Spring/Neap

Saxophone Quartet

Gabriella Smith

About

Gabriella Smith’s Spring/Neap is inspired by water, specifically the tidal cycle after which the work is named. Smith explains, “Spring tides occur when the gravitational effects of the sun and moon combine, resulting in extremities of tidal ranges: high high tides and low low tides. A week later, when the sun and moon are at right angles to each other, neap tides occur, resulting in a less dramatic tidal range. The structure and gestures of this piece evoke these tidal movements.”

Performance

Gabriella Smith Spring/Neap
  Duration
06:00
  Commissioning Year
2012
  Premiere
May 9, 2012
Field Concert Hall, Curtis Institute of Music, Philadelphia, PA
  Recording
May 9, 2012
Field Concert Hall, Curtis Institute of Music, Philadelphia, PA

Artists

  • Gabriella Smith Composition

    Gabriella Smith is a composer whose work invites listeners to find joy in climate action. Her music comes from a love of play, exploring new instrumental sounds, and creating musical arcs that transport audiences into sonic landscapes inspired by the natural world. An “outright sensation” (LA Times), her music “exudes inventiveness with a welcoming personality, rousing energy and torrents of joy” (NY Times).

    Lost Coast, a concerto for cello and orchestra, written for her longtime collaborator Gabriel Cabezas, received its world premiere in May 2023 with the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Gustavo Dudamel. This work joins her organ concerto, Breathing Forests, written for James McVinnie also premiered by the LA Phil, conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen. Other current projects include a large-scale work for Kronos Quartet, commissioned in celebration of their 50th anniversary season, and an album-length work for yMusic featuring underwater field recordings. In December 2023, her work Tumblebird Contrails was performed on the Nobel Prize Concert by the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen.

    Her first full-length album, titled Lost Coast, was recorded with Gabriel Cabezas and producer Nadia Sirota at Greenhouse Studios in Iceland and named one of NPR Music’s “26 Favorite Albums Of 2021” and a “Classical Album to Hear Right Now” by The New York Times. Gabriel and Gabriella, as a cello-violin-voice-electronics duo, have performed together around the world, including in Reykjavík, New York City, and Paris.

    Gabriella grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area playing and writing music, hiking, backpacking, and volunteering on a songbird research project.

  • Prism Saxophone Quartet
  • Timothy McAllister Soprano Saxophone
  • Zachary Shemon Alto Saxophone
  • Robert Young Tenor Saxophone
  • Taimur Sullivan Baritone Saxophone

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