Notes for The Same Stream: The Inaugural Recordings
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Thomas LaVoy
A Child’s Requiem
GIA Publications G-8797
Piano: Corey Everly
Soprano: Emily Johnston
Movement VI: Lux Aeterna
GIA Publications (G-8797)
Lux aeterna is the sixth movement of a larger work, A Child's Requiem, which was commissioned by the Marquette Symphony Orchestra to mark the 100th anniversary of the Italian Hall disaster. On Christmas Eve of 1913 in Calumet, Michigan, a man shouted “Fire!” in the crowded Italian Hall, causing a stampede that would leave 73 innocent people, the vast majority of them young children, dead on the stairs leading down to the street below. This terrible event was a catalyst for great change in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and in the broader context of the American labor movements of the early 20th century.
Photographs from the day of the funeral procession show thousands of people in mourning, lining the snowy streets of a bustling metropolis that in recent years has become a shadow of its former self. Lux aeterna most closely resembles this moment; when a community came together to mourn and utter their collective supplication to God to grant eternal rest and light to the deceased.
Text for Lux aeterna:
Lux aeterna luceat eis, Domine, cum sanctis tuis in aeternum, quia pius es.
Let everlasting light shine on them, Lord, with your saints in eternity, for you are merciful.
Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis.
Eternal rest grand them, Lord, and my perpetual light shine on them.
- Latin, from the Requiem Mass
A Child’s Requiem
GIA Publications G-8797
Piano: Corey Everly
Soprano: Emily Johnston
Movement VI: Lux Aeterna
GIA Publications (G-8797)
Lux aeterna is the sixth movement of a larger work, A Child's Requiem, which was commissioned by the Marquette Symphony Orchestra to mark the 100th anniversary of the Italian Hall disaster. On Christmas Eve of 1913 in Calumet, Michigan, a man shouted “Fire!” in the crowded Italian Hall, causing a stampede that would leave 73 innocent people, the vast majority of them young children, dead on the stairs leading down to the street below. This terrible event was a catalyst for great change in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and in the broader context of the American labor movements of the early 20th century.
Photographs from the day of the funeral procession show thousands of people in mourning, lining the snowy streets of a bustling metropolis that in recent years has become a shadow of its former self. Lux aeterna most closely resembles this moment; when a community came together to mourn and utter their collective supplication to God to grant eternal rest and light to the deceased.
Text for Lux aeterna:
Lux aeterna luceat eis, Domine, cum sanctis tuis in aeternum, quia pius es.
Let everlasting light shine on them, Lord, with your saints in eternity, for you are merciful.
Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis.
Eternal rest grand them, Lord, and my perpetual light shine on them.
- Latin, from the Requiem Mass
Cortlandt Matthews
Sine Paententia
Soprano: Emily Johnston
Tenor: David Lawn
GIA Publications (G-8815)
I composed this setting in my final weeks of study at Westminster Choir College. The Latin text (Sine paenitentia enim sunt dona et vocatio Dei) translates roughly to, "Truly, without regret are the gifts and callings of God." Many of the colors and textures found within this piece were influenced by my experience singing with the Westminster Williamson Voices for two years. While this setting allows shades of doubt to creep in, all uncertainty and fear is dispelled upon singing, "sunt dona et vocatio Dei."
Sine Paententia
Soprano: Emily Johnston
Tenor: David Lawn
GIA Publications (G-8815)
I composed this setting in my final weeks of study at Westminster Choir College. The Latin text (Sine paenitentia enim sunt dona et vocatio Dei) translates roughly to, "Truly, without regret are the gifts and callings of God." Many of the colors and textures found within this piece were influenced by my experience singing with the Westminster Williamson Voices for two years. While this setting allows shades of doubt to creep in, all uncertainty and fear is dispelled upon singing, "sunt dona et vocatio Dei."
Kile Smith
The Consolation of Apollo
7. The Star Shines
(Recorded with permission of the Composer. Scores available directly from the composer: Kilesmith.com)
The Consolation of Apollo, SATB, Crotales, Bass Drum, 35′
Crotales: Charles Hartung
Bass Drum: Joel Michalchuk
Commissioned by Eric Owens for The Crossing, Donald Nally, conductor, The Consolation of Apollo premieres at Princeton University, Wolfensohn Hall, on October 10th and 11th, 2014, and at The Church of the Holy Trinity, Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, on October 12th.
When he approached me with the idea that became The Consolation of Apollo, The Crossing’s conductor Donald Nally had been looking for a companion piece to David Lang’s The Little Match Girl Passion. They had been performing it since it won the Pulitzer Prize in 2008, and were looking for a work, that, with the Lang, would comprise an evening’s concert. So, along with an otherwise unaccompanied chorus I used some of the percussion and, significantly, the context of Christmas from the Lang work.
The spine of Apollo is Nally’s vision for some use of the 1968 Christmas Eve broadcast by the crew of Apollo 8, as they became the first astronauts to leave Earth’s orbit, circle the moon, and photograph the entire Earth. With the transcript of their communications I interspersed selections from The Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius (480–524).
