• Missy Mazzoli
  • These Worlds In Us (for full orchestra) (2006)

  • G Schirmer Inc (World)
  • 2.2.2.2/4.2.2.1/3perc(2melodica[=syn])/str
  • 9 min
    • 29th March 2025, Garde Arts Center, New London, CT, United States of America
    • 30th March 2025, Stadtcasino, Basel, Switzerland
    View all

Programme Note

Composer Note
The title These Worlds In Us comes from James Tate's poem The Lost Pilot, a meditation on his father's death in World War II:

(excerpt)
My head cocked towards the sky,
I cannot get off the ground,
and you, passing over again,

fast, perfect and unwilling
to tell me that you are doing
well, or that it was a mistake

that placed you in that world,
and me in this; or that misfortune
placed these worlds in us.

This piece is dedicated to my father, who was a soldier during the Vietnam War. In talking to him it occurred to me that, as we grow older, we accumulate worlds of intense memory within us, and that grief is often not far from joy. I like the idea that music can reflect painful and blissful sentiments in a single note or gesture, and sought to create a sound palette that I hope is at once completely new and strangely familiar to the listener.

The theme of this work, a mournful line first played by the violins, collapses into glissandos almost immediately after it appears, giving the impression that the piece has been submerged under water or played on a turntable that is grinding to a halt. The melodicas (mouth organs) played by the percussionists in the opening and final gestures mimic the wheeze of a broken accordion, lending a particular vulnerability to the bookends of the work. The rhythmic structures and cyclical nature of the piece are inspired by the unique tension and logic of Balinese music, and the march-like figures in the percussion bring to mind the militaristic inspiration for the work as well as the relentless energy of electronica drum beats.

— Missy Mazzoli

Media

Performed by the Yale Philharmonia

Scores

Features

  • Curtain-Up | Concert Openers
    • Curtain-Up | Concert Openers
    • Explore engaging, creative, and captivating orchestral openers for your upcoming programs. Set the stage for memorable musical experiences after the curtain comes up.

Reviews

…we now have a fuller picture of Missy Mazzoli the orchestral composer in the album Dark with Excessive Bright, highlighting four harmonically fresh, dramatically charged works.

Tom Huizenga, NPR: The 10 Best Classical Albums of 2023
13th December 2023
Missy Mazzoli's These Worlds In Us began elegiacally, with hints of Copland, but soon grew edgier and more searching. To me, it sometimes sounded the way psychotherapy feels, with rushes of memory subsiding into despondency and grief.
Larry Fuchsberg, Minneapolis Star Tribune
5th June 2008
The Mazzoli piece also seemed to be a favorite of the audience, to judge from the applause of all 900 listeners who turned out.
James R. Oestreich, The New York Times
17th December 2007

Discography

Missy Mazzoli: Dark with Excessive Bright

Missy Mazzoli: Dark with Excessive Bright
  • Label
    BIS
  • Catalogue Number
    BIS2572
  • Conductor
    James Gaffigan / Tim Weiss
  • Ensemble
    Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra / Arctic Philharmonic
  • Soloist
    Peter Herresthal, violin
  • Released
    7th April 2023

More Info