

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Leia, No. 02 from Alien Microetudes for 1 (any) melody instrument and piano
Duration: 3'
Instrumentation details:
clarinet in A
horn in F
trumpet in Bb
alto saxophone in Eb
violin (+vla, bsn)
Leia, No. 02 from Alien Microetudes for 1 (any) melody instrument and piano
Translation, reprints and more

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Altsaxophon in Es (Leia, Nr. 02 aus Alien-Mikroetüden für 1 Melodieinstrument und Klavier)Type: Stimme

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Horn in F (Leia, Nr. 02 aus Alien-Mikroetüden für 1 Melodieinstrument und Klavier)Type: Stimme

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Klarinette in A (Leia, Nr. 02 aus Alien-Mikroetüden für 1 Melodieinstrument und Klavier)Type: Stimme

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Leia, Nr. 02 aus Alien-Mikroetüden für 1 Melodieinstrument und KlavierType: Dirigierpartitur

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Trompete in B (Leia, Nr. 02 aus Alien-Mikroetüden für 1 Melodieinstrument und Klavier)Type: Stimme

Ulf-Diether Soyka
Violine (Leia, Nr. 02 aus Alien-Mikroetüden für 1 Melodieinstrument und Klavier)Type: Stimme
Sample pages
Audio preview
Work introduction
"All my Aliens" are 21 microinterval etudes (partly of intercultural character) and a prelude for any melody instrument and piano (some of them are also intonation etudes). The occasion for these pieces was the microintervallic 3rd symphony ("Die Unspielbare") - for which European pupils, among others, can train the necessary pitch sensitivity using the standard notation (according to H.P.Hesse, M.Vogel). The pieces are each about 1 - 3 minutes long, appear partly traditionalist (as intonation etudes with special accidentals for syntonic and Pythagorean comma etc.), partly as an intercultural introduction to world music (maqam, slendro etc.), partly jazzy (blue notes, alphorn fa), partly avant-garde (e.g. notation of rap language melody).
Leia is one of the lyrical-melodic movements from this collection. The piece sounds partly quite traditional, partly - gently but slightly obliquely - deviating from the familiar pitches, which are always logically supported by the piano accompaniment. This makes the piece easy to play even for young people without absolute pitch, and the "just-intonation" of each pitch can also be easily found with relative-eartraining. The sound recordings inserted here at a slow practice tempo can also help.
What is necessary to perform this work?
The piece can be performed by piano together with any (single) melody instrument or vocally if the appropriate range can be mastered, and the distinction between the microintervals is possible. Melody part material in C, F, Bb, Eb or A.