Added program notes.
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@ -7,4 +7,17 @@ date: 2020-10-01
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categories:
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- Chamber
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---
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Information about _Arcadia_.
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_Arcadia_ was commissioned by _Musaics of the Bay_ and written in response to June
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Yokell's painting entitled _Paradise Lost_.
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When I first saw her painting, I knew immediately that I must compose music from it.
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The colors of the landscape spoke to me directly, reminding me of the geography of
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my childhood home in Western Wisconsin. Arcadia is not only the name of a small town
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in Wisconsin, it is also an ancient Greek word for an ancient, unspoiled wilderness,
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where humans live in harmony with nature.
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In 2020, as I looked at the surrounding Wisconsin landscape while composing this work,
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I had feelings of loss, alienation, and sadness. While much of the natural
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world was (and still is) still incredibly beautiful, I had a sense that somehow a metaphorical
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poison had covered the land, rendering it a _Paradise Lost_. _Arcadia_ seeks to capture
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these emotions that I experienced through June's painting in that time.
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@ -7,4 +7,16 @@ date: 2021-11-01
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categories:
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- Chamber
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---
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Information about _Capriccioso_.
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Capriccioso is a musical response to Carel Fabritius’ 1654 painting _The Goldfinch_,
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as well as the history surrounding the painting itself.
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Generally, the music is meant to evoke the playfulness of the small bird in the painting.
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It is a stylish but silly bird: complicated, sparkling harmonies appear from the very
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beginning of the music, and short, pointy melodic ideas abound as I imagined
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the bird hopping around its home.
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However, as the work evolved, I had two competing yet somehow related ideas in my mind:
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the first of the painter’s tragic death in the gunpowder explosion in Delft the same
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year the painting was completed, and the second of the bird losing its chain and flying
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away in escape. This brought about music with a mysterious, foreboding character, and in
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the end music for the bird miraculously taking off in flight.
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@ -6,4 +6,27 @@ date: 2017-06-01
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categories:
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- Chamber
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---
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Information about _Conversations_.
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This work was written for Jocelyn Zhu and Mariella Haubs in commemoration of their _Concerts for Compassion_ Tour,
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Summer 2017. They premiered the work at the Church of St. Paul the Apostle, New York, NY, on April 3, 2019.
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It was subsequently performed on WQXR's _Young Artist Showcase_.
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This piece depicts a conversation between two people: they meet, argue, come to an agreement, and then part.
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These four events are split across two movements.
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In the first movement, we begin with their greetings. Each violinist trades the main theme,
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and they then develop it and chase it into new variations and ideas, reaching an exciting climax
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which restates the very beginning music. However, conflict immediate follows: a bickering scherzo
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in which the two cannot agree on what the harmony or rhythm should be. At times the argument is
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bitter and coarse, and at others more light-hearted and playful.
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In the end, though, they remain in total disagreement.
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After this heated conflict, the second movement begins with the two violinists pouring out their anguish
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in loud dissonances. After calming down, each tells a variation on a sad story: a long, lonely theme
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accompanied by constant pizzicato. A chorale briefly appears: they reconcile their sadness and pray together.
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Once reconciled, they engage in a break-neck fugue of "civilized discourse".
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They work out their argument in a disciplined, diplomatic fashion, finally reaching an agreement.
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They join together in celebration, playing the harmonies that began the first movement and staying
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in unison rhythm for nearly the rest of the piece.
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Finally, as in all conversations, the two must part ways. It is lonely and bittersweet, and we are left wondering why.
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@ -6,4 +6,10 @@ date: 2019-05-01
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categories:
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- Solo
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---
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Information about _Four Pieces for Piano_.
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This work was written for my dear friend Julia Hamos.
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It is a set of four small pieces, each varying wildly in character:
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1. A "celebration", full of radiance, and in a flowing tempo.
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2. A bit mysterious, and in a slow, very free tempo. Echoes of Debussy (who himself echoed Wagner).
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3. A moderate toccata, alternating between quietly agitated (though somewhat playful) and furioso characters.
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4. Slow. Feelings of resignation and loss.
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@ -6,4 +6,16 @@ date: 2013-02-01
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categories:
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- Wind Ensemble
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---
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Information about _Illuminatio_.
