Concert Program
November 17 & 18, 2024
Electronics & New Music
FONO (2011)
eme
ele
ce
ese
Becoming Within (2024)
World premiere
Volti commission
Anne Hege
Angélica Negrón
Tag des Jahrs (2001)
Der Früling
Der Sommer
Der Herbst
Der Winter
Kaija Saariaho
~ Intermission ~
Lux Aeterna (2024)
World Premiere
Victoria Fraser
Guardians of Yggdrasil (2024)
World Premiere Preview
I. Yggdrasil, Held
III. Wanting More
Mark Winges
Lisa Delan, libretto
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Let’s take a stroll into a corner of the world of music that, for Volti and me, is less traveled. Our goal was to build a program of new music that explores the nexus of vocal music and electronics. With three premières on the program, once again we are all part of history in the making.
We selected works by Angelica Negrón and Kajia Saariaho, we commissioned and will give premieres of new works by Anne Hege and Mark Winges, and we are delighted to present the premiere of Lux Aeterna in its new arrangement for multiple voices.
Thank you for joining either for our live performances or by recording. We are very happy to have you be part of our process and we welcome your response to the program.
The journey continues!
Robert Geary, Artistic Director
Texts & Program Notes from the composers
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Dayfall and nightbreak dream the same earth,
Around and around — never one, never other.
Night spins into day twirls toward night,
Never one, never other. One dancer. One dance.
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“Welcome to the cosmos... where Night and Day are simultaneous phenomena. Where Light and Dark are inextricable companions. This piece means to offer a meditative moment, out-of-time, to bask in a cosmological perspective of the eternal dance of Night and Day: not separate partners, but a single dancer ever-entwined in the steps of both Light and Dark. The ticking pattern heard on the fixed media track and in the orbit part is the digits of an astronomical unit: 93.64 million miles (9 + 3 + 6 + 4). Through movement, the ensemble goes from being the stars to being together looking at the stars.”
- Victoria Fraser -
Born and raised in Anchorage, Alaska, soprano and composer Victoria Fraser holds advanced degrees from the SF Conservatory of Music, University of Notre Dame, and University of Limerick in Ireland. She regularly performs with Philharmonia Baroque Chorale, American Bach Soloists, Volti, and as a soloist with California Bach Society. Victoria has sung under the direction of Masaaki Suzuki, Helmut Rilling, Matthew Halls, John Nelson, Craig Hella Johnson, and Jeffrey Thomas. Victoria’s compositions explore children’s literature, astro-physics, and the sacred. Her music often incorporates the work of dancers and other visual artists. She is a founding member of turas, a symphonic-folk duo weaving together classical, folk, trad, and pop music. Born to a mountaineer father, Victoria loves to ski, hike, and SCUBA dive. She is a proud member of the South End Rowing Club and can often be seen rowing on the bay at sunrise. victoriafrasersoprano.com
Lux Aeterna, Victoria Fraser
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“FONO, for chorus and electronics, is a piece in four short movements inspired by the “Cartilla Fonética” (phonetic book) used in the initial stages of teaching children the phonetics of the Spanish language. The work explores the nonsensical often-humorous character of the “Cartilla Fonética” by emphasizing the inherent wordplay in the way that syllables, words and short phrases are organized in the book. The piece focuses mostly on the purely aural features of language as well as the possibilities of creating new meanings through the rearranging of syllables and words in the text. Inspired by indistinct and fragmented recollections of my own childhood, specifically from the time when I was learning how to read and write, the work also intends to access a distant place and explore the translation process of a personal experience into a massive reflection/expression of the original scenario. The piece was written in 2011 for Cantori NY and commissioned by Music At The Anthology (MATA) for their 2011 Festival of New Music. -Angélica Negrón
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Puerto Rican-born composer and multi-instrumentalist Angélica Negrón writes music for accordions, robotic instruments, toys, and electronics as well as for chamber ensembles, orchestras, choir, and film. Her music has been described as “wistfully idiosyncratic and contemplative” (WQXR/Q2) while The New York Times noted her “capacity to surprise.” Negrón has been commissioned by the Bang on a Can All-Stars, Kronos Quartet, loadbang, MATA Festival, Brooklyn Youth Chorus, Sō Percussion, the American Composers Orchestra, and the New York Botanical Garden, among others. She has composed numerous film scores, including Landfall (2020) and Memories of a Penitent Heart (2016), in collaboration with filmmaker Cecilia Aldarondo. She was the recipient of the 2022 Hermitage Greenfield Prize. Upcoming premieres include works for the Seattle Symphony, LA Philharmonic, NY Philharmonic Project 19 initiative and multiple performances at Big Ears Festival 2022. Negrón continues to perform and compose for film. www.angelicanegron.com
FONO, Angélica Negrón
Tag des Jahrs, Kaija Saariaho
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Der Frühling
Wenn neu das Licht der Erde sich gezeiget,
Von Frühlingsregen glänzt das grüne Thal und munter
Der Blüthen Weiß am hellen Strom hinunter,
Nachdem ein heitrer Tag zu Menschen sich geneiget.
