Photos.
Recent Tours, Concerts/Audio-Video Files/Program notes
Life of Death, Slave Story, Invocation, Lamentation?, Phygein
Adynaton, The Garden of Eden, Anavasis, Chase
Dance, If I Could
I Would/Concerto for Strings
Constitution
Article 91(double concerto),
Lament for the Balkans(third guitar concerto), Night Wanderings, ...tell my wife I love her..., Escape, The Depressing Aspect
Ephatha, Nadir,
Love Works,
Daedalus and Ikaros
4':33"by John Cage
VIDEO
(from
1999/Germany-Iserlohn)
VIDEO: Berklee
Performance Center A. Kalogeras guitar concerto
VIDEO:
Life of Death - II Mov. ALEA III - Theodore Antoniou. conductor
Scenes
From the
Life
of Death
Death is a guitarist, a composer, and a disgruntled
employee. "They" don't pay him enough at his present job. He
complains all the time and wants to retire. He is sick and tired
of dealing with people, who greet him with expressions such as:
"Please, No!," "Don't take me today," "One more day please," "Take the
other guy, next door," and so on! Death's only consolation is to
go home to his "soul mates," his friends, and perform his
favorite pieces.
He has only 10-15 minutes to perform before going back to "work".
The titles of the movements are:
I. "Awakening of Mournful Feelings on Arrival at Work",
II. "A Visit at the Playground", and
III."Sad and Ungrateful Feelings After the Visit - What A Life!"
Put down your beloved instrument Mr. Reaper! It's time to pay a
visit to a fellow musician down the street...
A Profile of Death
Vital statistics: Male, single, ageless, wearing same stodgy
outfit since the beginning of time.
Nickname: Grim Reaper.
Occupation: Collector of Music Souls, human ribs, and attitudes.
Dreams: To quit his present position and become a full time
professional musician.
Hobbies: Composing, playing the guitar, walking in cemeteries
during storms, Russian roulette, crashing music festivals.
Sad moments: Antibiotics.
A.P as performed at Carnegie Hall/2002
The
Life of Death (Narration) by Lukas Foss
Look at you! You miserable creature! Coming back home, after a hard
day's work. How many souls did you have to get and deliver today?
You know, no one likes you! Your presence automatically signals the
absence of loved ones.
Yet you have the gall to complain. You say your pay is insufficient, so
low, and your work conditions unendurable horrible...You complain all
the time. You want to retire, but nevertheless you have to do your job.
You claim that you don't have a choice.
You say you are a sensitive man. You say your own fears almost
overwhelm you. Once, proudly, you, too, were mortal.
Well, here you are at last! At your home with your "soul mates", your
friends and fellow musicians. These are "souls" you yourself collected.
The best of the best!
You are not at work any more; you're not engaged in a leisure pursuit.
Join your orchestra. Forget for a while what you do for a living. Play a
little tune.
(FINALE)
Put down your beloved instrument Grim Reaper! It's time to pay a visit
to a fellow musician a poor suffering fool, practicing just down the
street, as if he had all the time in the world.
…text by Apostolos Paraskevas, edited by Paul Kafka-Gibbons


With The Odessa Philharmonic Orchestra
in Ukraine, playing The Life of Death
performing
Slave
Story
Slave Story (1992)
is one of the first pieces where the composer’s experimentation with
novel guitar sounds becomes evident. In the words of Mr. Paraskevas,
“with this piece I wished to give the listener as many unconventional
and new sounds on the guitar as possible.” In order to understand the
function of the sounds used one has to be aware of the programmatic
elements hidden behind the music.
The story is that of a slave; first
we hear the chains, represented by scratching of the nails on the
strings, while immediately afterwards the leitmotif of the slave is
introduced. As the music grows faster, the slave is caught in a dream,
where he is being pursued (musically illustrated by the strikes on the
wood and other techniques that produce percussive sounds). This hectic
effect culminates in the emancipation of the slave’s mind, whereby he
recalls sounds of the timpani that he used to hear when once free in
his homeland. In order to achieve these different timpani-like sounds,
the player has to cross the strings of the guitar in pairs, thus
forming six different sounds of timpani, and improvise rhythmically on
them.
As the sound gradually fades out, the opening
scratching of the
string returns, bringing the slave out of his illusions and back to
reality. The sound of the lowest note is not enough to lament on the
slave’s fate, so the performer has to start untuning the lowest string,
until a very low and uncertain pitch is heard. At this point he lays
the guitar flat, and, with the use of a Ping-Pong ball that he slides
between the fourth and the fifth strings of the guitar he creates a
sound that represents a dream, an escape from the reality. At the same
time, however, the lamenting bass persists - that proves to be the only
reality.