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_Illuminatio_ (Latin for "Illumination") was written in response to "Innovation in the Liberal Arts",
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St. Olaf College's campus theme of the 2012–13 academic year. In the traditional way of thinking about
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the liberal arts, the study of multiple, diverse disciplines can often seem to be a process of merely
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learning a plethora of diverse facts. However, one can recognize this process instead as a deeper
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enlightening, that of becoming aware. The study of diverse lines of thought not only gives one many
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different pieces of knowledge, but it heightens one’s perception of the world through experiencing
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many different perspectives of other human beings. The innovation is thus a change of the way one
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thinks about the process of learning in the liberal arts. _Illuminatio_ seeks to capture musically
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this process of becoming aware.
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The St. Olaf College Collaborative Undergraduate Research and Inquiry program sponsored my work on _Illuminatio_.
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The work was premiered in March 2013 by Dr. Kent McWilliams and the St. Olaf Band, with the composer conducting.
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@ -6,4 +6,7 @@ date: 2015-12-01
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categories:
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- Solo
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Information about _Intermezzo_.
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This work was written as an homage to composer and friend Will Healy. The bass line of the
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first four measures is taken from the latter half of his piece entitled _The Song I Wanted to Hear_.
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I decided to harmonize it with a similarly jazz/post-impressionist influenced sound. Cast in ABA form,
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the middle section winds into a _Liebestod_-esque climax.
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@ -6,4 +6,18 @@ date: 2013-04-01
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categories:
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- Chamber
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---
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Information about _Movement_.
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This piece was written for my dear friend Seiji Cataldo. After having had many opportunities
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to hear his fine playing, I became inspired to write a work for him, and this is the product.
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In this work, I appealed to his strong, sensitive, and charismatic playing style with bright,
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agile lines and a plethora of multiple stops, but also with smooth, lyrical tunes and delicate
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harmonics.
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The movement is cast in a sonata form. The piece begins with a fanfare-like rhythm,
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which gives way to a background of colorful tertian harmony. The violin enters with the first theme,
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declamatory in character and with a strong tritone. A harmonically adventurous transition brings
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the music to the second theme, a lyrical tune with octatonic suave. A slow development with
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omnipresent off-beat pulses follows, and eventually the music arrives at the recapitulation.
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Both themes are heard again, finally arriving in the original key.
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This work was premiered by Seiji Cataldo and Jesse Brault at Urness Recital Hall,
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St. Olaf College, on April 12, 2013.
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@ -7,4 +7,17 @@ date: 2021-03-01
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categories:
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- Solo
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---
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Information about _Near, Under, Far_.
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_Near, Under, Far_ is a response to Luc Tuymans’ painting _Die blaue Eiche_ (“The Blue Oak”).
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I was struck by both the loneliness and angularity of the painting,
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and sought to capture these two ideas musically.
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As I was first sketching the piece, the region where I was living experienced extreme cold weather.
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Standing outside one afternoon during this cold snap, I asked myself: what is the opposite of _Die blaue Eiche_?
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I imagined a large blue oak, green with many leaves, somewhere in a field in California.
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I thought of viewing it from a close distance, from underneath its shade, and from far
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away on a distant hill. I then imagined these views of the long-frozen tree of _Die blaue Eiche_.
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In picturing these opposite scenes, I felt both unease and longing, which I subsequently set out
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to express musically (in addition to the painting’s loneliness and angularity).
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_Near, Under, Far_ was commissioned by _Musaics of the Bay_, San Francisco, California,
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and was composed for cellist Gabriel Cabezas.
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@ -6,4 +6,31 @@ date: 2013-03-01
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categories:
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- Chamber
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---
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Information about _Quintet_.
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_Quintet_ is a summation of my work as an undergraduate. The work contains a plethora of tributes
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to and quotes of other composers, as well as quotes of my own work, all of which are tied together
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with original material to create a musical-dramatic structure that is nearly symphonic in size.
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The most prominent quote is the primary rhythmic motive from Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony.
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As is for many musicians and music lovers, that symphony holds a special place in my soul,
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and here this motive is meant to invoke the same as in his work: a sense of fate, perhaps the absurdity of life,
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ever present. In addition to this particular motive, there are various other quotations of
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the symphony in this work.
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Another important musical theme is _Why fum’th in fight_, a tune by the 16th century English composer Thomas Tallis.
