Gargoyles for piano, Op. 29

Gargoyles, Op. 29, a four-movement suite for solo piano written by the American composer Lowell Liebermann in 1989, was commissioned by the Tcherepnin Society for the pianist Eric Himy, who played its world premiere that October 14 at Alice Tully Hall in New York City. The score exemplifies Liebermann’s accessible yet technically rigorous and intellectually challenging modernist style, in which tonal harmony and expressive gestures grounded in tradition coexist with avant-garde procedures. The piece has become one of Liebermann’s most popular efforts, receiving more than ten recordings. Many cathedral gargoyles portray grotesque faces with great humor, and Liebermann intends precisely that in his pieces, which have the mordant wit of Serge Prokofiev's "bad boy" style in their ancestry. The

Gargoyles for piano, Op. 29

Gargoyles, Op. 29, a four-movement suite for solo piano written by the American composer Lowell Liebermann in 1989, was commissioned by the Tcherepnin Society for the pianist Eric Himy, who played its world premiere that October 14 at Alice Tully Hall in New York City. The score exemplifies Liebermann’s accessible yet technically rigorous and intellectually challenging modernist style, in which tonal harmony and expressive gestures grounded in tradition coexist with avant-garde procedures. The piece has become one of Liebermann’s most popular efforts, receiving more than ten recordings. Many cathedral gargoyles portray grotesque faces with great humor, and Liebermann intends precisely that in his pieces, which have the mordant wit of Serge Prokofiev's "bad boy" style in their ancestry. The