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The Music of Tom Flaherty (b. 1950)
Vorarlberg Resonance
Karl and Margaret Kohn, piano four-hands
Timeflies
Peter Yates, guitar
Tom Flaherty, cello
Trio for Cello and Digital Processor
Tom Flaherty, cello
Semi-Suite
Tom Flaherty, cello
Quartet for Viola, Cello and Digital Processor
Cynthia Fogg, viola
Tom Flaherty, cello
Time to Travel
Karl and Margaret Kohn, pianos
BRIDGE 9162
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Tom Flaherty's compositions grow organically from small motives
or cells that expand and contract in unpredictable yet satisfyingly logical
spans. Always governed by a truly musical ear, Flaherty's music is too restless
to be called minimalist, and too repetitive to be termed maximalist. The two duo
piano works that open and close this CD sound radically different from each
other. Vorarlberg Resonance is a response to bells the composer heard in
Austria, and makes use of the overtones that bells and pianos have in common.
Time to Travel uses a series of rhythmic ostinati that evolve continuously
throughout the course of the composition. The two compositions using digital
processor- Trio for Cello and Quartet for Viola and Cello use the processor to
delay and transpose the input from the live instruments. When the delay pattern
is overlaid with live playing, many different tempi and meters emerge from the
composite. These two works, so seemingly simple in their materials, emerge as
wonderfully rich musical statements. Timeflies for guitar and cello, and
Semi-Suite for solo cello further pursue the composer's interest in exploring
rhyhmic and metric interaction while writing challenging music for himself to
perform. Tom Flaherty was a cello student of Bernard Greenhouse and Timothy
Eddy, and studied composition with, among others, Martin Boykan, Billy Jim
Layton, Bülent Arel, Robert Linn, and Fredrick Lesemann. A recipient of
numerous grants and commissions, Tom Flaherty is an Associate Professor of Music
at Pomona College, and an active cellist in the Los Angeles area.
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