top of page
Tyler Harrison_edited.jpg

Tyler Harrison

A new concerto for soprano saxophone and wind ensemble coming May 2026 with Dr. Todd Nichols and the Eastern Wind Symphony! Premiering on their 30th Season Anniversary, this will be a tour de force for soprano saxophone.

If you are interested in joining the consortium, please contact me through the link below.

"Nick May and I first collaborated on my saxophone sonata, Through Every Closet Door, completed in May 2024. Nick proceeded to play this incredibly difficult sonata all over the US, and I realized then I could not have asked for a better collaborator, champion, and friend. After the sonata, we began to chat about a concerto, which was the impetus for this project

In creating this concerto, my sole aim was to compose one of the most difficult concertos for soprano saxophone in the repertoire to put Nick’s exceptional virtuosity on fervid display. My music is difficult and complex, and it fits Nick’s playing like a glove. At every turn, he rises to the challenge. When many players would tell me no, he tells me yes. This concerto would not exist without him.

My concerto is in a four-movement form played attacca without interruption. The slow first movement was written in Montana, a beautiful home atop a mountain in Utah, and on Fire Island in New York. The view of the sunsets over the Great Salt Lake and the bay on Fire Island inspired the opening percussion section, which depicts light reflecting on the ocean and the lake at sunrise and sunset. The movement is slow and melodic, much like the rolling mountains that inspired it. It introduces the main theme and several related motives that are the key foundations of the concerto.

The second movement was written in a home in Brentwood, Maryland, which is right on the border of Washington, DC. The movement is gritty and energetic, and it is a true reflection of the energy and stress of city life. The climactic point pins the soloist against the other soprano saxophone in the wind ensemble, and later, against all the saxophones in the ensemble. The screams of saxophones and brass fade, ushering in the next movement.

The third movement is a cadenza in four parts: the fast opening, a trio with the saxophones in the ensemble, a slow section, and a transition into the finale. The opening phases out the themes from the second movement, followed by a restatement of the main theme in the form of a trio. The tops two voices of the trio are a canon at the unison, while the bottom voice is the theme in prolation. The slow section offers a final reprieve in the texture, before transitioning into the fast finale.

The finale is a five-part rondo (ABACA). Each A section is varied, while the C section is a loose inversion of the B section. The movement goes between Bb minor and B minor. It begins and ends with the introductory scalar motives that are frequently present throughout the movement, representing the feeling of the wind on a beach or in the mountains. The work ends with a high C# / C in the saxophone and a triumphant Bb major chord, leaving the soloist to sing out after the cadence."

bottom of page