Pervertimento for Bagpipes, Bicycle and Balloons

Pervertimento for Bagpipes, Bicycle and Balloons

"Pervertimento for Bagpipes, Bicycle and Balloons" is a satirical work authored by Peter Schickele under the pseudonym P.D.Q. Bach, whose works and life Schickele purports to study. It is a concerto for orchestra, featuring the aforementioned bagpipes, bicycle and balloons as musical instruments.

Description

In Schickele's own words during the introduction, "The title, "Pervertimento" is... not P.D.Q. Bach's own. As a matter of fact, it was not so much a title as an opinion of the people who first played it". The piece incorporates several unconventional instruments, and in some cases non-instruments.

The bagpipes player uses three radically different incarnations of the instrument; first, the chanter is removed from the bagpipes and played similar to an oboe or clarinet. "The tone, though jarring, is not altogether unexpected" in the words of the dust jacket for the original LP. In the subsequent movement, a "practice bagpipes" with the drones removed and the chanter muffled is used. In the final movement, the full bagpipes are employed.

Balloons are rubbed and popped through the majority of the piece. For the final chord, three helium baloons, attached to pitchpipes, are released from the percussion section behind the orchestra. The bicycle is "played" first as a percussion instrument using playing cards in the spokes, then by blowing through the handlebars similar to a trumpet, and finally using pedal power to drive a rotary whistle.

Recordings

The work was first performed at Carnegie Hall and recorded live on the album "".


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