Reception
The music critic Anne Midgette of the Washington Post lauded the piece as "wide-ranging, appealing, breathtakingly virtuosic, sophisticated enough to appeal to an audience of classical aficionados, and approachable enough to appeal to people who have never been to an orchestra concert." John von Rhein also praised the piece in the Chicago Tribune calling it a "terrific contemporary score." Rhein continued:A 25-minute percussion concerto written for Wednesday's soloist, the young Austrian percussion whizbang, Martin Grubinger (who premiered it in Hamburg in 2007), its three movements purport to be "imaginary snapshots" of the primordial land masses that supposedly broke off from the continent of Pangaea – "Indoafrica," "Eurasia" and "The Americas" are the movement titles. The listener requires no such programmatic crutch to appreciate what this colorful, high-energy showpiece is about: two furious fast movements surrounding a slow, lyrical movement, moshing together grunge rock, Afro-Cuban jazz, ethnic, swing, blues and other popular musical impulses in a way that appears perfectly natural rather than simple-minded pastiche.In 2014, Simone Rubino won the
Recordings
In 2018 a commercial recording of 'Frozen in Time' was released by Sony Music Entertainment Germany, GmbH. It features Christoph Siezten with the Romanian National Symphony Orchestra conducted by Cristian Mandeal.References
External links
* {{cite web , url=http://www.musicsalesclassical.com/composer/work/36023 , title=Frozen in Time (2007) , access-date=2019-11-17 , publisher=Music Sales Classical Dorman 2007 compositions 21st-century classical music