Reflections on the Mississippi (2015) for tuba and symphonic band was commissioned and premiered by the University of Michigan Symphony Band, conducted by Michael Haithcock, with Carol Jantsch, tuba (Philadelphia Orchestra), at the University of Michigan Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor on February 6, 2015. The concerto, composed in memory of his father, Willis Daugherty (1929-2011), is a musical reflection on family trips during Michael's childhood to the Mississippi River near McGregor, Iowa. In July and October 2012, Daugherty returned to the Mississippi River to make two road trips along the ?Great River Road? from McGregor to Hannibal, Missouri to collect musical ideas. The result is one of the composer's most poignant and powerful musical works to date. In this 22-minute tuba concerto, Daugherty has created a unique sound world that brilliantly captures and reflects the ?sound and the fury? of the Mississippi River. The tuba soloist plays soulful melodies, jarring rhythms, prayerful chants and a New Orleans ?second line? that propels the concerto to a virtuosic conclusion.
Instrumentation
The number of players doubling each part is at the conductor's discretion, but should be in keeping with a balanced sound. One player per part recommended unless otherwise indicated.
Solo Tuba
Piccolo
2 Flutes
2 Oboes
English Horn
4 Bb Clarinets
Bb Bass Clarinet
2 Bassoons
Contrabassoon
Bb Soprano Saxophone
Eb Alto Saxophone
Bb Tenor Saxophone
Eb Baritone Saxophone
3 C or Bb Trumpets (straight metal mute; harmon mute, stem out)
4 F Horns
3 Trombones (1st/2nd Tenor, 3rd Bass; straight metal mute)
2 Euphoniums (straight metal mute)
Contrabass (1 or 2 players, 2 preferred)
Piano
Timpani (4 or 5 drums; 32?, 29?, 26?, 23?, 20)
Percussion (3 players; instruments are not shared):
1. Glockenspiel, Crotales (D, F, A, C), Xylophone, Small Tambourine, Vibraslap, Mark Tree
2. Vibraphone, Suspended Cymbal, Washboard, Woodblock, Bell Tree, Whip
3.Marimba (4 octaves), Snare Drum, Kick Drum, Castanets, Triangle, Chimes, Concert Bass Drum, Vibraslap.