Die Sichtbarkeit gewinnt von hellen Unterschieden,
Der Frühlingshimmel weilt mit seinem Frieden,
Daß ungestört der Mensch des Jahres Reiz betrachtet,
Und auf Vollkommenheit des Lebens achtet.
Mit Unterthänigkeit,
Scardanelli
d. 15. Merz 1842
Spring
Whenever earth’s bright light reveals itself anew,
The verdant valley gleams with springtime rain and gaily
Snow-white blossoms breast the bright-toned stream
Where once a cloudless day has bowed before mankind.
Such varied colours heighten our perception,
The springtime heavens linger with their peace,
Allowing man to see the year’s attractions undisturbed
And heed his life’s perfection.
With devotion,
Scardanelli
15 March 1842
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Der Sommer
Die Tage gehn vorbei mit sanffter Lüffte Rauschen,
Wenn mit der Wolke sie der Felder Pracht vertauschen,
Des Thales Ende trifft der Berge Dämmerungen,
Dort, wo des Stromes Wellen sich hinabgeschlungen.
Der Wälder Schatten sieht umhergebreitet,
Wo auch der Bach entfernt hinuntergleitet,
Und sichtbar ist der Ferne Bild in Stunden,
Wenn sich der Mensch zu diesem Sinn gefunden.
Scardanelli
d. 24. Mai 1758
Summer
The days drift past with gentle breezes’ rustling,
Exchanging cloud for meadows’ splendour,
The mountains’ twilight strikes the valley’s end
There where the river’s waters have wound their downward way.
The woodlands’ shadow lies there, spread around,
Where, far away, the brook glides downward
And the distant picture can be seen at times
When man collects his thoughts and to such sense inclines.
Scardanelli
24 May 1758
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Der Herbst
Das Glänzen der Natur ist höheres Erscheinen,
Wo sich der Tag mit vielen Freuden endet,
Es ist das Jahr, das sich mit Pracht vollendet,
Wo Früchte sich mit frohem Glanz vereinen.
Das Erdenrund ist so geschmükt, und selten lärmet
Der Schall durchs offne Feld, die Sonne wärmet
Den Tag des Herbstes mild, die Felder stehen
Als eine Aussicht weit, die Lüffte wehen.
Die Zweig’ und Äste durch mit frohem Rauschen,
Wenn schon mit Leere sich die Felder dann vertauschen,
Der ganze Sinn des hellen Bildes lebet
Als wie ein Bild, das goldne Pracht umschwebet.
d. 15ten Nov. 1759
Autumn
The gleam of nature is a higher revelation
Where daylight ends with many joys.
It is the year in splendid consummation
Where fruits are merged with blithe resplendence.
The world is thus bedecked, and rarely
Does a sound transcend the open fields. How mildly
Does the sunshine warm the autumn day, the fields
Extend before us like a vista, breezes blow
Through twigs and branches with their cheerful rustling
While all the fields give way to emptiness.
The total meaning of this bright-toned picture lives
As if it were a picture framed in golden splendour.
15 November 1759
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Der Winter
Wenn sich der Tag des Jahrs hinabgeneiget
Und rings das Feld mit den Gebirgen schweiget,
So glänzt das Blau des Himmels an den Tagen,
Die wie Gestirn in heitrer Höhe ragen.
Der Wechsel und die Pracht ist minder umgebreitet,
Dort, wo ein Strom hinab mit Eile gleitet,
Der Ruhe Geist ist aber in den Stunden
Der prächtigen Natur mit Tiefigkeit verbunden.
Mit Unterthänigkeit,
Scardanelli
d. 24. Januar 1743
Winter
When once the year’s last day has bent its head
And field and mountains all around fail mute,
The azure of the sky gleams brightly on those days
Which soar aloft like stars to cloudless heights.
The changes and the splendour seem less widespread
Where a river swiftly runs its downward course.
And yet the spirit of tranquillity is merged
With depth at all those times when nature gleams with
splendour.
