• Rachel Grimes, Angélica Negrón, Shara Nova, Caroline Shaw and Sarah Kirkland Snider
  • The Blue Hour (2017)

  • Music Sales Corporation (World)

Commissioned by: A Far Cry; Washington Performing Arts; Weis Center for the Performing Arts at Bucknell University; Hancher Auditorium at University of Iowa; Opening Nights at Florida State University

  • str; audio recording
  • Mezzo Soprano
  • 1 hr
  • Rachel Grimes, Angélica Negrón, Shara Nova, Caroline Shaw and Sarah Kirkland Snider
  • Carolyn Forché
  • English, French, Latin

Programme Note

Text
Carolyn Forché

Note
One way that humans strive to control uncontrollable realities such as death is by imposing arbitrary rules and structures on the chaotic and inevitable. Another is by participating in the difficult but necessary act of being active members of a community or communities. The Blue Hour, in its conception, its process, and its content, lives and breathes these paradoxes. The work, on its premiere tour this November after a long process of composition and workshopping, is an ambitious collaboration between five composers (Rachel Grimes, Sarah Kirkland Snider, Angélica Negrón, Shara Nova, and Caroline Shaw), a vocalist (Grammy-winner Luciana Souza), and the democratic, self-conducted string collective A Far Cry.

The work uses as its text Carolyn Forché's poem, "On Earth," which catalogs the scattered thoughts, visions, and imagery of a life passing ever closer to death, organized through the objective but arbitrary tool of alphabetization. This explicitly rationalized poetic form simultaneously evokes cold modernism and its ancient predecessors in biblical and gnostic abecedaries. The music that sets the poem draws similarly from an eclectic set of influences, at times setting the text quite literally (as with explicit references to Bach and settings that evoke plainchant and Renaissance polyphony), and at times using extended string techniques to create kaleidoscopic sound-paintings of Forché's moments of fantastical, jarring imagery. The work also gleams with power ballads — unapologetic lyricism and no-nonsense songwriting that is often associated with contemporary non-classical genres but which here contributes to the intimacy and universality of the subject matter. The various movements, each entirely written by one of the composers, access the personal vernaculars and interests of each composer as they pass through the ordered but nonlinear narrative of Forché's poem, contributing to the scope and scale of the work and its underlying subjects.

When the five composers and members of A Far Cry sat down for a meeting in the summer of 2016 about the possibility of bringing this song cycle to life, the group discussed in depth what justification there was for attempting a collaboration on such a scale for such a deeply personal work. As collaborators shared their own takes on the meaningful urgency of the project, the following statement took hold as a sort of "mission statement:"

In a time when we are seeing masses of people dehumanized — by war, displacement, poverty — we are looking here at a single life, the beautiful detail of one human existence. There is something precious in that; that through our sense of empathy with this one individual, we are given a lens through which to see our own world with greater clarity.

— Alex Forte

Movements
• Prologue Shara Nova
• Opening Rachel Grimes
• A black map Angélica Negrón
• A memory Rachel Grimes
• A syllable Caroline Shaw
• Angelica-Balefire Sarah Kirkland Snider
• Canticle Angélica Negrón
• Dark Angélica Negrón
• Early summer's green plums Sarah Kirkland Snider
• Even if by forgetting Carolyn Forché
• Firmament Caroline Shaw
• 1st Refrain Caroline Shaw
• Ghost swift Shara Nova
• He told her how Sarah Kirkland Snider
• Her hair Angélica Negrón
• I am alone Sarah Kirkland Snider
• It appears to be an elegy Shara Nova
• J'ai rêvé Caroline Shaw
• Keeping a record Carolyn Forché
• Library lilac Shara Nova
• My dear Sarah Kirkland Snider
• Nevertheless Shara Nova
• Oil soap Rachel Grimes
• Older than clocks Caroline Shaw
• Poppy seed Rachel Grimes
• She heard no one's footsteps Sarah Kirkland Snider
• Tendril Rachel Grimes
• 2nd Refrain Caroline Shaw
• The ganglia Caroline Shaw
• The hole Angélica Negrón
• The name Rachel Grimes
• The silence Angélica Negrón
• Twirling Caroline Shaw
• Vesture, vigil Caroline Shaw
• We are as paper Shara Nova
• Yet the women Sarah Kirkland Snider
• You are the ghost Shara Nova
• Zero Rachel Grimes
• 3rd Refrain Caroline Shaw

Media

Scores

Reviews

…A Far Cry’s latest project — a hauntingly beautiful, evening-length song-cycle entitled The Blue Hour *mdash; reflects a whole new level of ambition, care, and capacity.

The new piece, which received its local premiere on Friday night in Jordan Hall, is a rare species in contemporary classical music: a successful group composition…

There is an aura of deep personal intimacy in this work, yet Forché has also been hailed as a poet adept at blurring the lines between the personal and the political, and bearing witness to a century’s multiple darknesses. That sense of witnessing is here too.

These themes seem to have all been registered and deftly amplified by the project’s composers, whose own settings, interspersed in no apparent order, manage to cohere stylistically while still retaining differences in individual voice, like distinct beads of a single necklace. The music they have written has a poised, almost ritualized bearing, and its dominant impulse is toward a cool silvery lyricism, clouded at times by dissonant images in the text — and by harsh sonorities (crushed strings, wild arpeggiations) rising up from the strings.
Jeremy Eichler, Boston Globe
12th November 2017
The Blue Hour song cycle mesmerizes…

Working together, composers Rachel Grimes, Sarah Kirkland Snider, Angélica Negrón, Shara Nova and Caroline Shaw, the Grammy Award-winning singer Luciana Souza and the 18 string players of A Far Cry have come up with a gorgeous and remarkably unified work…

Vocally, The Blue Hour is a singer's dream (Souza's influence?). Lyrical and, for the most part, quiet, the music lies right in her mezzo range's sweet spot and gave her endless opportunities for nuance, which she took on magnificently — her stiletto-sharp disdain on the phrase "question after question" (the Q's in the alphabet, along with quiescent, quiet, quinine and quivering) was withering…

The 70-minute reverie closed brilliantly with a quiet, simple round on the text "all of this must remain" and drifted off as the lights dimmed. Theatrical? Maybe, but here very effective.
Joan Reinthaler, Washington Post
5th November 2017

Discography

The Blue Hour

The Blue Hour
  • Label
    New Amsterdam Records
  • Ensemble
    A Far Cry
  • Soloist
    Shara Nova
  • Released
    14th October 2022

More Info