THE
QUEEN SYMPHONY
HISTORY:
Kashif spent two years composing the
Queen Symphony. He conducted the
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in its debut on Wednesday
6 November 2002. It was performed in the
Royal Festival Hall and broadcast on
ABC TV to a wide
European audience. That night, it received a standing ovation from over two thousand people. This concert was attended by Jer Bulsara (
Freddie Mercury's mother), drummer
Roger Taylor and guitarist
Brian May. They "very much enjoyed it" and they said it was "very moving indeed". Queen Symphony was nominated
Album of the Year in the
2003 Classical Brit Awards. In 2003 Kashif directed the
Northern Sinfonia in UK tours with
Lesley Garrett. He conducted the
Turkish première of Queen Symphony at the
International Izmir Festival. He also directed the piece in
Australia in two sold-out performances at the
Sydney Opera House with the
Sydney Symphony Orchestra. These were broadcast on
ABC Classic FM. He also conducted a UK tour in
2007.
THE
WORK:
In
1974, Freddie Mercury said that he would "like people to put their own interpretation" on his own songs, and Kashif did just that. It is a work comprising six movements -
Adagio Misterioso, Allegretto, Adagio,
Allegro Vivo,
Andante Doloroso and Andante Sostenuto. It is based on around a dozen well-known melodies from the rock band Queen. These include "
Bohemian Rhapsody", "
We Will Rock You", "We Are the
Champions" and "
Who Wants to Live Forever", the latter including a performance by
Nicola Loud. Some critics have compared the overall effect with the work of
John Williams, notably his
Star Wars score.
Others have considered the choral elements of the Queen Symphony to be a nod to the rock band's own lavish tendencies, in addition to Kashif's spell as musical director of the
London Amadeus Choir. The piece has been performed regularly and in 2004 received US and
Dutch premières.
Please see
Tolga Kashif's
Wiki page @
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolga_Kashif
Please see Tolga Kashif's official website @ http://tolgakashif.com/
The movements and inspirations of the Queen Symphony are as follows:
Movement I - Adagio Misterioso - Allegro Con Brio - Maestoso - Misterioso - Allegro (10:33)
Radio Ga Ga,
The Show Must Go On,
One Vision,
I Was Born To Love You
Movement II - Allegretto - Allegro Scherzando - Tranquillo (7:31)
Love Of My Life,
Another One Bites The Dust,
Killer Queen
Movement
III - Adagio (7:13)
Who Wants To Live Forever,
Save Me
Movement IV - Allegro Vivo -
Moderato Cantabile -
Cadenza - A
Tempo Primo (9:48)
Bicycle Race, Save Me
Movement V - Andante Doloroso - Allegretto -
Alla Marcia - Moderato Risoluto -
Pastorale - Maestoso (12:54)
Bohemian Rhapsody,
We Will Rock You, We Are
The Champions, Who Wants To Live Forever
This segues into Movement VI.
Please see more @ http://www.ultimatequeen.co.uk/related/the-queen-symphony
.htm
In preparing an
album of classical music based on rock songs, a measure of the project's success depends on how compatible the music is to the classical milieu.
Past collections that have recast into classical styles such groups as the
Beatles and the
Police turned out well in part because these groups had a little "classical" in them.
Perhaps an album "classicizing"
AC/DC would not be as successful; a project involving similar treatments of music by the
Rolling Stones proved so weak it provided fuel for an argument against the validity of this entire genre. Queen, on the other hand, probably had more "classical" in it than any other major
British rock group. Queen was also able to creatively absorb in its magnum opus Bohemian Rhapsody influences drawn from the most un-rock like classical form of them all: opera.
Composer Tolga Kashif has embarked with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra on a quest to bring
Queen's music into a wholly classical realm and
The Queen Symphony is an entirely satisfactory result.
Rather than realizing direct treatments of specific Queen songs, Kashif has remodeled several related numbers into six movements making up a "symphony." In approach, it bears a distant resemblance to the symphony that
Philip Glass fashioned out of the second side of
David Bowie and
Brian Eno's Low, but it is far more dramatic and themes change over a bit more rapidly. There is also a full chorus, which results in some "
Hollywood"-type scoring that may be a bit over the top for some. Nonetheless, The Queen Symphony is excellently well done; beautifully recorded; and has an attractive, well-annotated package that includes a late, formal studio shot of Queen.
- published: 26 Oct 2012
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