Program Notes
Program Notes
Introduction
The main purpose of this work is to provide program notes for all
my compositions, or, to be precise, all those I consider worthy of
retention. Others not mentioned here have been withdrawn, and I do
not wish them to be performed. I have not provided details here
for the theatrical works in the Patria cycle, but have merely
listed them in the order in which they were composed. They have
been discussed in detail in the book Patria: The Complete Cycle
(Coach House Books, Toronto, 2002).
The works are listed chronologically by the year in which they
were composed or completed. An index will list the works
alphabetically giving the number of each work for easy reference.
In an appendix, I will provide a list of errata in all published
scores, at least those errors that performances have revealed to
date.
I am frequently asked by performers and publicists to provide
program notes to my works. Some works have notes in the scores,
others do not. In this catalogue I shall say something about each
work, so that the collection as a whole could be taken as an
evolution of my thinking as a composer.
A word of warning. I am not always careful about bibliographical
details such as dates of composition or performance. This
information is presumably accurate in Stephen Adams biography up
to 1981, when the book went to press.1 One might expect this list
to have been updated by some ambitious doctoral candidate at one
of the Canadian beaneries, but these students are evidently
applying their talents to more glittering projects.
See: Stephen Adams, R. Murray Schafer, Canadian Composers 4,
University of Toronto Press, 1983, Appendix 1 Compositions of R.
Murray Schafer.
1
83
Four-Forty 107
From the Tibetan Book of the Dead 23
Gamelan 49
A Garden of Bells 62
The Garden of the Heart 55
The Geography of Eros 15
Gita 20
Gitanjali 84
Hear Me Out 50
Hymn to Night 43
Imagining Incense 111
In Memoriam Alberto Guerrero 8
Isfahan 123
Jonah 48
Kinderlieder 6
Ko wo kiku 67
Letters from Mignon 65
Loving 17
Lustro 33
Magic Songs 78
Manitou 93
A Medieval Bestiary 97
Minimusic 25
Miniwanka 32
Minnelieder 5, 71
Music for the Morning of the World 29, 33
Music for Wilderness Lake 52
A Music Lesson 2
Musique pour le parc Lafontaine 86
No Longer than Ten (10) Minutes 27
North/White 38
Okeanos 31
Once on a Windy Night 95
Partita for String Orchestra 11
Patria No. 1, Wolfman 39
Patria: The Epilogue: And Wolf Shall Inherit the Moon
4
117
Polytonality 1
Protest and Incarceration 9
Psalm 34
Rain Chant 112
Requiems for the Party Girl 18
Scorpius 82
Seventeen Haiku 103
Shadowman 109
Six Songs from Rilkes Book of Hours 124
Snowforms 61
Sonatina for Flute and Harpsichord (or Piano) 7
Son of Heldenleben 22
The Star Princess and the Waterlilies 66
Statement in Blue 16
String Quartet No. 1 26
String Quartet No. 2 (Waves) 40
String Quartet No. 3 57
String Quartet No. 4 79
String Quartet No. 5 (Rosalind) 80
String Quartet No. 6 (Parting Wild Horses Mane)
String Quartet No. 7 104
String Quartet No. 8 110
String Quartet No. 9 119
String Quartet No. 10 (Winter Birds) 121
Sun 58
Sun Father, Earth Mother 64
Tantrika 70
Tanzlied 118
La Testa dAdriane 45
Theseus 60
Thunder: Perfect Mind 115
Three Contemporaries 4
Three Songs from the Enchanted Forest 91
Threnody 19
Train 41
Trio for Violin, Viola and Cello 125
5
89
14
1.
4.
My friend, the flutist Bob Aitken, was only nineteen when I wrote
this little sonatina for him, but he was not the first to perform
it. The first performance took place in London in 1959, while I
was living there. I remember the harpsichordist very well. Celia
10
Protest and Incarceration, 1960; 13 min; 2 songs, mezzosoprano and orch; ms.
11
Curse it with fire and brimstone for the savage beast that it
bore,
The beast that would overthrow the world with his horns!
Now you must grow, my voice, little by little,
Like the spring grass, in volume increasing
As down the mountainside it falls.
Swell out of the forest,
Swell from the felled woods,
Grow out of the deserted villages,
Grow out of the ruins,
Grow from the depths of dungeons,
Where all that still lives is about to die!
INCARCERATION
Sunday... Tuesday... Friday...
Empty days, without form...
A great fog over the landscape...
I stand in time, terribly naked,
My soul in liquid eternity,
like an atoll in an ocean, beaten by waves...
Tuesday... Monday... What day is it?
My week is dead amassment,
My months pass through no calendar,
Sunday... The devil take you!
Stinking days! Stagnant days!
Here in the jaws of eternity, who shall count...
10. Brbeuf, 1961; cantata for baritone and orch; Arcana.
St. Jean de Brbeuf, the first missionary among the Hurons, came
to Canada in 1625. He spent a winter in the woods with tribes near
Qubec City and the following spring he paddled up the long
waterway to establish his mission on Georgian Bay, Lake Huron. He
was martyred there in 1649 by the Iroquois.
In constructing the libretto I drew on Brbeufs own account of
his voyage up the St. Lawrence to establish his second Huron
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14
17
19
During my next visit to Montreal I saw what Pierre had done. There
were some beautiful scenes and experimental effects little-known
in television at the time. But the work was only about forty-five
minutes long. Nearly half an hour of music had been omitted. When
the work was shown on the English network of the CBC I was asked
to introduce it and speak about Pierre. Neither then nor until now
was the complete story of the production ever revealed.
(For a discussion of Loving see Patria and the Theatre of
Confluence, Arcana Editions, pp.13-26. The libretto is printed in
R. Murray Schafer: A Collection, Arcana Editions, pp. 49-64.)
I have waited since 1965 for a stage production of Loving. It
could easily be done since the resources are not extravagant and
projections could be used for dcor. About 1978 a concert version
was undertaken by Robert Aitkens New Music Concerts and toured
from Toronto to Ottawa, Montreal and Halifax. But Canada has no
interest in reviving its cultural history. It seeks to live
exclusively in the present tense and a work performed once is
simultaneously dead.
