Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs


Prelude, Fugue and Riffs is a "written-out" jazz-in-concert-hall composition composed by Leonard Bernstein for a jazz ensemble featuring solo clarinet.
The title points to the union of classical music and jazz: Prelude and Fugue - both baroque forms - are followed immediately without a pause by a series of "riffs", which is a jazz term for a repeated and short melodic figure.
It features:
Completed in 1949 for Woody Herman's big band as part of a series of commissioned works - that already included Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto - it was never performed by Herman, possibly because his orchestra had disbanded at that time.
Instead, it received its premiere as part of Bernstein's Omnibus television show, The World of Jazz on October 16, 1955, with Benny Goodman - Bernstein's Tanglewood neighbour and friend since the 1940s - as the soloist and to whom the work is now dedicated.
In 1952 Bernstein revised the score from its original instrumentation for a more conventional pit orchestra, and the work was then incorporated into a ballet sequence in the first draft of the musical comedy Wonderful Town. The revised version of Prelude, Fugue and Riffs did not survive and the majority of the music was cut from the final version of the Wonderful Town score with the exception of a few phrases in the musical's numbers "Conquering the City" and "Conversation Piece".
It later was transcribed for clarinet and orchestra by Lukas Foss.

Discography

Recordings by Leonard Bernstein
Recording of big band version
Recordings available on CD