Corfu 1997, Theodore Antoniou,
Hellenic Contemporary Orchestra
...Phygein
Adynaton..., 1996, for prepared guitar and orchestra,
(excerpt) from Finale. The guitar concerto Phygein Adynaton
(Impossible to Escape) calls for a guitarist with two classical guitars
(one of which is prepared with paper-clips) and orchestra. The
work is in one movement throughout but essentially has two parts
divided in half by the guitar Cadenza. The first part is
evocative and stochastic.
This “invocation” is around a tonal
center where guitar and orchestra coexist in equal terms. In the
second part the orchestra takes a different, more dynamic part.
The prepared guitar sounds almost distorted, like a new instrument
melodic and percussive at the same time. This part of the concerto is
darker in the mood and of a philosophical point of view is trying to
give a direction in the battle between life and death.
The Garden of
Eden
Athens Concert Hall, rehearsal of
"Phygein
Adynaton"
-Life
-Adam and Eve
-Serpent
-The Voice of the Lord God
-East of Eden's Garden
These 5 pieces, which are compiled together as a suite for guitar,
represent a trouble-free compositional style of mine, based on melodic
and most of the time tonal material. Although, I write
these program notes almost 11 years after the original date of the
work, I do look back and rediscover an innocent part of myself
away from my current trends and obsession with the notion of Death
which my latest works deal with.
A description of the Garden of Eden is what is about in this
suite. Some times programmatic Serpent and The Voice of the Lord
God , some times romantic East of Eden's Garden, other times
joyful Adam and Eve and some times musically absolute Life.
Every single movement represents a small part of the life in the Garden
of Eden as we read it, heard it or imagined it.
From a technical point of view the work is friendly for the performer
and guitar oriented concerning the compositional technique.
Fingerings and positions are very important for the overall
interpretation of the work which are provided.
Although these 5 pieces form the Garden of Eden they could be performed
as single units as well.
Lets hope we'll meet there.
“Anavasis”
The piece is quite demanding from a technical point of view and
it is written in a way which unfolds most of the possibilities of
the piano sonorities.
Dense texture, polyphonic, and with a
flavor of minimalism just before the end. Fast passages
increase the tension of the music and the agitation of the performer
accompanied by a very propulsive rhythm preserved for the finale.
The harmonic material used in “Anavasis” which means in Greek
“Ascension” has been derived from a modal scale find in Eastern music.
The
Chase Dance, 
It is a fast piece in dance rhythm with an introduction that presents
the whole tone scene. The introduction has no meter. Most of my tonal
material comes from my Greek traditional heritage as a listener and
musician. Alternation of 5/8, 6/8, 7/8, 9/8 meters increases the
tension of the piece and the nerves of the performer as the end
approaches. The piece ends almost abruptly as the result of a
chase.
“Chase Dance” has been recorded by David Starobin on a Bridge Records
label - Newdance (Bridge 9084/Grammy nomination) and by Apostolos
Paraskevas on a Centaur Records label - Visions of Azure (CRC 2378)
Constitution
Article 91 (Concerto for flute and guitar in one movement).
The piece is quite demanding from a technical point of view and unfolds
many sonorities for both solo instruments as well as orchestra,
including dense texture, polyphony, and a flavor of
minimalism just before the end. After an agitated orchestra
introduction, the flute enters with a lamenting and painful
melody. The guitar then takes over and introduces some of the
core motivic elements of the work. Next, the flute and guitar
join in a chase -like duo with virtuosic passages in both instruments,
playing off the orchestra in a frenzied commotion. The slow
and almost distorted cadenza (with the snare drum) comes as a surprise
and, at the same time, as a moment of relief. The tension
increases as propulsive rhythms drive through the finale and build with
rapid agitation to the end.
The title of the work, Constitution Article 91, refers to a part of the
former Greek constitution used by the dictatorship between 1976 and
1974 to abolish democracy in Greece. Certain rhythms in the work
come from a fearsome and agitated speech that the dictator delivered to
the academicians in 1973 following the students movement against the
tyranny.
Lament
for the Balkans for guitar,
strings and mezzo soprano
Lament for the Balkans is a work which deals with the notion of
Death, an aspect that has intrigued and inspired me for the last ten
years with respect to my composition and performance.