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This theme was made famous by Ralph Vaughan Williams in his work _Fantasia on a Theme of Thomas Tallis_.
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This musical theme is one I have listened to as long as I have been an admirer of classical music,
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and, since it deeply resonates with my inner ear, I felt compelled to place it in this work.
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Finally, I would like to acknowledge the debt that this work owes to the music of composer David Maslanka.
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With many references to his own musical language, including both a prominent use of _Old Hundredth_ (which I first heard
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in his Fourth Symphony) as well as various references to his Ninth Symphony, I am deeply in debt to his music.
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_Quintet_ fully reflects this.
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There are many other small quotes, especially of my own music. Overall, however, the work is not
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meant to be a "quotation collage". These quotations are to me powerful symbols for my musical being,
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the combination of which is meant to serve a greater musical narrative.
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In the end, I hope the work to be a journey from cynicism and despair to an affirmation of love and life.
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This work was premiered by Sara Baumbauer, Seiji Cataldo, Josh Wareham, Audrey Slote, Erin Roe,
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and Jesse Brault at Urness Recital Hall, St. Olaf College, on April 12, 2013.
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@ -6,4 +6,61 @@ date: 2018-09-01
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categories:
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- Solo
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---
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Information about _Sonata Shambhala_.
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This work is a musical response to _Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior_ by Chögyam Trungpa,
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a book which was recommended to me by a dear family-relative of mine in the spring of 2017.
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At the time, I was in a routine involving waking up very early in the morning and reading
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by the morning sunlight until it was time for breakfast. Reading the words of this book
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in such a setting was deeply inspiring, and it was not long after that I proposed the idea of
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composing an extended solo piano piece in reflection of the book to my dear friend Benjamin Hochman.
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Over a year's worth of labor later, I produced the score for him, and Mr. Hochman premiered
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the work at Marlboro College near Brattleboro, VT, on November 11, 2018, with performances following
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in Seattle, WA, and Ghent, NY. Around this time, Rinchen Llamo, a friend of Mr. Hochman and a
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former-student of Trungpa himself, sponsored the final labor of composing this piece,
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and I am deeply grateful to her for her support.
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In this work, I have not sought to depict the teachings of the book literally in the music,
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but rather to reflect musically my own feelings, experiences, and thoughts upon encountering
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and meditating upon them. Below are quotes from the book that I found particularly relevant
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to each movement after composing the work as a whole:
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I. _Kingdom Visions (Chaconne)_
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> When you awaken your heart, you find, to your surprise, that your heart is empty.
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> You find that you are looking into outer space.
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> What are you, who are you, where is your heart? ...
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> If you search for your awakened heart, if you put your hand through your rib cage
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> and feel for it, there is nothing there except for tenderness. You feel sore and soft,
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> and if you open your eyes to the rest of the world, you feel tremendous sadness. ...
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> It occurs because your heart is completely exposed. ...
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> For the warrior, this experience of sadness gives birth to fearlessness.
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> (pp. 31–32)
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II. _Warrior's Path_
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> The Great Eastern Sun is a rising sun ... it represents the dawning, or awakening of human dignity—
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> the rising of human warriorship. It is based on celebrating life. ... It is based on seeing that
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> there is a natural source of radiance and brilliance in the world—
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> which is the innate wakefulness of human beings. (pp. 43–45)
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III. _Pilgrimage – Ascent – Kingdom_
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> That mind of fearfulness<br />
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> Should be put in the cradle of loving-kindness<br />
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> And suckled with the profound and brilliant milk of eternal doubtlessness.<br />
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> In the cool shade of fearlessness,<br />
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> Fan it with the fan of joy and happiness.<br />
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> When it grows older,<br />
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> With various displays of phenomena,<br />
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> Lead it to the self-existing playground.<br />
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> When it grows older still,<br />
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> In order to promote primordial confidence,<br />
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> Lead it to the archery range of warriors.<br />
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> When it grows older still,<br />
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> To awaken primordial self-nature,<br />
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> Let it see the society of men<br />
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> Which possess beauty and dignity.<br />
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> Then the fearful mind<br />
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> Can change into the warrior’s mind,<br />
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> And that eternally youthful confidence<br />
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> Can expand into space without beginning or end.<br />
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> At that point it sees the Great Eastern Sun.<br />
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> (p. 91)
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