Elizabeth Adams's Blog, page 87

December 1, 2012

Nov. 30 Endings, Beginnings

Porcelain, the tub -


ankle bones beneath pink skin -


dawn, this wintry day.

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Published on December 01, 2012 08:45

November 30, 2012

Nov. 29 Gold


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Sunrise turns the streets


on axis into Stonehenge --


chariot blazing


his bright brief flare opposite


the calm round face of the moon.


 


 


 

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Published on November 30, 2012 05:18

November 29, 2012

Nov. 28 Initiation

Black ice on the streets


little boy in red snowpants


slips for the first time.

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Published on November 29, 2012 07:59

November 28, 2012

Thaliad, last two days for pre-order!


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I'll be making a formal announcement on Friday about Phoenicia's publication of Thaliad, by Marly Youmans -- with cover and illustrations by Clive Hicks-Jenkins -- but wanted to let Cassandra's blog readers know that there are just two more days to pre-order the hardcover edition at a special price of $23.00.



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I can't even begin to tell you how lovely this book is when you hold it in your hands, or how proud I am to have been part of the collaboration that made it. After November 30, it will be offered in both paperback ($13.95) and hardcover editions ($26.00.) The first fifty orders (of either edition) will also receive something very special, to be announced soon!


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Published on November 28, 2012 08:47

Nov. 27 From the fifth floor

Colorless city --


smoke shrouds your spires and towers,


flat roofs awaiting snow.

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Published on November 28, 2012 08:22

November 27, 2012

Nov. 26 At a stoplight

Her violet vest --


she shifts violet bottles --


the salon window,


a shaft of glassy sunlight,


grey stone, shining clear blue sky.


 

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Published on November 27, 2012 09:01

November 26, 2012

Nov. 25, two world premieres


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Chromatic colors


spill from new musical notes --


jagged, prismatic--


Magnificat and Magnum,


two fleeting rainbows of sound.


 


Yesterday afternoon we performed the world premieres of several new works: the Magnificat and Nunc dimittis of British composer Douglas Mason, and a setting of Ut Salvetur Mundus by Jason Noble, a doctoral student in composition at McGill who is also a tenor in our choir.


Jason's piece includes some aleatoric sections, where individual singers are instructed to improvise on a set of notes or other musical instructions. I looked up the word: it comes from the Latin word alea, which means "dice." While John Cage and Charles Ives were some of the first modern proponents of "chance" or "random" elements in their compositions, there are examples dating back to the 15th century, and it's known that Mozart created a game of dice for selecting the sequence of a set of musical measures, in which each measure had several possible versions.


Before joining this choir I'd never seen this kind of musical score, and found it a little intimidating. Four years on, I'm comfortable -- works written by our director often have aleatoric passages -- and I like the unpredictability the improvisational sections lend to each performance, as well as the particular quality and sound texture such writing can create, very different from music where everything is completely written out. Jason's piece included sections of chant, and also used solo passages with underlying choral textures - I thought the result was very effective and beautiful, as well as being completely appropriate to the text, and am looking forward to performing more of his work in the future. It's such a pleasure to help bring a new musical composition to life that way, especially when it's in the presence of the composer!



Text of Ut Salvetur Mundus



Kyrie
eleison. O magnum mysterium, et admirabile sacramentum, ut animalia viderent
Dominum natum, jacentem in praesepio. Christe eleison. Non enim misit Deus
Filium suum in mundum ut iudicet mundum, sed ut salvetur mundus per ipsum.
Kyrie eleison. Amen.




Lord, have mercy. O great
mystery and wonderful sacrament, that animals should see the new-born Lord,
lying in a manger. Christ, have mercy. For God sent not his son into the world
to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved. Lord, have
mercy, Amen.

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Published on November 26, 2012 13:26

November 24, 2012

Nov 24. Last night

Patti Smith, Neil Young:


bright spirits in aged bodies --


their crafty wisdom,


our mantra -- hey hey my my


rock and roll will never die

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Published on November 24, 2012 09:31

Nov. 23 La sécheresse d'hiver

Orange blinking light --


piano is dry -- a fact


known by my nose, skin.

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Published on November 24, 2012 09:14

November 23, 2012

Nov. 22

Ex-pat Thanksgiving:


Duke Ellington, Old-fashioneds,


gold maple sunlight.

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Published on November 23, 2012 05:30