I, for one, would love to hear or see this potential composition by Alistair. After hearing his Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Grieg (which I have praised in the past many times) I am anxious for more piano works.
Thank you. There have already been a few more piano works since that one (which seems a long time ago now!). There are two sonatas (nos. 4 & 5); 4 was premièred by Carlo Grante and played most recently by Jonathan Powell but 5 has not been performed yet. There's a set of six little pieces written for a young student;
Scottish Ballad (commissioned and first performed by Ronald Stevenson); a contribution to
A New Hexameron (six very short pieces by as many composers, again commissioned and played by Stevenson) entitled
Fantasia Crittogrammatica (the title almost as long as the piece!); a Rakhmaninov song transcription, Vocalise-Reminiscenza (also after Rakhmaninov, written for and premièred by Donna Amato who'd recorded the Grieg Variations), a 90-minute tribute to Sorabji entitled
Sequentia Claviensis (premièred by Jonathan Powell just over a year ago), a cadenza for Medtner's Third Piano Concerto and, most recently, a set of
Sieben Charakterstücke which opens with a piece called
Doktor Busoni and includes an
Étude for Elliott (as a tribute to Elliott Carter).
So, although I am not a pianist, I suppose that, over the years, I've concentrated more energies on the piano that any other medium and there are several other works that include it (two pieces for euphonium and piano, a cello sonata, some songs and
Variations for Piano and Orchestra, for example). Details are at
www.sorabji-archive.co.uk.
Best,
Alistair