The tragic situation of all wars in this world compels me as a creator
and performer to express feelings through my music. For this important
reason and with the hope that my music would be able to transfer a
message against war and to evoke feelings towards peace, I composed
Lament. As a composer,
I think that I have the obligation and, at the
same time, the right to fight using my weapons against any war that
causes violence, abandonment, and misery.
Night
Wanderings for Orchestra
"A night in Athens...
A lonely wandering in the nocturnal life of
one of the most ancient cities on earth...
A lonely wandering inside the darkness that
covers everything we want to avoid..."
Thus Mr. Paraskevas describes the influence on the composition of Night
Wanderings. Using his personal idiom as composer he wished to transfer
the distinctive Greek musical colors into what he considers his "most
Greek-influenced work thus far."
The score of Night Wanderings calls for the typical instrumental
forces of a classical orchestra, with the addition of piano and a great
variety of percussion, ranging from timpani (four), bongos, and tam-tam
to xylophone and sleigh bells.
The work is written in one movement, but one can clearly distinguish
the following three parts:
Part One starts with solo timpani, like a distant echo, in 5/8 time - a
rhythm which immediately becomes a persistent ostinato. The opening
slow section (A) leads to a fast dance, played primarily by the
woodwinds (B), only to subside again into a slow espressivo (C), with
rapid repetitive patterns on the flute. The fast dance (B) returns,
only this time gradually leading to the climax (D) which concludes the
first part.
After a short slow introduction to the second part, a solo clarinet
line, reminiscent of similar passages in folk songs of northern Greece,
soars above the rest of the orchestra.
The solo clarinet leads us to the third part, an energetic tutti, where
material from the previous parts are recapitulated. The final sonority
of the work, E-minor, is played staccato and sforzando by
the whole orchestra.
The 5/8 meter and the characteristic interval of the augmented second
(with its "exotic" connotations) permeate the whole piece, and they
suggest the influence of familiar rhythmic and modal patterns often
encountered in Greek traditional music. As the music evolves one is
encouraged to "wander" with the night colors and surprises of the music.
Night Wanderings was written during April and May of 1996 in
Boston. Its chamber version premiere was given in Athens in September
1996, with the Hellenic Contemporary Orchestra and Theodore Antoniou as
conductor. A year later, Lukas Foss presented the work in Boston
with the Boston University Symphony Orchestra in its orchestral version
and at Carnegie Hall with the National Festival Orchestra on January
14, 2001.
Eftychia Papanikolaou
Apostolos and Lukas Foss
Medford, MA 1992
In
Greece in 2001
St, Petersburg, 2005/Russia/composition
seminar



St, Petersburg, 2005/Russia/Jury/
Russian creative Union.
Award Ceremony, St. Petersburg
..and concert



V. Koslov, Miro and Oddveig Simic,
A. Paraskevas, G. Guillen
Invocation
the guitar introduces the evocative mood of the work, followed four
measures later by the oboe,
which with its characteristic sound, embraces
the guitar into a conversation and at the same time into an
invocation. the second theme, atmospheric, like an echo, reveals
a waiting status. the work, full of fast arpeggios and technical
difficulties for both instruments. gradually increases in dramatic
tension and complexity, and concludes with the initial idea. the
finale, simple, subtractive, allows a feeling of an unfulfilled
expectation.
Lamentation?
When I composed "Lamentation?" back in 1995, my main goal was to
portray elements of a tragedy (usually dealing with Death) with all
these idiosyncrasies which someone could find in certain
cultures. Always there is a point, in the sadness of the His
presence (Death), when people (especially in some cultures) need to
laugh at Him by means of dancing or saying jokes or even laugh out
loud; Here is where my “dance” comes to portray this aspect.
"Lamentation?" starts with a narrative and mournful way.
Melancholic would be a more sufficient characterization . The
dance which follows, is this specific element which keeps the balance
in certain devastating situations. The balance between sadness
and joy.
Characteristic lament sounds are the quarter tones and the existence of
a glissando chord which the performer realizes by playing and singing
at the same time.
For this work I did use thoughts and feelings derived form my home land
Greece which I tried to transfer with a direct and at the same time a
dynamic way for the performer.
