Die Königskünderin (The King-proclaimer) — character study after Elias Canetti
solo trumpet
c.5:00
to John Holt
April 2006
Christopher Scanlon, trumpet
John Holt, trumpet
score (pdf)
recording (Soundcloud)
Recorded by John Holt, trumpet; Facets 3 — New American Music for Trumpet (Crystal CD-768, 2009)
photographs
Performance of Die Königskünderin and four other Canetti studies for Voices of Change Salon program (Dallas, TX; 6 March 2011).
Die Königskünderin (The King-proclaimer) is the eighth in a series of short works for solo instrument based upon characters in Der Ohrenzeuge: Fünfzig Charaktere (Earwitness: Fifty Characters), written in 1974 by the Bulgarian-born British-Austrian novelist Elias Canetti (1905-1994). Canetti’s distinctive studies incorporate poetic imagery, singular insights, and unabashed wordplay to create fifty ironic paradigms of human behavior. This collection, begun in 1997, was inspired by the vividly surreal depictions of Canetti’s characters, and comprises twenty-two solo works to date—composed for familiar instruments such as violin, guitar, piano, and trombone, as well as less common instruments such as ocarina, cimbalom, glass harmonica, and carillon. In Canetti's depiction of this character, "The King-proclaimer has something majestic about her.... She is tall and stately and her supply of scorn is inexhaustible. She can tell underlings by the least gesture and keeps them away from the king before he is even proclaimed."
Die Königskünderin was completed in April of 2006 and composed for trumpeter John Holt, who first performed the work at the University of North Texas on 17 October 2006. It is included on the recording Facets 3: New American Music for Trumpet (Crystal CD-768, 2009).