifty-two bars long and lasts just over three minutes, but the wealth of imagination and emotional range in that short expanse of music is remarkable. The tranquil lyricism, blues-influenced harmonies, and rich but delicate dissonances of the A section in E-flat major (mm. 1-24 and 41-52) contrast with the greater urgency and sparser call-and-response textures of the B section in the parallel minor. The rhythmic language of the two sections likewise contrasts. Yet despite these contrasts there are also connections: the chromatic descents woven into the harmonic fabric in mm. 11-15 anticipate the chromatically descending line from D-flat to G-flat in mm. 25-29, and the responding chords in the right hand in mm. 33-36 subtly recall the main theme of the surrounding A sections. It is tempting to imagine that these wispy recollections and anticipations account for the otherwise somewhat cryptic title Memory Mist, but the phrase may alternatively derive from the fact that when Price wrote the piece she was sixty-two, in a season of life where memory, for many, is enfolded in mist. In any event the composition is compact and deliciously evocative — a musical distillation of engagingly cryptic title and traditional form combined with blues-influenced harmony and African-American-influenced texture.

— John Michael Cooper

You may also like