Philosopher, Christian apologist, and translator of Aristotle, Boethius was one of the greatest thinkers and authors prior to the Middle Ages, combining Classical thought and theology. In the Consolation he considers good and evil, our place in creation and on fortune’s wheel, and, at times, Apollo (Phœbus), the mythical charioteer of the sun. A consul to the Ostrogoth Emperor Theodoric, he wrote this while imprisoned by Theodoric, who suspected him of treason, as Boethius attempted to improve relationships with Constantinople. Boethius was executed shortly after completing the Consolation.
The Consolation is not overtly Christian and mentions God, as a higher power, only briefly. In this it is a cousin to the Seneca texts I set in The Waking Sun, also composed for The Crossing. In my selections from Boethius, I attempted to highlight his appreciation of myth, but also his judgment of it as inadequate. The compelling translation/adaptation attributed to King Alfred has the rhythmic and imaginative power of Beowulf. It and the lyrical James and Cooper translations provide textured counterpoint to the Apollo 8 transmissions.
That 1968 Christmas Eve television broadcast famously (and in some quarters, infamously) included the recitation by the astronauts of the first ten verses of Genesis, “In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth….” This text is mixed together with the prosaic chatter among the crew and Houston as they position the craft for what are now the iconic photos of Earth.
The setting of the prose was the tallest musical hurdle for me, as I wanted to convey the informal, even chaotic quality of the speech without sacrificing lyricism. The model that offered a solution was the sung Passion, where three singers of different ranges portray Christ, the narrator, and the crowd. I assigned Commander Frank Borman to the basses, Command Module Pilot James Lovell to the tenors, and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders to the altos. Astronaut Ken Mattingly, on the support team in Houston, is voiced together by the altos, tenors, and basses.
The distance and low-quality sound of the transmission was something I wished to approximate. I was unwilling to use percussion for this purpose mainly because of the length of the text, as percussion quickly tires the ears. After rejecting some vocal techniques, I decided to employ the sopranos in a halo of pre- and post-echoes of the lower three voices.
In the Genesis reading the lower three sometimes switch this sonic role with the sopranos. Again, a hurdle in Genesis 1 is the length of a not obviously musical text. One technique I used—interesting to me, anyway, as I don’t believe I’ve used it before—is bitonality, or the sounding of two tonal centers at the same time, the idea coming from the description of God’s dividing the light from darkness, and the firmament from the waters. At one point the women are in one key, the men in another; or I combine the sopranos and basses in one key, and the altos and tenors in another.
The bass drum drives the rhythm here and there, and the crotales are mostly simple—even simplistic—bell-like heralds of the astronauts, resolving into an evocation of the sincerest of wishes for a Merry Christmas for all. This, I believe, is the emotional center of the piece.
7. The stars shine
Consolation, Book 3, Song 1, trans. W. V. Cooper, 1902
The stars shine with more pleasing grace when a storm has ceased to roar and pour down rain. After the morning star has dispersed the shades of night, the day in all its beauty drives its rosy chariot forth. So thou hast looked upon false happiness first; now draw thy neck from under her yoke: so shall true happiness come into thy soul.
The Consolation of Apollo
7. The Star Shines
(Recorded with permission of the Composer. Scores available directly from the composer: Kilesmith.com)
The Consolation of Apollo, SATB, Crotales, Bass Drum, 35′
Crotales: Charles Hartung
Bass Drum: Joel Michalchuk
Commissioned by Eric Owens for The Crossing, Donald Nally, conductor, The Consolation of Apollo premieres at Princeton University, Wolfensohn Hall, on October 10th and 11th, 2014, and at The Church of the Holy Trinity, Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, on October 12th.
When he approached me with the idea that became The Consolation of Apollo, The Crossing’s conductor Donald Nally had been looking for a companion piece to David Lang’s The Little Match Girl Passion. They had been performing it since it won the Pulitzer Prize in 2008, and were looking for a work, that, with the Lang, would comprise an evening’s concert. So, along with an otherwise unaccompanied chorus I used some of the percussion and, significantly, the context of Christmas from the Lang work.
The spine of Apollo is Nally’s vision for some use of the 1968 Christmas Eve broadcast by the crew of Apollo 8, as they became the first astronauts to leave Earth’s orbit, circle the moon, and photograph the entire Earth. With the transcript of their communications I interspersed selections from The Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius (480–524).
Philosopher, Christian apologist, and translator of Aristotle, Boethius was one of the greatest thinkers and authors prior to the Middle Ages, combining Classical thought and theology. In the Consolation he considers good and evil, our place in creation and on fortune’s wheel, and, at times, Apollo (Phœbus), the mythical charioteer of the sun. A consul to the Ostrogoth Emperor Theodoric, he wrote this while imprisoned by Theodoric, who suspected him of treason, as Boethius attempted to improve relationships with Constantinople. Boethius was executed shortly after completing the Consolation.
The Consolation is not overtly Christian and mentions God, as a higher power, only briefly. In this it is a cousin to the Seneca texts I set in The Waking Sun, also composed for The Crossing. In my selections from Boethius, I attempted to highlight his appreciation of myth, but also his judgment of it as inadequate. The compelling translation/adaptation attributed to King Alfred has the rhythmic and imaginative power of Beowulf. It and the lyrical James and Cooper translations provide textured counterpoint to the Apollo 8 transmissions.
