Carl Sandburg once wrote that “Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance.” So, too, with these poems where, in conjunction with their vivid surface imagery, deeper meanings, echoes from the depths, emerged in the search for how love’s warmth, remembrance, and longing can intertwine. Those themes and others shaped my compositional approach.
Delineating both surface and deeper meanings within the music largely involved text painting, a process that determined structure, harmony, melody, rhythm, and so on. For a few examples, notice the sweep of the piano and strings at the beginning of “You Remember” (“The sunset swept to the valley’s west”). In both “You Remember” and “Some I Keep,” polyphony and counterpoint suggest the intertwining and recapitulation of memories that persist, sometimes even beyond death itself. In the first poem of “A Face I Know,” the strings alternate between two chords to mirror “the lungs of the earth” breathing in and out; in the second poem, the piano figurations sometimes signify raindrops, especially notable at the end as the chorus sings, “And the peace of long warm rain.” The harmonic language is modern and sometimes complex, employing extended chords, polychords and some jazz-based sonorities. The piano part is at times virtuosic. Vocal ranges are: Soprano: Bb3 to B5; Alto: G3 to D#5; Tenor: Bb2 to G#4; Bass: Db2 to Db4. The choral part is replete with divisi. Total performance time is ≈17 minutes. The work was premiered 9/26/2022 by the Utah Chamber Artists.
These poems, the music, and their attendant echoes and shadows are offered as a framework for insights into the human and timeless themes of love, longing, and memory.