18. Requiems for the Party Girl, 1966; 19 min; mezzo-soprano,
chamb orch; Arcana.
This work, written for Phyllis Mailing and consisting of ten short
arias, was later to become the source of Patria 2, the first of
the Patria works to be completed. The narrator is a young woman,
very disturbed, describing various states of her existence
including, at the end, her own suicide. It is a serial piece and
uses for the first time the all-interval row that occurs in all
Patria works:
C natural, B natural, C sharp, B flat, D natural, A natural,
D sharp , A flat, E natural, G natural, F natural, F sharp.
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24
20. Gita, 1967; 14 min; choir SATB, 3 tr, 3 hn, 3 trm, tuba, tape;
Universal.
25
NU-U-YUL
NOORWAHM
MAUNKLINDE
SHIVERGLOWA
SHEELESK
MALOOMA
SHIMONOELL
The words were so beautiful I decided to set them to music. The
piece was written in graphic notation but it is also an eartraining exercise, for the singers must pitch the notes by
interval from the preceding notes, so that one performance does
not differ from another to the extent one might expect. People who
dont read music are always delighted to discover that this is the
first piece they are able to follow because the graphic shapes
correspond so closely to the musical sounds.
Curiously enough, I once planned to destroy this
thinking that it had served its purpose. But the
Canadian Music Centre, Henry Mutsaers, pulled it
destined for the furnace. Im glad he did. It is
known choral piece.
little piece,
librarian at the
out of the pile
probably my best-
yet taken place concerning the length of the piece, the deadline
date, and of course, the fee they were offering.
I have always liked the music of Richard Strauss. And one evening,
just after the details had been worked out with the MSO, Jack
Behrens and I were listening to Strausss tone poem Don Juan,
counting the number of erections of the main theme. The next
morning I awoke knowing that I wanted to do a rewrite of one of
Strausss poems. This was not a particularly original idea.
Several composers had done rewrites of classical works.
Nevertheless, I knew what I wanted to do, and the work I chose was
Ein Heldenleben (A Heros Life). The hero of this work is not just
Strauss, but it is Man at the centre of the universe, dominating
all other living creatures. I saw Heldenleben as a typical
exhibition of the nineteenth-century concept of progress and human
imperialism, and so Son of Heldenleben would have to be, to some
extent, a send-up of Strausss ideas.
Asked to provide a program note for the concert, I knew I couldnt
explain why I was defacing Strausss glorious, empurpled
masterpiece, so I wrote a preposterous one-line program note as
follows:
Who, having forgiven the grammatical difficulties of its
polyglottal title, can surrender himself to speculations of the
possibility that the hero may indeed have had a son, may,
recalling the old heros majestic presence, at first rejoice in
the simple news of rebirth, shortly thereafter, however, to
ponder the matter and its grave consequences, at first, perhaps
in an opacity of Freudian imagery, seeing by no means an
innocent resurrection of a great man in a quite natural filial
disguise, but rather a jealous competition for possession of
the mother-wife (who in our case would be none other than
Madame Strauss) but these people would be badly mistaken, for
I have no designs on the fair lady; and equally mistaken would
be those who see the attempt to reconstruct a great narrative
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rehearsing it I would often clap my hands and ask any one of the
players to tell us which boxes the other players are playing. So
while the work stimulates spontaneity it is at the same time a
serious ear-training exercise.
I conceived
students at
hours a day
were bowled
long enough
No Longer than Ten (10) Minutes begins out of the tune-up. The
conductor enters and begins beating time, but nothing much
changes; only gradually does the work gain definition. The climax
is reached after a long crescendo precisely at ten minutes. Then
the conductor signals the orchestra to cut and turns to leave the
stage. But the orchestra continues to hold the last chord, only
gradually fading down. Now the instructions are to go back to the
beginning of the crescendo if there is applause from the audience
and to continue repeating the crescendo to the climax for as long
as the applause continues. When the applause finally subsides, the
last desk of each string section is instructed to sustain very
softly a!dominant-seventh chord in the key of the following piece
until the conductor returns and gives the down beat.
Smelling trouble, the management altered the program, saving the
Brahms until after the intermission and substituting Kodalys
Peacock Variations.
The percussionists, who were my friends, were totally on side, but
the conductor, Victor Feldbrill, had reservations. He said, Its
a great idea Murray, marvelous, but theres just one thing when
do I return to take my bow? You dont, I replied. I think his
interest in my music, if there ever had been any, flickered out at
that moment.
The performance was hilarious. The orchestra tuned up. The
conductor entered. A smattering of applause. Only gradually did
the piece gain coherence. As ten minutes approached, the huge
crescendo of sound grew, and Victor managed to get it building up
effectively. When he turned to leave, the patrons, reacting
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36
37
38
(divided); Arcana.
39
the sea. The work was composed by Bruce Davis, Brian Fawcett and
myself in the Sonic Research Studio at Simon Fraser University.
The Greeks had two words for ocean: pontos was the navigable sea
and okeanos the wild, untamed, stormy ocean. When I first
approached the CBC with the idea of creating a portrait of the sea
in sound and words, I was asked how long the program would be. I
thought twenty-four hours would be suitable. How could we suggest
the limitless magnitude of the ocean in a stingy half-hour show?
We were eventually given ninety minutes, and the CBC attempted
something I believe they had never done before: they broadcast the
program quadraphonically by using the stereo systems of both
networks (1972).
32. Miniwanka, or The Moments of Water, 1971; 4 min; choir SA or
SATB; Arcana.
The Queen said: They were singing Indian words, were they
not?
Lloyd said: They were Indian words describing the forms of
water, such as rain, stream, lake, waterfall, and so on.
There was a pause.
Lloyd filled it with When we sang this out-of-doors once
before, it brought on a rainstorm. Im glad that it didnt do
that today.
Pause.
Lloyd continued with We thought you might like to see the
score since the notation is not traditional.
Whereupon Lloyd showed the score to the Queen.
The Queen said: Oh yes, I saw some of the children moving
like that.
Lloyd replied: That is the storm at sea, and those are the
chords demonstrating it.
