Brink: Concerto for Viola and Chamber
Orchestra, premiered by violist Daniel Scholz and the Manitoba
Chamber Orchestra. Roy Goodman, conductor.
"...a coherent, satisfying argument with some diverting
touches of cross motion--activity over stillness--in various
guises to make for coiled-spring tension as needed."
- James Manishen: Winnipeg Free Press.
Nazca
Lines, premiered by the St.
Lawrence String Quartet and the
Saskatoon Symphony
Orchestra. Wayne Toews, conductor.
"The work was inspired by mysterious lines in the desert
near Nazca, Peru, and...presents the audience with a study
in contrasts. From the dramatic opening in the drums,
through solos shifting among the quartet reinforced or opposed
by the rest of the orchestra, it was evocative and challenging
to ear and mind."
- Jenni Morton: Saskatoon Star Pheonix.
Archipelago,
performance at the Center for New
Music, Duquesne University,
Pittsburgh, PA.
"Archipelago--which
unfolds in desolate landscapes with jagged edges--shows that
this composer has an eclectic sense of style and a keen ability
to balance color with rhythmic zest."
- Donald Rosenberg: The Pittsburg Press.
Five Pieces for Orchestra,
performance by Composers' Orchestra,
Royal Conservatory of Music,
Toronto. Gary Kulesha, conductor.
"The Five Pieces for
Orchestra...explore a wide range of orchestral colours through
an orchestration that duplicates Webern's Opus 10 pieces of
1910. As would be expected, the pieces are short, succinct
and beautifully wrought explorations of orchestral sound,"
- Bruce Shavers: Manitoba Composers Association.
Five Short Songs, premiered by Music
Inter Alia, Winnipeg Art Gallery.
"Five Short Songs
demonstrates that David Scott has a remarkable grasp of the
short musical form. Having chosen beautiful short poems
for his text, he matched them with suble and sensitive music
for piano, viola and voice."
- Neil Harris: Winnipeg Free Press.
Archipelago,
premiered by Aurora Musicale,
Winnipeg.
"There were flashes of dourness in Scott's
five movements, along with a dash of unease....but Archipelago
had much to say about inquisitiveness, brilliance and affirmation."
- Randal McIlroy: Winnipeg Free Press.
At a Quiet Surface, premiered by
soprano Angelique Leydier and
members of the Composers'
Orchestra. Gary Kulesha, conductor.
"Scott already commands
enough craft in accompanying a solo soprano with an ensemble
of winds, strings, keyboards and percussion, to let the instruments
take turns with the voice rather than competing for the ear's
attention."
- William Littler, The Toronto Star.
String
Figures, performed by the Cassatt
String Quartet at the 2003, Centara Corp. New Music Festival,
Winnipeg, Manitoba.
"String Figures, despite the whimsy, is an absorbing
piece, with more emotional weight than the title implies."
- James Manishen: Winnipeg Free Press.
Circular
Ruins, premiered by the Manitoba
Chamber Orchestra. Simon
Streatfeild, conductor.
"An equilibrium of opposing elements in activity, range,
timbre and expressive gesture is its core, but is sealed with
a firm structural hand and much imagination."
- James Manishen: Winnipeg Free Press.
Six Bagatelles, performance at P.I.
Chaikovskii Music Hall, Kiev, Ukraine.
"David Scott dedicated
his Six Bagatelles to the memory of Anton Webern. The
main feature of the Canadian composer's works--their laconic
character--evidently takes its roots from the works of the
spiritual father of the musical avant-garde of the 1950s.
Though the style is original, not imitating."
- A. Ocokina: The Ukrainian Pravda.