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- Vox_Maris abstract "Vox maris, Op. 31, is a symphonic poem finished around 1954, by the Romanian composer George Enescu, dedicated to the memory of the great Romanian pianist Elena Bibescu.The poem is scored for a large orchestra—quadruple woodwind, six horns, four trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, five percussionists, two harps, piano and strings—with an off-stage choir of sopranos, altos and tenors (no basses) and a tenor soloist, 'the voice of sailor'.Essentially, Vox maris is a large scale, three-movement-in-one symphony, anchored to G major—but not so firmly as to preclude (almost as we can expect) a fluid tonal basis.[citation needed]The second part of Vox maris begins with a calmer mood but soon starts rising in tone. Enescu exerts tonal control by rising by semitones; the climax is itself centered upon G—as though the very depths of ocean are moved by the powerful forces of the nature—and at the summit the choir, making its first entry, cries out in despair, with four thunderous crashes from double timpani. The voice of the sailor calls for boat to be launched, but again the chorus cried out, more fearfully and tragically, as they seem to be engulfed by the forces around them, literally so as a lone soprano cries 'Miserere, Domine!' before the wind machines blow across the texture for the first time.[citation needed]The image fades, and the music gradually, but quite soon, becomes calmer at the same time as retaining its essential fluidity. The storm has passed but the human voices have more than suggested some fearful event has occurred. The tonality now lands on G sharp—so near, and yet so far—as the last great part begins. It is as if the lower voices intone a blurred requiem, made more mysterious in an extraordinary passage for wordless female voices, solo strings, piano, celeste and percussion: a fabric of diffused colour and light, which tonally now falls to G minor. A shaft of light brings a falsely-related G, a little uncertainly, at last, into which quietly deep region the music descends, across no less than five percussion players to the lowest orchestral of all—the bass of the piano.[citation needed]Enescu did not live to hear his final masterpiece in concert: the première was given in Bucharest, in September 1964.".
- Vox_Maris wikiPageID "10518791".
- Vox_Maris wikiPageRevisionID "604155933".
- Vox_Maris hasPhotoCollection Vox_Maris.
- Vox_Maris subject Category:1954_compositions.
- Vox_Maris subject Category:Compositions_by_George_Enescu.
- Vox_Maris subject Category:Symphonic_poems.
- Vox_Maris type Abstraction100002137.
- Vox_Maris type AuditoryCommunication107109019.
- Vox_Maris type Communication100033020.
- Vox_Maris type Music107020895.
- Vox_Maris type MusicalComposition107037465.
- Vox_Maris type SymphonicPoem107047373.
- Vox_Maris type SymphonicPoems.
- Vox_Maris comment "Vox maris, Op.".
- Vox_Maris label "Vox Maris".
- Vox_Maris sameAs m.02qghj4.
- Vox_Maris sameAs Q7942353.
- Vox_Maris sameAs Q7942353.
- Vox_Maris sameAs Vox_Maris.
- Vox_Maris wasDerivedFrom Vox_Maris?oldid=604155933.
- Vox_Maris isPrimaryTopicOf Vox_Maris.