general information

composition date
2001
duration
8 min
editor
Boosey & Hawkes
Commission
Orchestre du Minnesota pour son 100e anniversaire
Libretto (details, author)

Textes d'Emily Dickinson.

type

Vocal music and instrument(s) (1 female voice and orchestra)

detailed formation

Soloist
soprano

2 flutes (also alto flute), oboe, English horn, basset horn, clarinet (also bass clarinet), 2 bassoons (also contrabassoon), 2 horns, 2 percussionists, harp, celesta, strings

information about the creation

date
March 2002

États-Unis, Minneapolis

interpreters

Dawn Upshaw et l'Orchestre du Minnesota, direction : Alan Gilbert.

observations

Il existe également une version de cette œuvre pour soprano et quatuor à cordes, voir How Slow the Wind.

Program note

How Slow the Wind, a setting of two short Emily Dickinson poems, was Golijov's response to the death in an accident of his friend Mariel Stubrin. He writes, 'I had in mind one of those seconds in life that is frozen in the memory, forever-a sudden death, a single instant in which life turns upside down, different from the experience of death after a long agony.' Originally for voice and string quartet, the piece was commissioned by Cecilia Wasserman, in memory of her late husband Herb, for Close Encounters with Music and was first performed in their Seiji Ozawa Hall concert of May 5, 2001, by Dawn Upshaw, soprano; Toby Appel and Justine Chen, violins; Kenji Bunch, viola, and Yehuda Hanani, cello.



Osvaldo Golijov, site internet du compositeur.

similar works


This entry is encyclopaedic in nature and does not reflect the collections of the Ircam media library. Please refer to the "scores" entries.


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