Muehleisen's setting of Edward Lears frenetic limerick, There was an Old
Person of Brussels, is in the style of a perpetuum mobile, a "perpetualRead More
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Pepper ID: 11364082ESupplier ID: MSJM09-19
Price:$2.30
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Muehleisen's setting of Edward Lears frenetic limerick, There was an Old
Person of Brussels, is in the style of a perpetuum mobile, a "perpetual
motion piece, a style of music characterized by an unrelenting rhythmic and
melodic movement (also known as a moto perpetuo in Italian). The perpetual
motion in my setting of Lears limerick represents the Old Person of
Brussels himself as he rushed through the town, knocking most people
down. Because of the frenetic nature of the musical setting, one might even
call this a moto frenetico. The namesake musical figure (passed between the
basses and baritones) has a headlong, reckless, staggering motion, befitting
a person who lived upon Brandy and Mussels. While the basses and baritones
are busy engaging their marathon musical material, the tenors present the
lines of Lears limerick. Upon singing the text fully through once, the music
becomes even more frenetic, with the tenors singing the entire text again,
now in double-time. The only let-up in the forward motion is on the
repetition of the line he knocked most people down, perhaps indicating that
the main character in Lears limerick might have paused for a moment to
survey the mayhem he had wrought, only to resume his seemingly pointless,
headlong rush through town. The very pointless nature of his behavior is one
of the most effective aspects of Lears limerick: at no time in the poem does
he provide even a hint of motivation for the main characters eccentric
conduct.