There was a brief pause, then Prince Philip said, Will you
please extend our congratulations to the choir, and Lloyd
said, I will, thank you.
That seemed to be the cue to end the conversation so Lloyd
turned and left the platform as he had been instructed.
33. Lustro, 1972; 70 min; full orch; 8 voices, electronic sounds;
Universal.
Comprising three works, Divan i Shams i Tabriz, Music for the
Morning of the World and Beyond the Great Gate of Light, the first
performance of Lustro was given in Toronto, May 31, 1973,
conducted by Marius Constant.
Beyond the Great Gate of Light was commissioned by the CBC in 1971
in order to complete the mystical triptych by bringing back the
orchestra and singers who had been silent during the middle
movement. As in the Divan i Shams the orchestra is spread in the
auditfindorium as well as on stage. The final movement follows
Music for the Morning of the World without pause as the lights are
slowly restored to the hall. As the title suggests, the final
41
Arcana derives its name from its text, which is in Middle Egyptian
hieroglyphs, and was discovered near Memphis by the Arabian
explorer Al Mamun at the beginning of the ninth century. The
fragmentary text is remarkable because it bears little
relationship to any other surviving Egyptian hieroglyphs of the
period; but it seems to possess a religious significance and
perhaps relates to the secret initiation ceremonies conducted in
the labyrinth by the Egyptian priests. It was translated for the
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43
44
The work employs the same technique I had used in Arcana where the
letters of the text are each assigned a different note. In this
case I used a quarter-tone scale for the twenty-four letters that
appear in the English translation. Recurring groups of letters
therefore take on the character of short melodies. The forty-eight
words of the text are punctuated by forty-eight gongs sounding
approximately every ten seconds, and the orchestra hums the same
pitches to form a quiet meditation. I had also positioned some
instrumentalists at the back of the hall and on the corners of the
stage, asking them to pivot as they played, like slowly-circling
dervishes. This provoked the conductor, Mario Bernardi, to say:
We cant have the orchestra spread as you want it because the
next piece on the program is Mozart and we have to have the right
seating for Mozart. I told him to ignore whatever staging
presented problems and he was greatly relieved. The rehearsal went
well, and the orchestra took it on tour to Europe, though I dont
know whether the staging was observed. In any case, it was the
first of several works Mario Bernardi would commission for the
National Arts Centre Orchestra over the next few years.
38. North/White, 1973; 9 min; full orch, snowmobile; Universal.
45
myriad tints of green and blue in the ice caps suggested a full
chromatic spectrum of white sound that would be filtered to reveal
certain changing hues. I decided to place a snowmobile in the
percussion section as a symbol of noise and pollution generated by
technology. While this attracted a good deal of press attention at
the premire, North/White has rarely been performed, and never by
a major orchestra. The reason: capitalist patrons might find it
insulting.
North and East are the only directions that interest me: the East
for sunlight, warmth, history and mythology; the North for purity
and austerity. For me the West is just cowboys and chopsticks, and
the South symbolizes tropical humidity and laziness. And so,
having written East and North/White, I let matters stand.
39. Patria l: Wolfman, 1974; 90 min; soprano, choir SATB, actors,
chamb orch, electronic and pre-recorded sounds; Arcana. For
information see Patria: The Complete Cycle (Toronto, 2002).
40. String Quartet No. 2 (Waves), 1976; 19 min; Arcana.
In the course of the World Soundscape Project we recorded and
analyzed ocean waves on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of
Canada. The recurrent pattern of waves is always asymmetrical but
we noted that the duration from crest to crest usually falls
between 6 and 11 seconds ninety percent of the time. Only ten
percent of the time are they of longer or shorter duration. It is
this wave motion that gives the quartet its rhythm and structure.
The listener will readily hear the dynamic undulations of waves in
this piece, and as the piece develops several types of wave motion
are combined. Aside from this, I have sought to give the quartet a
liquid quality in which everything is constantly dissolving and
flowing into everything else. That is to say, the material of the
work is not fixed, but is perpetually changing, and even though
certain motivic figures are used repeatedly, they undergo
continual dynamic, rhythmic and tempo variation. Although the work
47
Adieu Robert Schumann was one of the first works written after I
left teaching at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia and
moved to the farmhouse in Monteagle Valley (Ontario). The
commission was to write a piece for Maureen Forrester and came
from John Roberts, then Director of Music at the CBC. I was glad
to have it since from this point on in my life I was going to have
to rely on commissions and short teaching or lecturing invitations
for all my income.
The composition is concerned with the last days of Robert
Schumann, from the time of his first hallucinations until his
death in the Endenich asylum in 1856. The narrator is Clara
Schumann, and the text consists of selections from her diaries,
freely adapted. Passages of many of Schumanns own compositions
are incorporated into the total work, in particular, sections of
several of his Lieder, as well as fragments from the piano pieces,
Carnival and Kreisleriana. The quotations have been introduced to
suggest the conflicts in his mind during the days of his final
collapse. There are also signature motives: CA for Clara and BbE
for Robert a device of which Schumann was especially fond.
I included a backstage piano piece in the middle of the work,
playing the melody Schumann wrote down the night of his first
dramatic hallucination the melody he claimed was dictated to him
by the angels.
During his illness, Schumann kept hearing the note A ringing in
his ears, and so towards the end of Adieu Robert Schumann the note
A is increasingly stressed in the orchestra. While Clara sings an
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We were off to a good start; women were sewing banners, and choirs
and dancers were rehearsing in various church basements when the
minister at Metropolitan left for a new appointment. His successor
had no interest in the arts; the Dayspring Festival withered, and
my hair was turning grey trying to keep the momentum going. When I
began to receive angry letters from church wardens about untidy
rehearsals, and one of the ministers complained that the
Apocalypse was not Christocentric(!), I knew that my original
production plan would have to be given up.
53
55
Ariadne Awakens
Ariadnes Dance
Dance of the Bull
Dance of the Night Insects
Sun Dance
Labyrinth Dance
56
I decided to create this little piece using the Balinese names for
the tones as a text and attempting at the same time to suggest the
rhythms and sounds of the gamelan orchestra. It has proven to be
one of my most popular pieces, and with the current rage for world
music, I notice that it sometimes appears on programs as an
authentic example of Balinese choral style!
