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porcupine

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"Three Rivers"
A Trio for Clarinet, Viola and Piano

Doug Graham - Clarinet

Neil Casey - Viola

Winifred Goodwin - Piano


porcupine
Introduction
Story begins
Blowfish
The Salsa Dance
Woodpecker
Turtle
Happy ending
 
dotfor Performance Score and CD contact Ayala

 

Overview: 

Porcupine Saves the Dance is a narrated chamber music concert for children, with original music and story.  It is the tale of a porcupine who can’t find a dance partner, for obvious reasons.  The estimated length of the program is 30 minutes. 

Children participate throughout, learning musical concepts such as theme, rhythm, pitch, and how music can create images and emotion.  They also learn a few lessons about friendship, challenges, and life.

Porcupine’s chamber group is made up of professional level performers (most are South Carolina Philharmonic Orchestra members).  The instruments are clarinet, percussion, piano, and cello.  Actor Robin Gottlieb, a former teacher and specialist in children’s performances, provides the narration.

 

The Story:

Porcupine hears music playing on an old Victrola.  He follows the sound into the woods, where a dance is going on.  All his friends are there.  He approaches them one by one, seeking a partner:

  • His friend Blowfish is afraid he’ll be punctured and go flying away like a balloon.
  • The Squirrel Sisters say he’s a prickly third wheel.
  • His friend Woodpecker is willing to dance, but when he moves his wings, he can’t stay on the dance floor.

Discouraged and embarrassed, Porcupine plops down on a rock—that turns out to be his friend Turtle.  Turtle is ready to dance, because nature has provided him with his own needle-proof vest.  So Turtle and Porcupine dance a sloooow waltz and have a fine time…until…the music stops! 

The needle on the Victrola has broken.  The animals cry out:  who can save the dance?  Porcupine steps forward, plucks one of his needles, and repairs the Victrola.  The music begins again.

Porcupine has saved the dance.  Now everyone wants to be his partner.  But he sticks by his loyal, though slow, friend Turtle.  And sometimes, when the music is fast, he just dances by himself.  And has a fine time doing it.

The Music:

In addition to entertaining children, the piece also introduces them to a number of musical concepts such as high versus low (pitch) and fast versus slow (tempo).

At the beginning of the story, each instrument in the ensemble is identified.  As the story progresses, each character is introduced with his own theme.  Children learn to associate characters with their themes, and they also hear those themes vary to reflect the mood of the character within a scene.  Various musical styles are also presented.  For example, The Squirrel Sisters dance the samba and Turtle is associated with a waltz.


Creative Team

Composers Ayala Asherov Kalus and Gordon (Dick) Goodwin and writer Jenny Maxwell created Porcupine Saves the Dance.  These collaborators are as varied as Porcupine’s friends—but much nicer to each other.

Ayala Asherov Kalus was born into a family of actors, including the founders of the Habima National Theater of Israel.  She started writing and performing songs at 15.  After completing service in the Israel Defense Forces, she performed on television, acted in films, and hosted a children’s program.  She may be best known in Israel for writing the music and lyrics of “Along the Sea,” which has become a patriotic anthem.  She holds a Bachelors in Composition and Film Scoring from Berklee College and a Masters in Film Composition from The North Carolina School of the Arts and has composed for The Learning Channel and National Geographic. 

Dick Goodwin is Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the School of Music at the University of South Carolina where he headed the theory-composition area, wrote shows for the USC Marching Band, and for five years conducted the Orchestra.  He is the 2001 Elizabeth O'Neill Verner Individual Artist winner, the highest honor awarded in the arts by the State of South Carolina.  His compositions in virtually every idiom from jingle to opera, jazz band to orchestra, have been performed across the U.S. and abroad.  He is a composer-arranger-performer-conductor-studio producer and leader of the Dick Goodwin Quintet and Dick Goodwin Big Band.

Jenny Maxwell is a writer with a background in television and experience creating programs for children.  She has written episodes of The Food Network’s Good Eats, which teaches science and history through cooking (and a heaping helping of humor).  In both 2004 and 2005 she won Emmys for PBS specials she wrote and directed to educate children about the environment.  A former producer and marketing director at WIS Television in Columbia, she is at present the editor of Skirt! magazine in Columbia.  She has a Masters in Creative Writing from the University of South Carolina.

for Performance Score and CD contact Ayala

 
 
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