Photo by Dr. Youngmi Ha |
The songs of this cycle came into being as a private journal
in which I wrote the lyrics and then improvised the song. They were never
intended for an audience and I seldom performed them exactly the same way
twice. It was a way of reflecting upon my experiences. There are three
exceptions. The Way They Ought To Be
and I Never Knew are from a musical I
composed years ago and that had several incarnations. I was fortunate to find
Rick Hartung who played the leading role based on Don Quixote. Whatever Happened to Might Have Been is from a musical
The Marvelous Multicolored Maze that
received a stunning performance at Texas Tech University as commissioned by the
Texas State Council on the Arts. It never had another production,
perhaps deservedly so as it was ephemeral and fleetingly embedded in the 70s.
The other journal songs existed as lyrics on a page, which
lived only when I sang them while improvising at the piano. The songs in this
cycle are selected from songs spanning more than thirty years. Must
You Go? was composed for my jazz quartet in college. I remember when I
finished the song in the practice room, the lead tenor came in and listened. He
was so excited, and said we needed to get the “other guys” and try it out. We sang the song over and over in a car,
driving around Lubbock, Texas until about 5 a.m., where we went in to a Toddle
House for pancakes, and started remembering portions and saying to each other
that although we had stopped singing, it was still sounding in our heads, and
we were still drunk from the music. The Four Freshman heard the song and wanted
to buy it, but I was young and foolish and the deal never happened. It wasn’t until
about 20 years later that I thought it would make a good solo piece, and I
began improvising it as a journal song. I discovered that this song was not
just about losing a girlfriend, but it was about my family and my close
friends. Inevitably we are on a journey where we lose all of our loved ones.
The haunting phrase of “must you go” affected me profoundly, and as a solo, the
work ends with an E-flat augmented triad. Leaving the answer open, but
inevitably we are always saying goodbye to those we love.
The final song of the cycle, Where is the Music? was composed or “resurrected” two weeks ago. In
1998, I suffered a stroke in which many of my journal songs were lost from my
memory. I slowly began to recover that song and the form that is in the cycle
is still emerging and growing, but was especially created for this cycle.
The journey between dissonance and resolution underlies all
the songs. And in the final song Where is
the Music?, the cycle comes to a close with a struggle for resolution
between E-flat and A-Flat Augmented triads. It ends not really resolved, but possibly intent on some
future quest, “somewhere”.
My life has always been a quest for beauty, spontaneity, and excellence. Affecting the video stream of the Poet is the Italian film, The Great Beauty. I call the main character of the cycle, the poet. This name was derived from a madrigal cycle I published in 1969 called The Loves of a Poet. I never published another thing, and my life has always been creating and moving on to the next thing… and noticing. For me one of my purposes in living is to notice and have reverence for all I notice. That is why I love to teach, because I strive to notice the sheer beauty and potential of all those that I am lucky enough to encounter. Noticing becomes a way of creating spontaneity, but also a way of documenting our experience of our world.
The Great Beauty
is about a writer who publishes one of the greatest books of Italian literature
when he was twenty-five and never published again. Always the question from everyone he met was “Why did you
never publish again?” He couldn’t find the answer. But in the film, one sees
his quest for beauty, always inspired by his muse who was also his first love.
The film is about the quest for beauty and excellence. He never had an answer
to the question. But after a profound series of events, all about the essence
of beauty and excellence, he discovers his answer in remembering his muse.
In this performance, the left screen is the Poet’s stream of conscious and the right
screen is the stream of consciousness of the The Woman. The center screen is the live action that has the power
to enter into the streams of consciousness. This is determined by an artist at
the technology console making decisions that interact with the stage action.
In starting an opera project several years ago called A Song for Second Avenue, I developed,
through dialoging with friends, a concept of the MoviOp. The MoviOp involved the creation of streams
of consciousness of characters in prepared videos and projected with the live
action on the stage, coordinated, but not meant to connect directly to the live
action. In addition, live video is captured in the moment on action on the
stage, and such action can be manipulated and invade the streams of
consciousness. This meant to be a live and improvised experience
I abandoned A Song for
Second Avenue two years ago. It seems as though I am veering on returning to
the libretto and resuming a revision of the text and writing the music. For me
the question is slightly different than that of the writer in The Great Beauty.
I have wondered if I can go into the isolation required to do such a work.
I enjoy the act of noticing being in
the moment with those I know and encounter.
On the other hand, I always have admired Rossini. The great composer was a friend with Balzac and both had become addicted to coffee. In those days coffee was considered a drug and both Rossini and Balzac had become addicts. Balzac wrote:
Without Rick’s encouragement and friendship this song cycle would not exist. Working on it has opened the door to completing the opera. I’m no Rossini, so the idea of finishing A Song for Second Avenue in about 20 days is an inspiring challenge. If I could do it, I could get back to noticing the beauty around me much sooner.
On the other hand, I always have admired Rossini. The great composer was a friend with Balzac and both had become addicted to coffee. In those days coffee was considered a drug and both Rossini and Balzac had become addicts. Balzac wrote:
Rossini has personally experienced some of these effects as, of course, have I. "Coffee," Rossini told me, "is an affair of fifteen or twenty days; just the right amount of time, fortunately, to write an opera."
Without Rick’s encouragement and friendship this song cycle would not exist. Working on it has opened the door to completing the opera. I’m no Rossini, so the idea of finishing A Song for Second Avenue in about 20 days is an inspiring challenge. If I could do it, I could get back to noticing the beauty around me much sooner.