50. Hear Me Out, 1979; 5 min; 4 voices; Arcana.
Written for a group of soloists from the Maynooth Community Choir,
Hear Me Out was first performed in Maynooth in July 1979 on the
same program with Gamelan. The text consists entirely of wellknown aural figures of speech, juxtaposed in ridiculous and often
humorous ways. Somewhere between music and theatre, Hear Me Out
invites a wide range of interpretations.
51. Felixs Girls, 1979; 14 min; 9 songs for vocal quartet and/or
choir SATB; Arcana.
In 1954 I was given a large number of poems and aphorisms by the
Polish-Jewish immigrant poet Henry Felix. From these I selected
nine, each of which describes a feminine type. There are girls
here from the Middle East, Central Europe, France, England and
America, presented with biting wit and sarcasm. The music
accordingly shifts in style for each song from a Lutheran hymn
to jazz, to a French folk song, to expressionism.
idea was that we would play Dusk as the sun was setting, then camp
at the lake and play Dawn as the sun rose the next morning. I had
arranged for the work to be broadcast on CBC Radio and recorded on
film.
The lake was not far from my farm, and the time was mid-September.
After a rehearsal in my barn, we drove to the lake in the late
afternoon and performed Dusk in the evening. I conducted it with
coloured flags from a raft in the centre of the lake, from where
the CBC was also recording it. The flags were necessary because of
the distances separating the players (500 metres or more), but
actually the score is written in such a way that the players take
cues from each other aurally most of the time.
The next morning I drove back to the lake at 4:30 a.m. The
performers were just up and were slapping themselves to keep warm.
The boatmen were ready to ferry them to their positions with the
first glimmer of dawn. The recordists began to take up their
positions in canoes, looking fantastically surrealistic with their
wind-socked microphones rising above the gunwales as they paddled
silently in the misty water.
We were just ready to run when the mist rolled in and we had to
delay the performance for an hour. But finally the mist rose to
reveal a sunny morning. The whole experience was very beautiful
and very strange with the mist drifting across the water and the
trombone chords slowly circling and rising over the hills.
Since we were recording simultaneously from the raft and from
canoes moving about the lake, we were able to mix the takes to
zoom in on different soloists so that within a second or two we
could hear them from the distance to close up or in reverse. I
think this panning and zooming at such great distances must have
been a first for sound recording, but, of course, most of the
effect was lost when it was all mixed onto the optical film track.
59
Beauty and the Beast was written mostly in the brief spell of a
week in November 1979. The performer was to be Maureen Forrester
and Montreal was to be the venue of performance, so I had my
friend Gabriel Charpentier prepare a French version of the text,
and the score is therefore printed in both English and French.
Madame Leprince de Baumonts story is considered a childrens
fairy tale, but like many fairy tales it has a deep psychological
significance as well. Thus we see how, at the outset, the young
virgin (Beauty) lives contentedly at home under the protection of
her father, whose powers to care for her are, however, weakening.
The moment comes when she must leave home; her father knows this
and even to some extent assists in her departure. When she leaves,
she encounters another kind of male personality: Beast, whose
bristling masculinity immediately threatens her. Even though Beast
appears to have attractive qualities beneath his frightening
appearance, Beauty fears him and flees back to the protective care
of her father. But her subconscious mind (i.e., the figures in her
dreams) forces her to realize that she cannot remain here but must
return to Beast and tame his brutish masculinity with her love. As
soon as this is done, Beast is transformed into a charming prince,
and the two lovers embark on their life together as young adults.
At the time I wrote Beauty and the Beast I was beginning to create
a variety of pieces for Patria 3: The Greatest Show, and I
60
Beauty and the Beast is a miniature opera for solo voice with
hand-held masks. The work has successfully been presented like
this by numerous performers. I say successfully even though the
work has seldom been favoured by critics. On one occasion a
Lesbian critic for the Globe and Mail attacked me for resurrecting
this nasty anti-feminist story and suggested that my name should
be excised from all music encyclopedias throughout the world.
In the Greatest Show the work is performed in the Rose Theatre,
one of the restricted entertainments to which one must win
admission by playing a game or in other unorthodox ways, and it
amused me enormously to see quite ordinary people competing
furiously to win entry to an entertainment that, under normal
circumstances, they would never attend. (See Appendix for
corrections to score.)
54. Wizard Oil and Indian Sagwa, 1980; 14 min; speaker, cl;
Arcana.
This humorous work recreates an old-time medicine show in which
the speaker, alias Johnny Mailloux, endeavours to sell a cure-all
called Wizard Oil, while the clarinettist, alias Chief Sam
Padoopi, dressed in Indian costume, endorses the product with his
playing and occasional dancing.
The work was originally written for the poet bp Nichol and was
performed several times by him before his early death. Like many
other pieces of the time, it was eventually incorporated into
Patria 3: The Greatest Show.
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The Garden of the Heart was written for Maureen Forrester, who
was, by this time, past her prime, but would, I hoped, give the
vocal line just the right touch of senescence to stimulate
sympathy in the same way as the declining voice of Julius Patzak
singing Mahlers Das Lied von der Erde resulted in a better
recording of that decadent work than any other made since.
I first composed the vocal line from beginning to end. I intended
the accompaniment to consist entirely of the same material with
the instruments anticipating and recalling phrases sung by the
singer, overlapping and underweaving like the arabesques of
Persian art. I wanted the score to shimmer like a garden full of
flowers and birds and fountains, surging forward to greet the
singer then hesitating and falling back to make room for other
voices. The orchestration of this piece is one of the most
delicate and sensuous I ever achieved. The work was written over
the summer of 1980 when the birds in Monteagle Valley were at
their most joyful, and the evening air was filled with the scent
of the earth. (See Appendix for corrections to score.)
56. Patria Prologue: The Princess of the Stars, 1981; 80 min;
soprano, 3 actors, 6 dancers, 2 choirs SATB, 12
instrumentalists, canoeists. For information see: Patria: the
Complete Cycle (Toronto, 2002).
