One Sheet

Brooke Joyce’s music has been described as “exceptionally gripping” by the Los Angeles Times and “vividly pictorial” by the San Francisco Chronicle. His debut CD, Waves of Stone, draws inspiration from a wide variety of sources: from his Midwestern home to ancient Chinese philosophy to his pet dog. With lyricism, humor and captivating rhythmic drive this is dramatic music that grabs you by the scruff and doesn’t let go until the story has been told. 

Six Degrees of Separation, an exuberant, virtuosic study in rhythm and color for six instruments, begins the CD with a jolt of energy. 

dark waters, for cello and piano, was inspired by the music of late-period Liszt, the paintings of Mark Rothko, and the experience of canoeing on a mist-enshrouded lake. 

In Three Iowa Ballads, Joyce draws on the pioneer experience in three divergent tales, spinning spare folk melodies into driving, dramatic explosions of sound. 

Come up from the fields, father is a lyrical and dramatic setting of one of Walt Whitman’s epic Civil War poems that recalls the devastating effects of war on the home front. 

The title track of the CD, Waves of Stone, unites the disparate realms of traditional Chinese philosophy and Western music into a complex sound world for piano, 4-hands. 

The disc ends with toydogmusic, a wild romp shared between toy piano and piccolo, evoking the joyful and fearless spirit of Joyce’s beloved family pug, Roland. 

Brooke Joyce teaches composition at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, and is on the summer faculty for The Walden School and the Lutheran Summer Music Academy. Waves of Stone spans fifteen years of composition and introduces listeners to his vivid and rich sound world.