Sustain | |
Composer: | Andrew Norman |
Period: | Contemporary |
Composed: | 2018 |
Duration: | c. 35 minutes |
Scoring: | Orchestra |
Premiere Conductor: | Gustavo Dudamel |
Premiere Location: | Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles |
Premiere Performers: | Los Angeles Philharmonic |
Sustain is a 2018 composition for orchestra by the American composer Andrew Norman.[1] The work was premiered on October 4, 2018 by the Los Angeles Philharmonic, conducted by Gustavo Dudamel, as part of their centennial season.[2]
Sustain was commissioned by the Los Angeles Philharmonic for their centennial season. Norman has stated that he began by imagining what orchestral music will mean in the future, during the 200th season of the orchestra. Thus, the piece was conceptualized as "one long unbroken musical thought", focusing on the importance of communal listening. However, it eventually came to represent the Earth and the vast scale of geologic time.[3]
Norman has explained in an interview that the title "Sustain" comes partly from his background as a pianist (in reference to the sustain pedal), and that it also relates to the idea that each note in the piece should have its own journey.[4]
Sustain
A similar structure was used in Norman's earlier and shorter work Spiral.[6] In describing that work, Norman said that he had been considering the idea of a "spiral-shaped" orchestral piece for some time.[7]
The piece is scored for the following orchestra:[8]
3 Flutes (3rd doubling piccolo)
3 Oboes
3 Clarinets
4 Horns
4 Trumpets
3 Trombones
1 Tuba
4 Log drums
2 Suspended pieces of plywood
Tam-tam
4 Temple blocks
2 Pianos (one tuned a quarter tone down)
16 Violin I
14 Violin II
12 Violas
10 Cellos
8 Double basses
The piece has been described as "sublime" by The New York Times, and as a "masterpiece" by both the Los Angeles Times and The New Yorker.
In 2020, Norman was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition for the work,[9] and the Los Angeles Philharmonic won the Grammy Award for Best Orchestral Performance[10] for their 2019 recording of the piece.[11] The composition was also a finalist for the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for Music.[12]