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64
65
66
There was no further discussion and after the one and only
rehearsal the Maestro hurried offstage without consultation. I
didnt attend the premiere, which was a great success even
though the last movement was too slow.
64. Sun Father, Earth Mother, 1984; 15 min; solo voice; Arcana.
In the fall of 1984 I went to St. Gallen, Switzerland, to live
with the singer Eleanor James, and the first piece I wrote there
was Sun Father, Earth Mother. That summer I had been at Banff,
where we were planning a production of The Princess of the Stars
in the Rocky Mountains, and had been researching a variety of
lakes, some with amazing echoes. I wanted to write a work
celebrating those echoes and created a text that would help to do
that.
O Sun
Father,
Light of the World,
I come to you,
I sing to you,
My spirit soars,
I am one with you.
Earth Mother,
Cradle of the World,
I come to you,
I sing to you,
My spirit clings,
I am one with you.
When the singer sings I come to you... I am one with you. the
song echoing back would blur the distinction between soundmaker
and the soundscape, as if the mountains and the forest were
addressing the singer as much as the other way around. I wanted to
create the impression that the whole universe is full of
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72. Dream Rainbow Dream Thunder, 1986; 12 min; full orch; Arcana.
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__________________________________________________________________
Note: Richard Wagner was fifty-one when he was rescued by King
Ludwig of Bavaria who from then on sponsored his music dramas.
I was fifty-three when for a brief moment I thought I had met my
benefactor. A Halifax lawyer, Brian Fleming, had made a fortune on
the stock market. One day he came to see me and told me he had
always wanted to do something important for music and asked me
what grand project Id like to undertake. I told him about the
incomplete Patria cycle, mentioning in particular Patria 5, the
dance drama on the story of Theseus, Ariadne and the Minotaur,
which I was then thinking about seriously. He was fascinated,
particularly because his wife had been a professional ballet
dancer. Where do we start? he asked. I told him Id like $5,000
and Id begin work at once. He wrote me a cheque and invited me to
spend a week in his beautiful Halifax home. We visited beaches in
search of the ideal one for The Crown of Ariadne, since I wanted
it to be performed at the edge of the ocean. I went home thinking
my fortune had been made and set to work.
About three months later I received a strange letter accusing me
of having deceived him, claiming we had talked about a short work
for indoor performance by a small dance company. He wanted his
money back. I sent it to him. Somewhat later I learned that he was
experiencing significant financial problems.
________________________________________________________________
73. Patria 3: The Greatest Show, 1987; 3 hrs; about 150 actors,
singers, dancers, musicians and carnival people; Arcana. For
information see Patria: The Complete Cycle (Toronto, 2002).
74. Le Cri de Merlin, 1987; 17 min; solo guitar; Arcana.
Many are the stories told of Merlin, wizard at King Arthurs
court. He was alleged to be the offspring of a virtuous woman and
an incubus, which accounts for his amoral character. Among other
endowments, says Bullfinch, he had the power to transform
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From my diary:
This business of writing for orchestra is so time consuming.
After the devotion of every available hour to the concerto I
am now in possession of forty pages of trash which is
supposed to be the first movement. Its triviality astounds
me. Is it because I have grown tired of this instrument that
I am so bereft of ideas? Additionally it must be confessed
that the construction of a work which has as its sole purpose
the inflation of a soloists vanity disgusts me no end. Nor
is the harp particularly well-suited to this kind of boastful
display. It seems an effrontery to place before the orchestra
an instrument whose role has traditionally been little more
than the sonorous gush. Even half the orchestra, going about
their normal business, is enough to smother this little water
baby. An amplified harp is an obscenity but I may be driven
to that.
Eventually I did finish the harp concerto, and during the final
moments I did amplify the harp, giving the soloist the exquisite
pleasure of triumphing over the orchestra at full throttle. Of all
my concertos (and despite my disinclination towards the medium,
there were to be many more commissions for them) the harp concerto
has been performed most frequently and was, a few years later,
even adopted as the test piece for the Israel International Harp
Competition.
One bright event occurred while I was in San Diego. I won the
Glenn Gould Prize. Excitedly I told a colleague that with the
$50,000 I wouldnt have to teach for awhile, perhaps ever again.
Canadian dollars, he snivelled.
76. Patria 4: The Black Theatre of Hermes Trismegistos, 1988; 2
hrs; 7 solo singers, mixed chorus, 11 actors, chamb orch;
Arcana. For information see: Patria: The Complete cycle
(Toronto, 2002).
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77. The Death of the Buddha, 1988; 15 min; choir SATB; Arcana.
The Death of the Buddha was written for the BBC Singers for
performance at the Toronto International Choral Festival in 1989.
The text comes from the Mahaperinibbana Sutta, one of thirty-four
discourses forming the Digha Nikaya, the earliest Buddhist canon
of sacred writings. It is a litany of Buddhas rising from one
state of trance to another until he finally passes into Nirvana.
I wanted the music to illustrate the passive quality of the text.
The sopranos and altos repeat a series of eleven notes, consisting
of an identical number of upward and downward intervals, which
undergoes continual modification by semi-tone augmentation or
diminution.
Beneath this line the basses sing eighteen evenly-spaced Oms and
hums. Om represents the ascent towards universality and hum is the
descent of universality into the depth of the human heart; 18 is
the number of dhatas or elements in the Buddhistic canon.
The tenors sing the text, rising and falling by semitone degrees.
The basses are accompanied by two pitched gongs that sound each
time they pronounce an Om or a hum. During the performance a bell
tree is sounded three times, once at the beginning, once in the
middle, and once at the end of the composition.
In conception The Death of the Buddha is related to Credo, which
is also rigorously structured according to numerical symbolism,
but it has nothing of the emotional power of the earlier work.
Among my many choral pieces it exists in a category of its own.
The austerity of the music and the motionlessness of the text
will, no doubt, continue to prevent The Death of the Buddha from
receiving many performances.
