David Bruce - Composer

 



David Bruce is a British-American composer, living and working in
St. Albans, UK. This site contains information on his music.

Contact David Bruce



"Masterful"
Albany Times Union

"Wonderfully entertaining"
The Telegraph

"Close to operatic genius"
Metro

"Dazzling"
Opera Now

"Sometimes skittish, sometimes mournful, always deeply felt"
Evening Standard


5 recent 'passions'

  • Rhythmic games
  • The Gift
  • Beginners Lessons in Tabla playing
  • The implications of Antony Gormley
  • Musical Clowns


    Other recent posts

  • Birds in Arlington
  • Groanbox
  • North and South
  • Shake rattle and stomp
  • Dawn again


    Most popular 'passions' posts

  • Building a Cajon
  • Beginners Lessons in Tabla playing
  • My Lagerphone is built
  • So You Want To Make A Steel Drum huh?
  • Rhythmic games


    Most popular blog posts

  • Stephanie Berger Photographs
  • Miles for Music
  • Angela from Push! at Tete a Tete Festival
  • Dances for Oskar in the Lake District
  • Polish Dawn


  • Shake rattle and stomp


    Dawn Upshaw and members of Ensemble ACJW yesterday


    Some colorful reviews of yesterday's concert at Carnegie's Zankel hall, which was a riot, and a wonderful celebration of Dawn Upshaw's incredible range and versitility. The performance of Piosenki was spectacular all-round, Evan Hughes joined Dawn and ensemble ACJW, with the wonderful Steve Prutsman conducting. But the lagerphone also rightfully received plenty of the attention:

    David Bruce incorporates his lagerphone into the final section of his vivacious song cycle “Piosenki” (in Polish, popular songs), which concluded the program and was its highlight.

    Mr. Bruce’s lagerphone, a percussion instrument in the shape of a long stick, is covered with bottle tops (hence the “lager”) and other metal noisemakers and decorated with colorful streamers. When pounded on the floor, it produces a jingly sound akin to a tambourine’s but louder. The rest of the colorful score evokes Polish folk music and Slavic wedding bands with klezmer clarinet tunes, zesty piccolo riffs, syncopated rhythms and energetic fiddling. The audience laughed at the musical flatulence of “Smelly,” the fourth verse.


    Vivien Schweitzer, NY Times


    In the final Polish song of this ecstatic recital ... bass-baritone Evan Hughes picked up a four-foot-long thick stick decorated with bells, and stomped it repeatedly on the floor or dangled it with the bells jingling. And as he and Dawn Upshaw sung, the untranslatable words (Trumf, Trumf! Misia Bela!!) and the entire chamber orchestra wailed and trilled and the klezmer clarinet warbled and the drums drummed, not only this scrivener but everybody in the packed Zankel Auditorium wanted to thump and jingle along with Mr. Hughes and the now foot-stamping orchestra.


    Harry Rolnick, ConcertoNet.com


    Posted on 03 November 2008