香港六合彩资料

September 18, 2024
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’Word of Mouth’: Collaborative project unites poets, composers and performers

Pictured here, students and faculty members, including tenor Lex Bonner (far left) and poet Cole Depuy (far right) perform Pictured here, students and faculty members, including tenor Lex Bonner (far left) and poet Cole Depuy (far right) perform
Pictured here, students and faculty members, including tenor Lex Bonner (far left) and poet Cole Depuy (far right) perform "A Turing test," part of "Word of Mouth: New Words, Voices and Music" to a standing-room only crowd at the 香港六合彩资料 Art Museum on April 9. Image Credit: Jonathan Cohen.

“In what ways do you resemble your mother?”

Graduate student Cole Depuy, the poet behind 鈥淎 Turing Test,鈥 asks the question again. And again tenor Lex Bonner answers with a recitation of haunting childhood imagery, underscored by a riotous cello and eerie piano chords. A gong trembles, wielded by composer Leif Haley, as the song comes to a powerful end.

It鈥檚 a god-eat-god world, Cole, she said. And God eats.

Two days before the 香港六合彩资料 poets, composers and vocalists honed their musical creations. Co-sponsored by the Material and Visual Worlds Transdisciplinary Area of Excellence, the project resulted from a collaboration between the Music Department and the Creative Writing Program.

Guided by Director of Creative Writing Tina Chang, Associate Professor of Composition Daniel Thomas Davis, Associate Professor of Voice Thomas Goodheart and Director of Choral Activities William Culverhouse, undergraduate and graduate poets provided the initial text, which student composers turned into art songs and other compositions. They were then performed by an array of student vocalists alongside several faculty performers in conjunction with the 香港六合彩资料 Art Museum鈥檚 spring 2022 exhibition, 鈥Joy, Play and Resistance.鈥

The 24 teams of poets, composers and performers proved to be so successful and ambitious that the launch was divided into two back-to-back concerts, each with a standing-room-only crowd in the museum鈥檚 main gallery.

Junior Alex Walley, a music major focusing on vocal performance, performed 鈥淭o Regard This Weather with Claim and Wonder鈥 by poet Shannon Hearn and composer Valerie Lasser, which deals with the recovery of the natural world. He is friends with Lasser, a sophomore vocalist and composer who wrote the piece with Walley鈥檚 tenor voice in mind 鈥 an amazing opportunity for both, they said.

鈥淚 know his voice and his style of music,鈥 said Lasser, who both composed and performed works at the event.

In one piece, poet Josh Grosse鈥檚 鈥淧ush,鈥 Lasser did both, pre-recording six different tracks of herself to create a chorus of angelic voices. The poem draws on Grosse鈥檚 own experience going into his final college semester, before circling back to memories of childhood.

An English major focused on creative writing, Grosse also contributed five haiku that explore the meditative experience that became the foundation for Haley鈥檚 second composition of the show, 鈥淢editation.鈥

Speak your deepest thoughts;

building walls is not control.

Do not fear your truth.

The ethereal voices of sopranos Riya Bolander and Rebecca Grabarchuk twined around the senior鈥檚 enigmatic words, accompanied by the drone of faculty artist Zachary Sweet鈥檚 cello and the cheerful tones of a marimba, played by Haley himself.

A junior majoring in both music and psychology, Haley is an accomplished composer with an entire opera already under his belt, in addition to being a skilled percussionist. While working with his poets 鈥 Depuy on 鈥淎 Turing Test鈥 and Grosse on 鈥淢editation鈥 鈥 he sat down with both to make sure he understood the message behind their work.

鈥淭he overall tone of the poetry informs what the song is going to sound like,鈥 he explained. 鈥淚 also consider how the text would be best set in the context of the song, the words, where they fit in the overall register.鈥

For their part, the poets came to view the work of composers and musicians with renewed respect. That respect went in multiple directions: Bolander, a sophomore majoring in vocal performance and psychology, appreciated the chance to speak with both the composers and the poets about their vision behind the three pieces she performed, she said.

鈥淚鈥檝e never done a collaboration before. Poetry is usually so personal and experience-bound,鈥 Grosse reflected.

It was a new experience for Depuy as well. A doctoral candidate in the Creative Writing Program, the poems he submitted had darker themes. In 鈥淎 Turing Test,鈥 the speaker 鈥 or in this case, singer 鈥 responds in a different way to repetitions of the same question; the title refers to a conversational test that can differentiate whether the respondent is a human or a machine. Depuy鈥檚 second poem, 鈥淲e Race in Circles鈥 and rendered into music by graduate-student composer Neva Derewetzky, concerns self-destructive habits such as violence and drug use.

This is the eagle escaping

the forest. This is the lightening

that started the fire.

鈥淚t feels like talking to someone in a different language. It鈥檚 a give-and-take,鈥 Depuy said of the collaborative process. 鈥淚 have to trust the musician to respect the poem, but also accept that I am losing the poem to the song.鈥

Sometimes, that meant compromises. Composer Adrian Finney, a sophomore music major, worked with poet Kiel Gregory on 鈥淪tealing from Grandmother,鈥 which concerns the theft of some cigarettes. The poet wanted a heavy metal feel, and Finney did his best to meet him halfway, writing for a single piano played by two people to create fascinating metallic sound effects.

Meanwhile, classmate Alexis Gross, a senior majoring in music, had the opportunity to bring a love poem to life: 鈥淵ou鈥 by student poet Vincent Gialanella, with soprano vocals and cello.

I look at you

And I can鈥檛 even describe

What I truly feel

Other than this

One word

Happiness

鈥淭his is the first time I will be hearing what I composed performed by other people,鈥 Gross said during a rehearsal. 鈥淚t鈥檚 even better than I imagined it would be!鈥

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