Song of the Pyramid Orchid
inkl. MwSt., zzgl. Versand
Lieferzeit 2-4 Wochen
Peter Lawson
Song of the Pyramid Orchid
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Peter Lawson
Song of the Pyramid Orchid

Lieferzeit 2-4 Wochen
inkl. MwSt., zzgl. Versand
Voraussichtliche Lieferung zwischen 06.03.2026 und 20.03.2026.
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Beschreibung:

  • Dauer: 07:30
  • Gewicht: 81 g
  • ISMN: 9790222281516
Song of the Pyramid Orchid was written in 1990 for Bryn Lewis, who was then the principal harpist of the Philharmonia Orchestra, now the principal harpist of the London Symphony Orchestra and a Professor of Harp at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. It is the sixteenth to be composed in a projected series of musical portraits of the forty-eight wild orchids of Britain and Ireland, of which there are currently twenty-eight written, scored for various instrumental and orchestral forces.

The Pyramid (or Pyramidal) Orchid, Anacamptis pyramidalis, is a familiar sight on chalk and limestone grassland in Southern England, extending upwards to Western Scotland and Ireland and South-East to Eastern Asia, the Mediterranean and North Africa. The Pyramid Orchid takes its name from its neat, conical spike of closely-packed flowers, which range from rich red or cerise to pink - very rarely pure white. The lower labellum is three-lobed with its two upper petals having evolved to be so angled as to act as a guide for the nectar-seeking proboscis of a butterfly.

Taking its cue from the Pyramids, the Song of the Pyramid Orchid employs Middle-Eastern type scales as well as referring to a colour coding of harmonies used in all of the orchid portraits. An arch-like melodic fragment heard at the beginning refers to the both the faint, sweet perfume of the flowers and the mysteries of the ancient Pyramids - and this reoccurs frequently between increasingly animated sections which finally lead up to the flower's pollination.
Duration 7,5 minutes