With devotion,
Scardanelli
24 January 1743
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"I have been familiar with the late poems of Hölderlin for some time now and used some of them for several little pieces (Die Aussicht, Überzeugung). The idea for Tag des Jahrs for choir came to me a few years ago when someone very dear to me suffered a cerebral haemorrhage and communication with her acquired a new logic (or rather lack of it) because she no longer had any sense of time or place. I do not know what had happened to Hölderlin, for he signed his poems under different dates, decades, even centuries from the time in which he lived, and under the name of Scardanelli. I nevertheless acquired a new insight into his poems as visions of lived moments that pass in the twinkling of an eye and then vanish or transform into new, intensive moments. Our minds are full of such clear; sensuous moments, and they in fact make up our own experience of the life we live.
The text begged to be given an archaic choral treatment. I also wanted to expand the sound world in the direction of the nature that is so present in these poems. Hence the material consists not only of taped human voice but also of birds, the wind and other nature sounds. The electronic part was realized in summer 2001 at the Civitella Ranieri studio, Italy with Jean-Baptiste Barrier.
Tag des Jahrs is dedicated to my mother.” - Kaija Saariaho
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Kaija Saariaho (1952-2023) was a leading voice of her generation of composers, in her native Finland and worldwide. She studied composition in Helsinki, Freiburg and Paris, where she lived from 1982 to her death. Her studies and research at IRCAM, the Parisian center for electroacoustic experimentation, had a major influence on her music, and her characteristically luxuriant and mysterious textures were often created by combining live performance and electronics.
After her breakthrough piece Lichtbogen for ensemble and electronics in 1986, Saariaho gradually expanded her musical expression to a great variety of genres, and her chamber pieces and choral music have become staples of instrumental and vocal ensembles, respectively. www.saariaho.org
Texts & Translations
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“I have dreamed of writing a piece for professional chorus and my Rope Instrument for years and it is thrilling to have the opportunity to bring this piece to life. In many ways, this is a companion piece to my previous work for Volti, it sounds like all my dreams. Where that piece struggled with isolation, this piece celebrates the joy of being together!”
-Anne Hege
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Born in Oakland, CA, Anne Hege began her musical studies singing with the Piedmont East Bay Children’s Choir and the Oakland Youth Chorus. Hege received a BA in music with honors from Wesleyan University, CT and an MA in music composition from Mills College, CA. In 2014, she completed her PhD in Music Composition at Princeton University where she studied embodied cognition theory and musical meaning. She has composed for film, installation art, dance, and concert settings. Since 2008, Hege has composed musical scores for choreographer Carrie Ahern. The New York Times praised her score for Ahern’s SenSate as “convincing” and “strangely environmental.” Influenced by her deep listening practice, her latest compositions lie somewhere between ritual, music, and theater with some homemade instruments thrown in for good measure.
Becoming Within, Anne Hege
Guardians of Yggdrasil, Mark Winges
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MORE
There must be more
more than we know, more we can grow
more to unfold, more of the gold
more we control
more than we’ve been given to hold
there must be more
MORE
MORE
MORE
why can’t we have more?
we’ve given everything
we could discover other roots, we could discover other runes we could discover other roads, we could discover other realms becoming gods in our own worldsswimming in lakes adorned with swans, unwinding threads that spin our fates riding wild winds to other suns, eating the fruits of other moons
the tree of life can tend herself
can draw fresh water from her wells
can bar the serpent from her roots
while we set foot upon new lands
since the beginnning of the worldof all the worlds
our world has been here
watching and waiting
for what?
we do not know, how can we know
what we can’t see, what we can’t hear, what we can’t touch who we could be, if we had more, if we could see, if we could hear
we want MORE than the world of the Yggdrasilnew worlds are waiting for us
we want MORE
we will find more
there must be more
we must find more
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“The Yggdrasil is an immense and central sacred tree in Norse cosmology. Around it exists all else, including the Nine Worlds. The tree itself appears in many texts, including both the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda, both of which date from the 13th century. Many characters and gods are associated with the tree. In The Guardians of Yggdrasil, librettist Lisa Delan and I focus on those who nourish and protect the tree, its guardians. The Yggdrasil tree serves as a metaphor for our world, with the chorus acting as its human guardians, singing to keep it from harm. Or perhaps, as many of us are wont to do, getting distracted from the stewardship role we are given and seeking “more”.
The complete Guardians of Yggdrasil will be premiered by Volti this coming June as a theatrical work integrating scenery, lighting and projections with the live sung and electronic sound. Today, Volti will perform two of the five movements in concert format as a preview.