(First Prize- advanced category- at the SKOA/Greece composition
competition, 1996)
Drawing
by Christos Mitsakis
Open
Up/Ephatha
This work of mine is a scream of faith. It is the Impossible,
possible. It is the needed effort for the realization of
something. It is the thought behind every success and every
failure. It is the extra step we took and succeeded or the one we
didn’t take and failed. In all my works since 1992 the aspect of
Death is the primarily energy and initiative energy in my musical
thought.
In Epphatha I try to offer to faith the first step and to myself a
chance for a salvation in this level of creation. The title of
the work comes to me from the St. Mark’s Gospel 7, 32-35 from where I
took most of the realization of the work.
Of course as a western educated composer I used material I found in
front of me in those years of exploration in the music world and I
didn’t conceive the work “under a tree”, an image that most of us maybe
had for creators over the years.
There are so many and so little a composer/creator can say for his/her
work. I will not challenge you with the many.
with Theodore Antoniou in
Corfu.Greece
Rhythm always gives me the drive for
continuation in this work. I utilize important elements from my
Greek heritage and personal elements as well when it comes to
form. That’s why my music takes its shape and develops itself via
a trip. It starts with optimism, moves to an impulse and
dizziness of the moment and soul’s nostalgia, the simplicity of the
youth, the pain and salvation of Death and again returns at this
optimistic feeling that was lost for a while.
The procedure of composing is very simple when I walk through it step
by step. Everything is so clear, ceremonial, related like a
pray. Whatever I offered I should receive back. Nothing
more.
This work is for my mother’s memory that returned to meet my father in
a better place.
There some people brought to him a
man who was deaf and could hardly talk, and they begged him to place
his hand on the man. After he took him aside, away from the
crowd, Jesus put his fingers into the man's ears. Then he spit and
touched the man's tongue. He looked up to heaven and with a deep
sigh said to him, "Ephphatha!" (which means, "Be opened!"
). At this, the man's ears were opened, his tongue was
loosened and he began to speak plainly.
St. Mark 7, 32-35
The
Daedalus and Ikaros Journey
Escape from here is what I’ll
do
in Cuba 1984/with Leo Brouwer
I have a plan I thought it through
The waves beneath us deadly
wild
In Cuba 1988
I’ll fly up high, it’s just the sky
That was a dreadful thing to say
To fly so high, you can’t survive.
Your wings, your soul and frozen
smile,
The sun will burn and you will die.
The Death you seek I am sure
you’ll get,
He’s there for you he won’t forget.
He will be fast and kind with you,
If He survived why not you too?
It’s time to go the sky gets blue
My mind will be so close to you
You can not scare me I have to try,
The time is right, let’s say
goodbye.
text by Apostolos Paraskevas
The music was originally set on the poem Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
Evening by Robert Frost. My teacher then, Lukas Foss asked me to
compose one song in order to be a part of one of his lectures at Boston
University ‘Words on Music”. When years later I decided to
publish the work I realized that the estate of the late R. Frost hated
the idea that someone (like me) could wreck the poem and sent me a
refusal letter. At that point I decided to write my own poem
(maybe my first one…) and use the familiar to me subject of the
Daedalus and Ikaros Journey to freedom.
After his arrival in Crete, Daedalus found that Minos would not let him
leave. He subsequently obtained wax and feathers and fashioned wings
for himself and his son Ikaros. With these they succeeded in flying
away, but Ikaros, flying too near to the sun, melted his wings, fell
into the sea near Crete, and drowned; Daedalus escaped to Italy. The
local King Kokalos drowned him in hot water.
Nadir
(1994) is written for
“prepared” guitar, a term usually associated with a piano in which
certain objects have been placed on the strings in order to alter the
conventional sound of the instrument. Many composers have written music
for “prepared” piano, among them John Cage, who, according to Mr.
Paraskevas, was the inspiration for his transferring of the same
technique to the guitar.
It is quite possible that nobody has used this
kind of technique on the guitar before. After experimenting with
various materials, he decided on the use of two metal paper clips,
which he puts at specific locations on the fingerboard, so that they
best produce the desired sound effect, a sound both harmonic and
percussive. Nadir suggests the lowest point, here associated with
the notion of death.
The piece bears many programmatic references to the struggle between
good and evil, life and death, musically portrayed in the persistent
ostinato rhythms and the fragmented melodic phrases. Death cuts through
in the form of an abrupt strike on the wood, the fingers continue to
play but no sound is heard, until two more strikes make their movement
stop. Little by little life and sound start again, but the final strike
brings about the pessimistic message that fate and death predominate in
the end. The piece ends with the inscription “...but sooner or later we
live forever” - a final optimistic touch.
