This is a substantial work in five sections which explores the many different textures and colours available from the combination of two guitars.
Opus No : 51a
Category : Chamber Works / guitar
Year : 1992
Duration : 21'00
Commissioned by : Matthew Marshall and Tony Donaldson
Instrumentation: for two guitars
Level :
4 - challenging for professional musicians
Available from
the composer
I - Prelude
II - Au revoir
III - Jeux
IV - Waltz triste
V - Epilogue
Pas de Deux is an essentially abstract work for two guitars, but was conceived as a sequence of imaginery dances, involving two characters. The titles of the five sections give clues as to the mood of each dance, but beyond that the listener must rely on their own imagination and personal experiences to interpret the sounds.
There are elements of 'minimalist' influence in this work, with plenty of quite simple modal ideas being subtly varied in the course of repetitions. This is especially so in the second section, which develops an idea first presented in the choral work 'As Long as Time' (No.3: "I lie, I watch the ceiling"). The third section is more Bartokian in style, while the fourth builds up to a cartharsis through repeated chord patterns. In the short 'Epilogue' ideas from the beginning recur, but transformed into a more peaceful setting.
Pas de Deux was commissioned and first performed by Matthew Marshall and Tony Donaldson.