Jointly commissioned by the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Tanglewood Music Center, with generous support from the Harriett Eckstein New Commissions Fund. First performed on 15th July 2019 at Tanglewood Summer Music Festival, MA, by the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra conducted by Killian Farrell.

  • 3.3(ca).3(Ebcl).2+cbn/4.3.2+btbn.1/timp.3perc/hp.pf/str
  • 12 min

Programme Note

Scored for a large orchestra (triple winds, three percussionists, piano, harp, and strings), Limina is a single movement of about 12 minutes’ length. Its energy, nuance, and multi-levelled activity require a high level of virtuosity and cohesion among the players.

“Limina” signifies “thresholds,” a point at which one state becomes another; in Grime’s piece the thresholds are between musical ideas representing expressive states. The idea of shifting states was suggested by a chapter in the Norwegian author Tarjei Vesaas’s 1963 novel The Ice Palace, which describes a young girl’s emotions as she moves between chambers within a frozen waterfall. Although some of Grime’s previous works have links to imagery or literary ideas, Limina’s connection to Vesaas’s narrative was unusually explicit and direct; the various chambers and the girl’s corresponding emotions determined the episodic structure of Grime’s piece. In spite of this specificity, once Grime was fully involved with the piece, purely musical, compositional concerns became the focus. Although there are a few clear shifts, these musical states are frequently layered and dovetailed with one another, leaving the listener balanced, as it were, right on that liminal boundary. The overlapping of larger ideas and small rhythmic variations among similar parts “blurs” the impact of any expressive state, paralleling the girl’s unsettled blend fear, joy, and confusion. The music also contrasts the girl’s physical fragility with the dispassionate strength and coldness of the ice.

Limina’s opening, marked “Bright, icy,” has a deliberately cold, somewhat off-putting character. This passage develops in increasingly complex waves, filling out the orchestra — shimmering, suspended strings with vibraphone, a glittering, rising figure in high woodwinds, a fragmented chorale in brass. The arpeggiated figure played by three solo violins signals a recurrent dream state. A warming, humanizing element appears with the expansion of the strings into the bass register; the various layers come into clearer focus with definite pulse and distinct melodic lines. Increasing density and intensity leads to a big sustained chord starting the final episode, marked “Ecstatic and tender.” The once-obscured chorale for winds comes to the foreground, but this is still interrupted by the strings’ breathless textures, as though it’s unwilling to take on the full burden of conclusion.

Programme note © 2019 Robert Kirzinger

Scores

Reviews

...a brilliant evocation of a beautiful frozen world.... Though the landscape is frozen, the emotional world becomes increasingly heated, as a young girl roams through ice-caves in search of her lost friend. The airy, bejewelled sounds of the opening, disturbed only by a tremor of foreboding in the bass drum, became increasingly freighted with anxiety. After a desperate climax, the music subsided to an unexpectedly roseate glow, with three solo violins entwined in uneasy communion. Was this a resolution or the prelude to more terror? It was hard to say.

Ivan Hewett, The Telegraph
30th October 2021
A richly layered work inspired by a scene in Tarjei Vesaas’s novel “The Ice Palace,” the piece shimmers with a duly icy radiance and then slowly morphs in texture — “Limina” means thresholds — hovering suggestively between moments of opacity and transparency.
Jeremy Eichler, Boston Globe
28th February 2020
The title refers to “thresholds”—borderlines between successive states, an idea suggested by her reading a 1963 novel, The Ice Palace, by the Norwegian author Tarjei Vesaas. The work is a long, gradual arch in form, building from an opening marked “Bright” to a monumentally dense climax, then relaxing to a close marked Ecstatic and tender at a pianissimo dynamic. The principal materials going into this long rise and descent, in terms of texture and dynamics, are long-held complex chords sustained by specific families of instruments (beginning with two-fold violas and cellos) over which the upper woodwinds undertake virtuosic flurries of rapidly moving figures in echoing statements.... The sense of power, even at a low dynamic, continues to the tender ending.
Steven Leadbetter, The Boston Musical Intelligencer
24th July 2019
...a thirteen-minute depiction of “thresholds” between various expressive states. The densely orchestrated score for large ensemble produced a range of sonorities, from forbidding to caressing, but these fearless musicians met its awesome technical demands with aplomb. Irish conducting fellow Killian Farrell directed a stunningly virtuosic performance.
Michael J. Moran, In the Spotlight
15th July 2019