Home Andrea's MUSIC SALON (History): The Salon Celebrates 20 Years!
The Salon, a performance series in the home and modeled after the 19th Century European salons, was founded in September 1986 by composer/pianist Andrea Clearfield. Andrea hosted monthly Salons from September through May at her 1427 Spruce Street location and has recently moved into a larger space to accommodate the growing number of audience attending. Unlike the Salons of the past, the Salon was conceived with the idea of integrating different music genres as well as other arts. The Salon features not only classical chamber music and opera, but also jazz, original contemporary compositions, electronic, improvisation, folk, experimental, world music, poetry, dance and multimedia works. Near the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in Philadelphia, the Salon reflects the strong tradition of music in our city and fosters new art forms in an intimate and supportive atmosphere. David Patrick Stearns wrote a story for the Philadelphia Inquirer on the Salon and WHYY broadcast a story celebrating the 15 year anniversary season. In 2003, Peter Burwasser wrote an article on the Salon for the City Paper. Salons begin at 7:30pm and shoes are removed at the door. Email Andrea for more details. Read more about the Salon: Listen to the Salon story on WRTI: Listen to the Salon story on WXPN: Watch the TV spot on the Salon on WHYY: Read Peter Burwasser's article on Andrea and the creative process: Winner 2006 Citypaper Choice Awards: Most Creative Way to Spend a Sunday
The Long Bright is set to texts by David Wolman, who commissioned the work. Mr. Wolman wrote these poems during the five years between his wife’s diagnosis and her death from breast cancer. His wife, Anni Baker, was an acclaimed coloratura soprano, Broadway singer and a strong supporter of contemporary vocal music. The cantata is in two movements that contain arias, choral sections and instrumental interludes. The poem, “The Long Bright”, frames the piece. Portions of The Long Bright are informed by Anni Baker’s varied repertoire that includes art songs, musical theater and opera. A number of layered fragments from Anni’s varied recital pieces appear in the “Melisma” aria and an excerpt from a folk opera that she composed is heard in the last movement. The Long Bright also alludes to contemporary American popular music as well as to the music of Anni’s longtime friend, Samuel Barber. A 5-note theme is built from the opening two notes of the piece, heard in its entirety in the first choral passage. This recurring motif departs from and returns to the same note, representing the cycle of life. The title, The Long Bright, can be perceived as the white light at the end of the tunnel (of death), the long and bright hope for a cure and the fierce brightness of our lives, the white light of our souls - within which, like the color white that can contain all colors, we can feel deeply all things. I was inspired by David Wolman’s generous sharing of the experience of his wife’s death in the form of these deeply personal and moving poems and I am honored to have been asked to set them to music. It is my hope that the piece will be a tribute to Anni Baker’s memory and the fullness of life that she embodied, and that it will generate an increased awareness of breast cancer and the need for finding a cure. David Patrick Stearns wrote about The Long Bright in The Philadelphia Inquirer on April 22, 2004, “Phila. composer’s cantata honors a Phila. benefactor” and on May 23, 2004 in his column, The Music Report “Classical music reinvents its relevance to times”. The Long Bright was awarded the 2005 Theodore Front Prize for Chamber and Orchestral Music from the International Alliance of Women in Music. For score/parts rental, or piano/vocal score, contact Andrea at aclearfi@aol.com
WOMEN OF VALOR, An Oratorio on the Women of the Bible
The Women of Valor chamber ensemble can give performances of the oratorio in your area and can be booked by contacting Andrea at aclearfi@aol.com. All of the arias from Women of Valor are also arranged for voice with piano accompaniment. Contact Andrea for score and parts. CD’s are available upon request. Texts for Women of Valor are drawn both from the Bible and from modern poems and prose. The Biblical texts include portions from Genesis, Judges, The Book of Esther as well as the entire "Eishet Hayil" (literally "A Woman of Valor") poem from Proverbs, sung and narrated in English, Hebrew and Yiddish. The work is composed in three large sections, each including recitatives, arias, duets, narrated portions and orchestral interludes, similar to an oratorio. The Eishet Hayil text comprises the recitatives, and the arias are the stories of biblical women from the perspective of ten contemporary women writers. "Women of Valor" highlights the stories of Sarah, Leah, Rachel, Jocheved, Miriam, Hannah, Jael, Michal, Ruth and Esther. Texts are by Alicia Ostriker, Marge Piercy, Rivka Miriam (translated from the Hebrew by Linda Zisquit), "Rachel" (translated from the Hebrew by Robert Friend), Rabbi Rayzel Raphael, Sandy Shanin, Roza Yakubovitsh (translated from the Yiddish by Dr. Kathryn Hellerstein), Isidor Lillian, Dr. Ellen Frankel and Andrea Clearfield. The musical material for "Women of Valor" incorporates ancient Hebrew synagogue chants as well as other traditional melodies which are sung to the Eishet Hayil text. These melodies are woven through the piece like a tapestry, connecting threads between the old and the new. A Renaissance technique called soggetto cavato dalle vocali was employed where a theme is carved out from the vowels of a phrase. Thus, the theme for the oratorio was created from the vowels of "Women of Valor" where o-e-o-a-o becomes do-re-do-fa-sol. Likewise, the longer version of the theme, do-re-do-fa-sol-sol-la-ti, is derived from the vowels of the words ""Women of Valor, Who Can Find?" and rises like this question from the opening of Proverbs 31. Heard in a multiplicity of forms, this theme pervades the work. Another structural element is shaped by the acrostic nature of Proverbs 31, which uses each of the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet. "Women of Valor" employs a 22-note scale which was devised from three synagogue prayer modes, providing a musical representation of the literary acrostic. Each line of the biblical text is sung on a consecutive degree of the scale, preceeded by a chime tone." While not an authentic representation of any traditional ritual, prayer or musical style, "Women of Valor" is influenced by cantorial ornamentation, biblical instruments, Jewish dance forms and Middle-Eastern and Sephardic music so that these elements became resources for color, melody, rhythm, phrasing and orchestration. Mixed meters, syncopated rhythms, traditional scales and percussion instruments such as the dumbek, rik (small tambourine), finger cymbals and sistrem add a Middle-Eastern flavor to the composition. Portions of ancient melodic patterns, called tropes, sung to the Torah, can be heard in the Sarah, Miriam, Hannah and Ruth arias as well as in fragments and layers in the orchestral prelude and other interludes. The centerpiece of the work, "Miriam's Dance", was inspired by the biblical heroine, Miriam, who led the women in song and dance after the crossing of the Red Sea. Among the tropes woven through the dance is the particular melodic pattern that is chanted to Miriam's "Song of the Sea" in the Book of Exodus. The biblical stories have been passed down from generation to generation and transformed with each re-telling. Likewise, the music in "Women of Valor" unfolds in continuous variation. By employing a musical device called heterophony, a melody is heard by many instruments at the same time, but each statement differs slightly from the others. Out of this sea of chant, various themes emerge. Strata of musical ideas also represent the rich and complex interpretative layers of the Eishet Hayil text. This large-scale work can be likened to a musical midrash which reflects the poetic, colorful, heart-felt, mysterious, evocative and celebratory aspects of the texts. See Reviews for critics' reviews of "Women of Valor". "Women of Valor" logo by Louise Clearfield. |
|||||||||||
|
|||||||||||