Nadir was the outcome of continuous experimentation on the
capabilities of the guitar as an instrument, and all the potential
sound effects that one can draw from it.
Preparation of Nadir, in St.Petersburg/Russia - Lecture



Performing
Alex Kalogeras' Guitar Concerto
Conducting with Lukas Foss
Lukas Foss conductor
Chamber
Concerto for Strings -
If I Could I Would
Concerto for Strings was
premiered by Theodore Antoniou and the SOLISTI di PATRAS. One of my
few aleatoric/improvisatory pieces for orchestra based on specific
music material and deals with time as an important element of creation.
The conductor has a significant role as when the instruments start and
stop so no second performance is the same .



Sonetos
de Amor/Love works
These Sonetos were written in Boston in 1994.
at Athens Concert Hall - 1995
The
melodic aspect is the most important element in the work, where the
soprano is
constantly
in a
“love affair” with the solo violin. The violin in this work has a
very melodic part which serves as a second voice (contralto).
Two poems by Pablo Neruda where used, in a way to serve better the
voyage of his melodic writing. Counterpoint is quite evident in
the whole work.
The clarinet always dramatic, serves as a bridge between the
voice and the violin and of the rest instruments.
Sonetos de Amor are written for soprano, clarinet, percussion, harp,
violin, viola, cello and double-bass and won the first prize in the
Papaioanou Composition Competition in 1997 in Athens, Greece.
The premiere performance took place in the 1997 Corfu Music Festival
with Klaudia Delmer, mezzo soprano, Theodore Antoniou, conductor and
the Hellenic Music Ensemble.
with Alexandros Kalogeras in Boston 1993
The
Depressing
Aspect
When Peter Cokkinias asked me to write a
piece for the Berklee Clarinet Choir and specifically for nine
clarinets, I was surprised to hear that this croup existed at the first
place. Although I have written music for winds before, I never
had the opportunity to write for the whole family (almost) of
clarinets. The piece reflects the idiosyncrasies of Life and
Death which coexist in the same environment. For the last 10
years now I compose music which deals with the notion of Death.
Therefore this piece makes no exception to this rule.
The Depressing Aspect apparently is Death itself or I could
rather say Death himself! Always there is a point when in the
sadness of His presence people (especially in some cultures) need
to laugh at Death by means of dancing or saying jokes or even laugh out
loud. There is, where my “dance” comes to portray this
aspect. The piece from a technical point of view is quite
demanding for all nine of the clarinets. Based on two ostinato ideas
(presented in the beginning of the work) on where the piece takes its
material from. A second part comes attaca to explore the idea of
compound rhythms, and finally the return to the depressing feeling of
the introduction which brings to the listener the unwanted reality of
Death’s presence.
Escape
Some of the material used in this work comes from my First guitar
concerto which was composed and premiered in the Athens concert hall in
Athens /Greece in 1995. The idea to be able to reduce a whole
orchestra’s material to a single instrument always intrigued me and
inspired me. The title Escape is suggesting escape from
Death. It reflects the idiosyncrasies of Life and Death
which coexist in the same environment. Death needs Life to exist
but not vice versa! For the last 10 years now I compose music
which deals with the notion of Death. Therefore this piece makes no
exception to this rule.
"Escape" was premiered by Michael Nicolella in Western Washington
University in Bellingham, Washington, USA in 2001.
...tell my wife I love her...
The last words of a dying soldier. His last 5 minutes. A
lament full of love, beautiful memories and the eminent shadow of
Death. A simple melody unfolds onto a variation of agony and
ecstasy. The end comes closer and closer as the heart beat
accents and descents. Still the last beat says ...I
love you...
Lamentations are a eulogy to love not to death. We lament because
we love life. Death needs life to exist but not vice versa.
...Tell my Wife I love her..., was
a part of 13 Laments which were written by Berklee College composers
after a request of mine.
I thank all my esteemed colleagues for their time and talent they
devoted to compose for me these beautiful works for the memory of
love. I thank you for your trust and most of all I thank you for
your dedication to music it self.




VIDEO: with
Peter Cokkinias, conductor
performing at Berklee Performance Center
Apostolos and Lukas Foss in
Bridgehampton in July 2003
a day before the performance of
"Lament
for the Balkans"
Berklee Performance Center/2006

"Performing" 4':33" by John Cage
in Liechtenstein/2000


CARNEGIE HALL, NY 2002 WITH
LUKAS FOSS