That 1968 Christmas Eve television broadcast famously (and in some quarters, infamously) included the recitation by the astronauts of the first ten verses of Genesis, “In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth….” This text is mixed together with the prosaic chatter among the crew and Houston as they position the craft for what are now the iconic photos of Earth.
The setting of the prose was the tallest musical hurdle for me, as I wanted to convey the informal, even chaotic quality of the speech without sacrificing lyricism. The model that offered a solution was the sung Passion, where three singers of different ranges portray Christ, the narrator, and the crowd. I assigned Commander Frank Borman to the basses, Command Module Pilot James Lovell to the tenors, and Lunar Module Pilot William Anders to the altos. Astronaut Ken Mattingly, on the support team in Houston, is voiced together by the altos, tenors, and basses.
The distance and low-quality sound of the transmission was something I wished to approximate. I was unwilling to use percussion for this purpose mainly because of the length of the text, as percussion quickly tires the ears. After rejecting some vocal techniques, I decided to employ the sopranos in a halo of pre- and post-echoes of the lower three voices.
In the Genesis reading the lower three sometimes switch this sonic role with the sopranos. Again, a hurdle in Genesis 1 is the length of a not obviously musical text. One technique I used—interesting to me, anyway, as I don’t believe I’ve used it before—is bitonality, or the sounding of two tonal centers at the same time, the idea coming from the description of God’s dividing the light from darkness, and the firmament from the waters. At one point the women are in one key, the men in another; or I combine the sopranos and basses in one key, and the altos and tenors in another.
The bass drum drives the rhythm here and there, and the crotales are mostly simple—even simplistic—bell-like heralds of the astronauts, resolving into an evocation of the sincerest of wishes for a Merry Christmas for all. This, I believe, is the emotional center of the piece.
7. The stars shine
Consolation, Book 3, Song 1, trans. W. V. Cooper, 1902
The stars shine with more pleasing grace when a storm has ceased to roar and pour down rain. After the morning star has dispersed the shades of night, the day in all its beauty drives its rosy chariot forth. So thou hast looked upon false happiness first; now draw thy neck from under her yoke: so shall true happiness come into thy soul.
Thomas LaVoy
The Same Stream
GIA Publications (G-9035)
I have recently been incredibly inspired by the writings of the great Bengali mystic Rabindranath Tagore, whose monumental collection of poetry Gitanjali won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. Tagore's poetry introduces the reader to a new awareness of the world that surrounds us, deepening the connection between nature and the human spirit that we all yearn for. Verse 69 is particularly joyful and life-affirming, an ecstatic realization of the energies that move in ceaseless ebb and flow through us, our lives, and our natural environment.
It seemed a natural course of events that this piece should become the namesake of The Same Stream choir. The musicians who are a part of this ensemble understand the undercurrent of Tagore's writing in a very intuitive and natural way, perhaps even more than they know. In addition, the leadership of James Jordan, who himself acts as a prism for the focusing of same energies that Tagore writes about, has been essential to the voice of the choir.
Text for The Same Stream:
The same stream of life that runs through my veins night and day runs through the world and dances in rhythmic measures.
It is the same life that shoots in joy through the dust of the earth in numberless blades of grass and breaks into tumultuous waves of leaves and flowers.
It is the same life that is rocked in the ocean-cradle of birth and of death, in ebb and in flow.
I feel my limbs are made glorious by the touch of this world of life. And my pride is from the life-throb of ages dancing in my blood this moment.
- Rabindranath Tagore, 1861-1941
"Stream of Life," verse 69 from Gitanjali, 1912
The Same Stream
GIA Publications (G-9035)
I have recently been incredibly inspired by the writings of the great Bengali mystic Rabindranath Tagore, whose monumental collection of poetry Gitanjali won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1913. Tagore's poetry introduces the reader to a new awareness of the world that surrounds us, deepening the connection between nature and the human spirit that we all yearn for. Verse 69 is particularly joyful and life-affirming, an ecstatic realization of the energies that move in ceaseless ebb and flow through us, our lives, and our natural environment.
It seemed a natural course of events that this piece should become the namesake of The Same Stream choir. The musicians who are a part of this ensemble understand the undercurrent of Tagore's writing in a very intuitive and natural way, perhaps even more than they know. In addition, the leadership of James Jordan, who himself acts as a prism for the focusing of same energies that Tagore writes about, has been essential to the voice of the choir.
Text for The Same Stream:
The same stream of life that runs through my veins night and day runs through the world and dances in rhythmic measures.
It is the same life that shoots in joy through the dust of the earth in numberless blades of grass and breaks into tumultuous waves of leaves and flowers.
It is the same life that is rocked in the ocean-cradle of birth and of death, in ebb and in flow.
I feel my limbs are made glorious by the touch of this world of life. And my pride is from the life-throb of ages dancing in my blood this moment.
- Rabindranath Tagore, 1861-1941
"Stream of Life," verse 69 from Gitanjali, 1912