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Magic Songs leads us back to the era of tone magic, when the
purpose of singing was not merely to give pleasure but was
intended to bring about a desired effect in the physical world. In
spirit culture, everything has its voice, and the aim of the
singer is to unify himself with this voice, For anyone who knows
and can imitate the special sound of an object is also in
possession of the energy with which that object is charged... by
sound-imitation the magician (musician) can therefore make himself
master of the energies of growth, of purification or of music
without himself being plant, water or melody. His art consists
first of all in localizing the object in sound and then coordinating himself with it by trying to hit the right note, that
is, the note peculiar to the object concerned. (Marius
Schneider, Primitive Music, The New Oxford History of Music,
1966, Vol. 1, pp 43-4).
There are nine chants in the cycle:
1. Chant to bring back the wolf
2. Chant to make fences fall down
3. Chant to make fireflies glow
4. Chant for clear water
5. Chant for the spirits of hunted animals
6. Chant to keep bees warm in winter
7. Chant to make bears dance
8. Chant to make the stones sing
9. Chant to make the magic work.
The aim of these songs, with magic texts in a language spoken by
no human, is to restore aspects of nature which have been
destroyed or neglected by humanity. To the extent that the
performers and the audience believe in them, they will be
successful.
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81. Concerto for Guitar and Orchestra, 1989; 23 min; solo guitar,
chamb orch; Arcana.
Written for Norbert Kraft, the Guitar Concerto consists of
short movements, played without a break. While writing the
was conscious of the Fibonacci number series by which each
is the sum of the two preceding numbers, thus: 1, 2, 3, 5,
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six
work I
number
8, 13,
21, 34, 55.... This series affected the shaping of the piece to a
certain extent and can be sensed immediately in the guitar line of
the opening toccata.
Of all my concertos, this is the most neglected, having only been
performed once, which is strange since I consider it to be better
than most twentieth-century guitar concertos. As one of the two
orchestras participating in the original commission, the Montreal
Symphony Orchestra was supposed to play it but never did. I
complained both to the MSO and to the Canada Council who imposed
this condition when they provided the funds, but I received no
satisfaction from either the commissioner or the patron. As a
result I prohibited any of my works from being performed by the
MSO, a resolution in force now for many years without grief to
either party.
82. Scorpius, 1990; 9 min; orch; Arcana.
Scorpius was commissioned by Alex Pauk for the Esprit Orchestra of
Toronto. As frequently happens, the publicity had to go out long
before the piece had been written. Pressed by Alex for a title I
said it would be called Brian Mulroneys Early Morning Whackoff.
As the worst prime minister Canada has ever had, Mulroney was
really getting on my nerves at the time with his unctuous and
empty chauvinism. Of course, that title was impossible. Alex
explained that the theme of the concert was outer space, so,
consulting our star-gazers manuals, we decided to call it
Scorpius. But when I thought about it, there was something
intriguing about the first title: the fast jerky rhythm, the
panting, the pauses for breath, renewed excitement and finally the
climax a dribble. Sometimes during rehearsals I divulge the real
title to the orchestra. The piece is always played better after
that.
But you cant print that in a program, so you better use this.
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83. The Darkly Splendid Earth: The Lonely Traveller, 1990; 22 min;
solo vln, full orch; Arcana.
While I have written several concertos for solo instruments, I
have always been suspicious of the medium that entices flashiness
in the composer and meretriciousness in the performer, while the
loyal orchestra is reduced to enthusiastically applauding
everything uttered by the soloist.
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The Falcons Trumpet was written for Stuart Laughton, who had been
a member of the Wolf Project for many years, and therefore shared
with me a love for the Canadian wilderness. Most of the work was
written while I was giving a course at the University of
Strasbourg and I have no doubt that my nostalgia for the Canadian
lakes and forests strongly influenced the conception of this
piece, in particular its unusual layout, with groups of
instruments spread on stage in the wings and in the auditorium
behind the audience. I had done this before (for instance, in
Lustro), but my intention was different here; I was trying to
catch something of the spacious resonance when a trumpet plays
across a lake at dawn or sunset causing the whole forest to echo
and vibrate. At the end of the work I added a soprano, Wendy
Humphries, another Wolf who frequently sang aubades and
nocturnes with Stuart (see Wolf Music) and also the Princesss
aria in The Princess of the Stars.
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Those that miss their mark are carried away by the breezes and
disappear unless they strike a surface that reflects them back,
sometimes in a muddled or distorted form. Today we reject the
atomic theory of sound, forgetting, perhaps, that light is
explained as consisting of both waves and particles, and there are
equations in which either theory can be made to work.
Lucretius was both a scientist and a poet. Having explained
matters scientifically, he extends his work in vivid poetry, for
instance, when he describes echoes as the voices of nymphs, satyrs
and fauns, led by the god Pan, mocking the world of humans from
hidden places. In moments like this his poetry is charged with a
fantasy seldom attained by others who have sought to explain the
world of nature.
My treatment of lines 549-595 of De Rerum Naturae is illustrative
in the same way Monteverdi and others frequently illustrated the
texts they employed. For this purpose three choirs are used: the
stage choir which states the scientific theories; a choir in the
hall, reflecting or distorting the statements of the stage choir
in illustration of the theory being described; and a backstage
choir of satyrs and nymphs.
For this reason I call the work Vox Naturae, literally the voices
of nature.
101. Concerto for Viola and Orchestra, 1997; 30 min; solo vla,
full orch; Arcana.
The best way to describe my Viola Concerto might be to quote a
couple passages from my diary, written while I was writing the
concerto.
June 11, 1997. Last night I took out the few sketches I had
made some months ago for the Viola Concerto. Though I had
carried a pleasant memory of them, I was surprised at how
inappropriate they now seemed. I was reminded of the foolish
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Wild Bird was written for Jacques Israelievitch, for whom I had
written The Darkly Splendid Earth: The Lonely Traveller. It was
commissioned by his wife, Gabriella, for his fiftieth birthday. At
some point since wed last met he had begun to dye his hair a
rather vivid orange and this is what prompted the title.
