Violin Sonata No. 4 (Hill)

Violin Sonata No. 4 in C minor "Maori Sonata", Stiles 1.2.1.6 So4,[1] is a sonata for violin and piano by Alfred Hill composed ca.1909. It was premiered on 6 April 1910 by Cyril Monk and Laurence Godfrey Smith in the YMCA Hall, Sydney.[2][3][4] Its approximate duration is 18 minutes.

History

The "Maori" Sonata is part of a series of Hill's works dealing with Māori material, all originating from his New Zealand years (1892-1896 and 1902-1910). Other notable works of this group are cantata Hinemoa, opera Tapu, his most popular song Waiata Poi and two String Quartets (No. 1 and No. 2). All the three movements of the sonata are based on the Māori tunes Hill collected in the previous years. The precise circumstances of its creation remain unknown.[4] The manuscript score is in the National Library of Australia.[5]

The Sonata was later (ca.1915) transcribed by Hill (as was his habit) into an orchestral work Maori Rhapsody. Nothing is known about the origins and performance circumstances of it. The sonata was also arranged by Michael Vidulich as a viola concerto[4] (not to be confused with Hill's original Viola Concerto).

Structure

The Sonata is in three movements.

I. Death Defiance (Waiata Maori)[6]
II. Tangi (Lament)
III. Waiata Poi

Editions

Recordings

There is a New Zealand radio recording of the sonata performed by Ronald Woodcock (violin) and Colleen Rae-Gerrard (piano).[7]

References

  1. Allan Stiles. A Catalogue of the Music of Alfred Hill
  2. Stephen Pleskun (17 January 2012). A CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF AUSTRALIAN COMPOSERS AND THEIR COMPOSITIONS: (VOLUME 1: 1901–1954). Xlibris Corporation. p. 147. ISBN 978-1-4653-8226-9.
  3. Allan Stiles. Notes to Hill's Flute Sonata No.2. Cited from National Library of Australia. Lam cites this as the completion date, but it can be only terminus ante quem.
  4. 1 2 3 Lam, Y. C. (2006, June). Analytical study of Alfred Hill’s String Quartet no. 2 in G minor (Thesis, Master of Arts). University of Otago
  5. Catalogue entry
  6. Death Defiance according to Stiles's catalogue; Waiata Maori according to Lam's thesis.
  7. Catalogue entry in the National Library of New Zealand
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