“Rapture After Schoenberg and Kandinsky,” 2024

08/11/2024 2 min
“Rapture After Schoenberg and Kandinsky,” 2024

Listen "“Rapture After Schoenberg and Kandinsky,” 2024"

Episode Synopsis

Patrick Holcomb performs his original composition “Rapture After Schoenberg and Kandinsky,” 2024.

“Rapture after Schoenberg and Kandinsky” is inspired by Vasily Kandinsky’s "Improvisation 28 (Second Version)," 1912 and the final movement of Arnold Schoenberg’s String Quartet No. 2, “Entrückung,” 1908. In Holcomb’s work, Schoenberg’s opening gesture becomes distant thunder, and the subsequent melodies in the viola and cello parts become horn calls and, later, the bells are imagined sounding from the church in the upper-right corner of Kandinsky’s painting.

About the Performer
Patrick Holcomb (b. 1996) is a composer based on Long Island. A member of Mensa since age nineteen, Holcomb seeks to write music that is both intellectually and emotionally engaging. His recent compositional honors include the 2022 ASCAP Rudolf Nissim Prize, a 2021 ASCAP Morton Gould Young Composer Award, a 2021 American Prize in Composition, and a 2020 BMI Student Composer Award. In addition to concert music, Holcomb also composes music for film. Recently, his score for the 1925 silent documentary "Grass: A Nation’s Battle for Life," which was commissioned by Indiana University Cinema as a part of the 2019/2021 Jon Vickers Film Scoring Award, accompanied the film during its screenings at the Museum of Modern Art in 2023.

Holcomb completed his undergraduate studies at Ithaca College, from which he graduated top of his class in the School of Music with a BM in Composition in 2018. He went on to earn an MM in Composition and an MM in Music Scoring for Visual Media from the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music in 2021. His former teachers include Claude Baker, Jorge Villavicencio Grossmann, Robert Morris, Eugene O’Brien, Evis Sammoutis, Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez, Tom Schneller, Aaron Travers, Dana Wilson, and Ricardo Zohn-Muldoon. Holcomb is currently a PhD candidate in composition at the University of Rochester Eastman School of Music as a recipient of the Robert L. and Mary L. Sproull University Fellowship from the University of Rochester. In addition to composing, Holcomb is also a passionate educator. He is currently an Adjunct Instructor of Music at Hofstra University.