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red
blue
yellow
green
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one day I decided to set it again, this time in English and for a
childrens choir. Of course it is above a childs level of
comprehension (but then so are many portions of the Mass that boy
sopranos and I was one used to sing every Sunday). I wanted
pure voices to explain the illumination to be obtained by
putting aside all desires. Eventually the work was incorporated as
unit 20 of The Fall into Light.
106. Alleluia, 1999; 6 min; choir SATB; Arcana.
One day I had a letter from Susan Frykberg, a composer I had known
only slightly in Vancouver, telling me that she had decided to
enter a nunnery. She had found God, and her revelation was so
clear and touching that I sat down and wrote this little Alleluia
for her, almost at one sitting.
107. Four-Forty, 1999; 29 min; string quartet, chamb orch; Arcana.
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Shadowman was written for the Nexus percussion ensemble and the
University of Toronto Symphony Orchestra. It was commissioned by
Michael Koerner. The piece celebrates soldiery, or rather the
futility of soldiery. The five percussionists are divided: two
players impersonate the Forces of Darkness; two the Forces of
Light; while one, dressed in a tattered military uniform,
impersonates the individual soldier as he drums his way through
victory and defeat on the battlefield.
The orchestra accompanies this crusade of courage and folly with a
number of tunes from military musical history. In the end, the
soldier, mentally deranged, plays a variety of toy instruments and
even tries to teach a teddy bear to play a toy drum. The valour
and pathos of soldiery is exemplified in the piece, but the antiwar theme is unmistakable throughout the work. To my regret, the
work has not achieved the popularity I had hoped for. We need more
anti-war demonstrations in music.
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One winter day in 2000 I was visited by Ellen Karp and Bill
Johnston who wanted to commission a piece to celebrate the
fiftieth wedding anniversary of Ellens parents, Fred and May
Karp. We discussed what might be suitable and I suggested the
possibility of a new work for the Molinari String Quartet, who had
just successfully presented the seven previous quartets on a
marathon concert in Montreal. They liked the idea and I began the
work during a sojourn in Munich.
I had no idea whether Fred and May Karp, whom I had not met, even
liked music, let alone the atrocious brand a contemporary composer
was likely to deliver. But imagining how much in love they must
have been at the time of their youthful marriage, and the
achievement of sustaining something of that romance over fifty
years, I planned a two-movement work. The first movement would be
lively and energetic and of course it would begin with the same
motif that had ended the seventh quartet. The second movement
would be slower and more gentle but with outbursts of passion.
Both movements would be based on the same material.
For the second movement I decided to double the quartet with prerecorded material, both to add to the richness of the texture, but
also to suggest memories of the past. As the playback of the
recorded quartet is behind the live group, and therefore a little
fainter, I hoped the distance would give something of the
sentimental experience of looking through an album of old
photographs.
111. Imagining Incense, 2001; 15 min; choir SATB; Arcana.
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from a wide
the most
personal
the soul
from its heavenly home of light to the darkness of the earth and
its attempt to escape from the archons who rule there and to pass
through the aeons of space back into the pleroma of light. The
direction of this passage may be up or down since the earth is
surrounded by starry light, hence the title. Since the soul in
Manichean thinking is also a drop of light, the whole work is a
study of light within darkness as well as darkness within light.
Sometime after Credo (the multi-choir second part of Apocalypsis)
was performed in Toronto in November 2000, the producer, Lawrence
Cherney, asked me to consider another large-scale multi-choir
work. His idea was to bring six of Canadas best professional
choirs together for a week of concerts, to culminate in a combined
event at which the new work would be the centerpiece. I began
writing The Fall into Light in November 2002 and finished it in
May 2003.
115. Thunder: Perfect Mind, 2003; 12 min; mezzo-soprano, orch;
Arcana.
Commissioned by the CBC, Thunder: Perfect Mind was written to fill
out the time on a proposed CD featuring Eleanor James singing two
of my other works for voice and orchestra, both written for her:
Letters from Mignon and the orchestral version of the Minnelieder.
The text of Thunder: Perfect Mind comes from a papyrus discovered
at Nag Hammadi, Egypt, in 1945. It is a revelation discourse
delivered in the first person by a female theurgist. The tone is
forceful throughout and full of deliberate antitheses and
paradoxes, viz.: I am the whore and the holy one, I am the wife
and the virgin. The text also contains exhortations to hear and
reflect on these antitheses, revealing that the narrator believes
herself to be, and wants us to believe her to be, a seer intimate
with all the incomprehensible forces of the cosmos. This seemed to
be a perfect text for the dramatic voice of Eleanor James, and I
wrote the piece quickly, finishing it just in time for her return
to Canada.
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117. Patria: The Epilogue: And Wolf Shall Inherit the Moon, 1988;
8 days; 64 adult members; Arcana. For information see:
Patria: The Complete Cycle (Toronto, 2002).
118. Tanzlied, 2003; 18 min; mezzo-soprano and harp; Arcana.
You know that I have been good to you, and often too good,
And the reason is that I am jealous of your wisdom.
Ah, this crazy old fool, Wisdom.
I know that you are thinking of leaving me soon.
Listenthere is a bell that sounds the hour at midnight
The final section of Tanzlied is peaceful. Zarathustra and Life
embrace one another and weep. To support this reconciliation I
have introduced some of Nietzsches own music, a very tender and
passionate music, inspired by his idol, Wagner.
The work ends with the twelve strokes of the midnight bell, while
the singer comments:
The world is deep. Deep is woe
Joy, deeper than hearts agony
All joy wants eternity; wants deep, deep eternity.
In 1889 Nietzsche suffered a mental collapse and spent the last
eleven years of his life insane.
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The quartet opens with the Ariadne theme that may be found
embedded in several of the previous quartets as well as in other
works. This is followed immediately by a tranquil motif consisting
of a half note, two quarter notes and a whole note, over which the
recorded voice of a boy soprano is heard, slowly repeating and
expanding one of the principal themes of the eighth quartet.
The moods that follow are directly stimulated by the childrens
voices, and when they are not present the elegiac character
predominates, although the last appearance of the boy soprano at
the close stimulates a happy ending in a sped up version of the
halftwo quarterwhole note motif that introduced the work.
