Free and Easy Wanderer
About this Piece
Peter Lieberson (b. 1946) composed Free and Easy Wanderer in 1998 on a commission from the Aldeburgh Foundation and the London Sinfonietta. He has written the following note about it.
"I like to have the title of a piece in hand before I start to compose. My wife Lorraine light-heartedly suggested Free and Easy Wanderer. This term is a loose translation of a Chinese herbal supplement I was taking at the time. I thought, 'Why not?' and in fact began composing in the spirit of those words. Free and Easy Wanderer is a short piece based on the simplest of ideas: an opening chord in the piano and bells that provides the intervallic and harmonic stuff of the piece, and a motif in the clarinet which generates rhythmic impetus. Phrases and sections of the music arise and dissolve with transformations of the chord and motif. 'Free' and 'easy' suggested to me the qualities of water: water will flow in the most casual, sparkling way in a brook, or it can swiftly rage forward in rapids, quickly coming to rest again in the next section of river. Water 'wanders' as a river winds through the countryside, yet it carves its way through the landscape in a definite pattern. I dedicated this new piece for the London Sinfonietta to my friend of many years, Oliver Knussen."