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James Erber ‘Traces Cycle’ for Solo Flute Recording Review

Odaline de la Martinez

Odaline de la Martinez co-curates Festival of Women Composers...

Stacey Fraser - Soprano
Stacey Fraser - Soprano

31 December 2019 Comments Off on Jack Van Zandt’s ‘A Chaos of Light and Motion’ Song Cycle Premiere Views: 1758 CE News

Jack Van Zandt’s ‘A Chaos of Light and Motion’ Song Cycle Premiere

The newest work by Jack Van Zandt, “A Chaos of Light and Motion” will receive its premiere performance on January 30, 2020 in the University Theater at California State University San Bernardino. It was commissioned by soprano and Cal State University San Bernardino music department chair, Stacey Fraser, who will premiere it with some of Los Angeles’s very best performers (listed above), conducted by University of California Riverside orchestra and choral director Ruth Charloff. This dramatic song cycle will be videotaped and audio recorded for subsequent release. Further performances are planned in the USA and Canada.

The Composer Writes:

The reason Shelley appeals so much to me as a composer is the synthesis of influences in his work. My composing style is very much the same, combining elements of science, math, philosophy, visual art theory (especially Klee and Escher), and often, music that I love from ancient traditions and cultures outside my own, especially Native American, Indian, Japanese, Indonesian and Equatorial African.

Shelley’s works were marked by many interests and influences—especially science, mathematics, and philosophy, including Hinduism and Buddhism—and were often a “mash-up” of numerous ideas of the time. The text of the title song, extracted from his drama Hellas, is a wondrous evocation of the scientific achievements of the Age of Reason and explores the crossroads of science and spirituality. 

The Gothic Romantic style of much of his poetry, including the sonnet “The Painted Veil,” often contained references to his many intellectual influences, along with phantasmagoric imagery in a highly atmospheric spiritual context, to make a universal philosophical point or observation. Also typical of Shelley the dramatist, his sonnet tells a story that takes the reader on a journey, not unlike a miniature version of Dante’s great allegory, “The Divine Comedy,” where the narrator relates his experiences wandering through the world beyond life, or the great sagas of Hindu myth. In this case, I was struck by the similarities between the Shelley poem and the spiritual texts of some of the epic Hindu vocal works of Indian classical music. On one level, my setting is essentially a “raga,” and is based on a commonly used modal scale of that tradition. I also ask the vocalist to imitate some of the ornamental idiosyncrasies of raga singing. The ensemble instruments take the functional place of Indian musical instruments, including performing shruti (drones) and tala (rhythmic cycles).

The third song, “Weave the Dance on the Floor of the Breeze,” is an allegory of the natural world taken from “Prometheus Unbound.” The rhythmic flow of the setting is controlled by a common Indian tala, 4+4+2+1+2+1. I tip my hat to Stravinsky with this setting, including references to “Les Noces,” “A Soldiers Tale,” and Russian folk melody.

The final song, “The Atmosphere of Human Thought,” is also a tribute to the memory of legendary American composer Lou Harrison, a friend who was instrumental in bringing Indonesian gamelan music to the attention of American audiences. The text is taken from “Prometheus Unbound,” and takes the listener on a Buddhist-inspired journey to a floating, ethereal world where ideas and thoughts become conscious spirits. The percussion instruments of the ensemble become a kind of gamelan orchestra that the soprano floats over accompanied melodically by the bass flute and viola.

Jack Van Zandt 
A Chaos of Light and Motion: Four Shelley Songs
For soprano Stacey Fraser and seven players
Premiere 30 January 2020
University Theater, California State University San Bernardino
Stacey Fraser: Soprano
Sara Andon: Flute, alto flute, piccolo, bass flute
Cynthia Fogg: Viola
Nadia Shpachenko: Celesta
Alastair Edmonstone: Piano
Alison Bjorkedal: Harp
Yuri Inoo: Vibraphone
Cory Hills: Marimba and chimes
Conducted by Ruth Charloff 
Commissioned by Stacey Fraser

Text by Percy Bysshe Shelley

I.          A Chaos of Light and Motion
II.         The Painted Veil
III.        Weave the Dance on the Floor of the Breeze
IV.       The Atmosphere of Human Thought

The score and parts will be available from Composers Edition in February 2020.

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