Yggdrasil, Held opens the work, depicting the timeless world of the tree lovingly attended by its guardians. This movement has no text, only phonemes. All of the electronic sounds in this movement were created from recordings of Volti, although the sound was digitally manipulated in various ways. Wanting More is the third movement of the complete work. It chronicles the thoughts of the guardians as they decide to leave the tree, seeking to gratify their own desires. These thoughts are radical, dramatic, maybe even harmful. Accordingly, much of the music is agitated, with only temporary points of repose. The electronic sounds that propel the chorus are a mix of vocal and strictly artificial sounds.Special thanks to Tom Flaherty and Sam Nichols for their advice and guidance about all matters digital. This is the first foray into the world of electronic sound since my undergraduate days on the analog playground, where “electronic” meant cutting up bits of recording tape and twirling dials on early synthesizers. And, as always, thanks to Bob and the singers for being my companions on the road of new sounds.” -Mark Winge
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Mark Winges was born in Louisville, Kentucky, and currently resides in San Francisco, where he has been resident composer / advisor for Volti since 1990. He was also composer-in-residence for the San Francisco Choral Artists in the 2012-13 season. He is a graduate of the College-Conservatory of Music in Cincinnati, SF State University, and has studied at the Musikhögskolan in Stockholm, Sweden with composer Arne Mellnäs.
Gramophone magazine has characterized his music as “Stylistically adventurous in setting, but strongly beholden to conventional means”. SF Classical Voice describes him as “a composer with the skill and self-confidence to write music that is clear, direct, and at times even simple, but not at all simple-minded”. He has had residencies at the MacDowell Colony, Fundación Valparaiso (Spain), Ragdale Foundation, the Visby International Centre for Composers (Sweden), and a Lucas Artists Residency at Villa Montalvo.
Recent pieces include Words Cast Shadows for mixed chorus, Solstice Dreams for chamber orchestra, Moon Obsesses Me for children’s choir, and Adventure in the Air, a concerto for soprano saxophone and wind ensemble, which was commissioned by a consortium of bands, with performances taking place throughout the 2024 / 25 season. Red Sky Opening, an album of his solo piano music played by Blaise Bryski (Cornell University / Ithaca College) is scheduled for release in April, 2025.
Text by Lisa Delan
Many thanks to our supporters
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San Francisco Grants for the Arts
Anonymous -
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THANK YOU to all of our donors! Like most arts organizations, Volti relies on your donations to stay alive. Ticket sales account for only a small portion of our expenses. Knowing that you are asked for contributions from all sides, we are particularly grateful to those who choose to support the arts. Volti is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) corpora]on, EIN 94-2699509. All donations are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.
Donations listed below were received in the 12-month period ending October 31, 2024. We sincerely apologize for any errors or omissions. Contact us with any corrections needed, at 628-225-7533 or ExecDir @ VoltiSF.org.
In Memoriam
Gael Betts Helander (b.March 21,1953, d.June 20, 2024) was a founding member of the San Francisco Chamber Singers, later renamed Volti. Gael sang alto and helped with all the organizational issues of a young organization. Rehearsals, concerts, potlucks, tours, fundraisers, house concerts, caroling, she did it all with a willing spirit and an ever positive attitude. She was kind and keenly intelligent. Her husband Ed Betts also sang with the Chamber Singers and then some 40 years later their son Will Betts, auditioned and is a current member.
Aurelio Viscarra (b. September 4 1955, d. October 25 2024) sang with the San Francisco Chamber Singers for more than 10 years and more recently served on the board. He infused all of us with his warm, generous, and loving nature which was balanced by fine artistry, a high degree of organization, and strong sense of humility. There was nothing small about Aurelio. From his huge heart to his beautiful big rich tenor voice he filled a room or stage with a powerful presence. He sang many solos with the Chamber Singes and with other music organizations and he often performed roles in theatrical productions.
VOLTI STAFF & LEADERSHIP
Robert Geary Artistic Director
Giacomo DiGrigoli Executive Director
Mark Winges Composer in Residence
Sidney Chen Artistic Advisor
Paul G. McCurdy Collaborative Pianist
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President: Richard Collier
Secretary: Catherine Heagerty
Treasurer: Mary Anne Shattuck
Members at Large:
Emily M. De Falla
Yiting Jin
Mark Shattuck
Cole Thomason-Redus
ADVISORY BOARD
Roslyn Barak
Susan E. Bohlin
Juan Pedro Gaffney
Vance George
Eric Howe
Morten Lauridsen
Kirke Mechem
James Meredith
Jose Luis Moscovich
Kent Nagano
Anthony Pasqua
John Renke
Sandra Soderlund
Eric Valliere
Dale Warland