120. Flew Toots for Two Flutes, 2004; 5 min; Arcana.
This little piece for two flutes was written for my friend Bob
Aitken for performance on a celebration concert to mark his
retirement from the music department at the University of
Freiburg, Germany.
121. String Quartet No. 10 (Winter Birds), 2005; 17 min; Arcana.
My tenth string quartet (Winter Birds) was commissioned by Radio
France for the Molinari String Quartet, who has performed all of
my quartets on various occasions and has recorded the first eight
of them commercially for ATMA Classique.
The quartet was written during January and February 2005 at my
farm in central Ontario. This is the quietest time of the year,
with snowy fields outside my window and temperatures that descend
at night to 20 or 25 degrees below zero Celsius. There are few
birds at the feeders: chickadees and sparrows, and a few blue jays
and woodpeckers. As a result, the texture is thinner than in most
of the previous quartets. Occasionally there is a suggestion of
swirling snow or a flock of turtle doves. The wolf howl from the
Fifth Quartet is taken over and echoed by all the instruments as
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111
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126.
The first movement begins with Angst and passion on the solo violin; the other players
gradually join in, and the work takes on a rhythmic character in which the passacaglia theme is
repeated several times. In the second movement the same theme is sounded very softly over
which the viola plays an elegiac obligato. This leads directly into the third movement which is
a musical description of a sunset, from the sun's blazing descent into deep shadows as it passes
below the horizon. At the end, two loons fly over head into the darkening sky.
The fourth movement is a romance between the second violinist and the cellist, with some
excited emotions involving all the players. In the last movement the strings suggest the soft
throbbing of an Aeolian Harp. This instrument used to be placed in gardens where it would
catch the wind, producing an eerie chromatic wailing sound that infatuated the romanticists,
(Schumann, Berlioz, E.T.A. Hoffmann).
127.
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expect to find in Toronto. The walkway suggested a processional work and I immediately
thought of the Children's Crusade.
I sketched out a libretto and drew a series of charts showing how the story might be staged,
employing the balconies and towers of University College, as well as the belfry tower of the
adjacent Hart House. The audience would accompany the children on their journey, both
indoors and outdoors. Lawrence liked the idea but, unfortunately, University College did not.
Unshaken we decided that I should begin to write the work while the search for an appropriate
site went on.
There were two children's crusades, one originating in Germany and the other in France; both
took place during the year 1212, quite independently of each other. Both were inspirations of
children and both were dedicated to liberating the Holy Land with love rather than force. Both
ended in disaster.
I based my text on the French story which tells how a young boy named Stephen had a vision
about leading a crusade, went to see King Phillip and, although he was laughed at by the court,
nevertheless was given free passage to Marseilles when it was pointed out to the King that
Stephen's followers were mostly orphans and gutter children so that the proposed crusade would
result in a social cleanup.
The children walked to Marseilles where they expected the waves of the Mediterranean to part
as the Red Sea had parted for Moses. The chroniclers are not very precise about how many
children reached Marseilles but most mention a figure in the thousands. Of course, the waters
did not part and the crusade ended in disaster. Many of the children drowned; others were sold
into slavery, and many starved to death as they attempted to return home.
As I mentioned, I wanted the work to move from place to place and be accompanied by an
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itinerant audience. I wanted also to mix medieval people into the audience: jongleurs, beggars,
lepers and dancers, such as we see in the medieval manuscripts and paintings of Breughel and
others thus placing the audience inside rather outside the set as in traditional opera and
theatre. The work was to become a spectacle from all angles with the actors mixing with the
audience above, below, far, near, and never from a fixed position.
128.
129.
130.
commission and while I could have chosen one of the many I have on file, I decided to write my
own. I imagined the choir inviting God to come and join them in their singing a whimsical
idea perhaps, but one that must surely be in the mind of all singers the moment they open their
mouths.
131.
The first work we hear is the final chorus from The Wreck of the Hesperus, a cantata based on
Longfellow's poem by Arthur E. Fisher (1848 1912). The work received its first performance
on the opening concert of Massey Hall in 1894. This is introduced by a suggestion of the storm
at sea that took the lives of all passengers and crew of the fatal ship.
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A short interlude leads to the opening of a Sonata for Cello and Piano by Leo Smith
(1881- 1952), himself an accomplished cellist. The sonata is somewhat whimsically interrupted by the
Butterfly Waltz, a work by the pianist Ernest Seitz (1892 1978) who is best known as the
composer of the ballad The World is Waiting for the Sunrise. Seitz's work is quickly invaded
by a short snatch of Samuel Dolin's Prelude for John Weinzweig. I knew Samuel Dolin (1917
2002) as a diligent teacher of several well-known composers, including Brian Cherney, Moe
Kaufmann, Michel Lontin and Ann Southam, among others. This short piano piece echoes the
brevity of the Viennese atonal school that Dolin and Weinzweig were bringing to Canada in the
1950s.
Sir Ernest MacMillan (1893 1973) was better known as an organist and conductor than as a
composer. Perhaps the earlier compositions were more adventurous and interesting but, by the
time he was conducting the Toronto Symphony, his works took on a pompous diapasonal
quality that we were trying to escape. Typical is the anthem, The King Shall Rejoice in Thy
Strength, O Lord, which sounds like an exercise for the buttocks.
Another composer in the British tradition was Healey Willan (1880 1968) who is best known
for his choral music; and one of his most beautiful choral pieces is the anthem Rise Up, My
Love, My Fair One. We hear the work in the distance with a slight wash of sound from harp
and strings.
The last piece I chose was by my teacher John Weinzweig (1903 2006). It is an early work,
The Red Ear of Corn, which I remember hearing at its premiere as a ballet in 1949. John was
probably the first Canadian to regard himself as a composer rather than a musician who also
composed, and this new attitude made it possible for many of his students to take up composing
as a serious career.
My quodlibet ends abruptly in the middle of The Red Ear of Corn's Tribal Dance, vanishing
into a peaceful slumber, which is my last memory of John in the nursing home shortly before
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his death. We had eaten a light lunch together with his wife, Helen, and I had accompanied
them upstairs and helped John into bed where he soon drifted off to sleep.
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