John Adams took on a major responsibility when, shortly after - TopicsExpress



          

John Adams took on a major responsibility when, shortly after Sept. 11, 2001, he accepted the assignment to compose music for New York Philharmonic performances marking the first anniversary of the attacks. The piece ended up earning him a Pulitzer Prize. While most of America was still in shock, Adams was wondering how to distill the horrific experience in 25 minutes of music for chorus and orchestra. The composer spoke with NPR Music in 2002, just before the premiere of On the Transmigration of Souls. I realized right up front that the public did not need any more images, Adams said. It didnt need any more reiteration of the narrative of that day. Certainly it didnt need some tasteless dramatization of the events in music and text. If I was going to do something meaningful, I was going to have to go in the opposite direction. That direction was to focus on the loss and grief expressed by those who were left behind. Adams didnt look to poets past or present for his texts. Instead he chose words scribbled on posters plastered around Ground Zero by families searching for and mourning their loved ones. They were a mixture of hope and a slowly dimming acceptance of reality, Adams said. I was touched by the fact that when people are deeply in shock over the sudden loss of a family member, they dont express themselves in fancy language. They dont start sprouting sonnets or highfalutin verse. They speak in the most simple of terms. When we say words fail, we really mean it. Adams challenge was to set such mundane phrases as He was the apple of my fathers eye, and She had a voice like an angel and she shared it in good times and bad and He used to call every day, Im just waiting for the phone to ring. Adams thinks of Transmigration as a soundtrack sewn together, like the AIDS quilt. Into it he weaves a tape of city sounds, footsteps, cars passing by and a litany of victims read in plain speech, mixed with what almost seems like random quotes from people featured in the New York Times Portraits of Grief series. Ultimately, Adams says he hopes that his piece will give people a memory space. Where you can go and be alone with your thoughts, he says. And the music and the words are giving you stimulus but they are not directing your emotion, and they are not pounding you over the head with a point of view.
Posted on: Thu, 11 Sep 2014 14:48:23 +0000

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