In history, however,
it’s more than a river; it defined a big stretch of the boundary between
North and South in the Civil War. Now — the name of a county as well
— it’s being written in big letters on a larger map as
Rappahannock County, a theatrical song cycle to be premiered at the
2011 Virginia Arts Festival on April 12, which — not coincidentally
— is the 150 anniversary of the attack on Fort Sumter that launched the
Civil War.
The composer of the work is Ricky Lee Gordon, widely praised for the opera
that he made of John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath; author of the
30 poems in the cycle is Mark Campbell, noted for his collaborations with
several significant composers. “The Rappahannock remains a symbol of the
division between North and South,” Gordon says. “And the songs are
snapshots of life and loss during the war.”
In making the commission festival director Robert Cross asked only for a
work on the Civil War. What exactly it would be was up to Gordon and Campbell.
“I couldn’t see a big three-act opera on the war,” Gordon
says. “The challenge was to make the subject manageable — to cut it
down.”
Gordon brought Campbell on board, and they both started reading.
“Virginia was so central to the war — and so divided!” Gordon
says. “We decided to focus on just one county in the state:
Rappahannock.” The two decided on music theater as their genre, and
Gordon thought in terms of a cycle of songs to be performed by a small group of
singers, each of whom plays a number of roles. Although the final score is
divided into five acts — one for each year of the war — they are
performed without interruption. The work lasts 85 minutes.
“Although the poems offer no cohesive narrative, they must be
performed without intermission,” the composer says. “That would
break the mounting intensity of the cycle.” Campbell’s texts draw
on letters, diaries and other documents from a group of people — both
black and white — who experienced the impact of war first hand. The goal
of the creative team was a work in which individuals speak with intimacy.
“But the personal is political,” Gordon says, “and the
political is personal.” The piece has the sense of a lens closing in on a
spectrum of individuals and their feelings around slavery and morality in a
profound and poignant way. “Mark’s libretto shows what everyone has
to lose — or has lost.”
A preacher opens the cycle:
“For slavery is not a sin,
It’s sanctified…
By God!”
A map maker decries the abuse of his profession:
“Making these maps
Is not to orient a man,
But parcel to a plan
For spoiling valleys, for torching forests,
For bloodying rivers, for rupturing ridges,
Fields, farms, paths, groves, all lost—
Leveled into an ashen heap.”
A soldier — unidentified by side — dies:
“And what the Hell for?
All I wanted
Was to die the Good death,
The noble death,
A death both brave and bold.
Not this slow withering away.”
In a duet former slaves ask what the future holds, and a young black woman
buries her infant child, while the dying soldier concludes:
“For fin’lly only cruelty reigns.
My heart is dead, my soul has left me,
So now let’s finish what remains.”
Rappahannock County is a work of great economy, but immense
emotional breadth — and depth. As he completed the poems Campbell sent
them to University of Richmond historian Edward Ayres, a leading Civil War
scholar. Ayers served as consultant on the project. “He has been our
godfather!” Gordon says. “He checked the texts for historical and
sociological accuracy.”
Ricky Ian Gordon, composer and Mark Campbell, lyrics and concept [Photo by Rachel Greenberg courtesy of Virginia Arts Festival]
Gordon, in his understanding of the voice, is too often compared with
Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein. Rappahannock County will
correct that view and underscore the unique and original voice with which he
writes. (Edgar Lee Master’s 1915 Spoon River Anthology, a
collection of free-form poems describing life in a fictional small town served
Campbell and Gordon as a model.) The work is scored for a chamber ensemble of
17. Wendell Harrington has designed minimal sets that rely on projections for
power. Kevin Newbury directs the premiere; Rob Fischer conducts.
Members of the Norfolk cast are soprano Aundi Marie Moore, mezzo Faith
Sherman, tenor Matthew Tuell and baritones Charles Freeman and Mark Walters.
Rappahannock County is a co-commission of the 2011 Virginia Arts
Festival, Virginia Opera, the University of Richmond and the University of
Texas in Austin, The Norfolk production will be staged at both universities in
September 2011.
Repeat performances of Rapphannock County during this 14th season
of the Virginia Arts Festival, are scheduled for Norfolk’s Harrison Opera
House on April 16 and 17. For information and tickets from $33.95 to $8.50.
call 1-877-741-2787 or visit www.vafest.org.
Wes Blomster
image=http://www.operatoday.com/Ricky-Ian-Gordon-%28c%29-Greg-D.gif
image_description=Ricky Ian Gordon [Photo by Greg Downer courtesy of Virginia Arts Festival]
product=yes
product_title=Ricky Ian Gordon: Rappahannock County
product_by=Virginia Arts Festival, Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 PM (World Premiere), Saturday, April 16, 8:00 PM and Sunday, April 17, 2:30 PM, Harrison Opera House, Norfolk. Co-commissioned by the Virginia Arts Festival, Virginia Opera, the Modlin Center for the Arts at the University of Richmond, and Texas Performing Arts at the University of Texas at Austin.
product_id=Above: Ricky Ian Gordon [Photo by Greg Downer courtesy of Virginia Arts Festival]
Virginia Arts recalls Civil War
In history, however,
it’s more than a river; it defined a big stretch of the boundary between
North and South in the Civil War. Now — the name of a county as well
— it’s being written in big letters on a larger map as
Rappahannock County, a theatrical song cycle to be premiered at the
2011 Virginia Arts Festival on April 12, which — not coincidentally
— is the 150 anniversary of the attack on Fort Sumter that launched the
Civil War.
The composer of the work is Ricky Lee Gordon, widely praised for the opera
that he made of John Steinbeck’s Grapes of Wrath; author of the
30 poems in the cycle is Mark Campbell, noted for his collaborations with
several significant composers. “The Rappahannock remains a symbol of the
division between North and South,” Gordon says. “And the songs are
snapshots of life and loss during the war.”
In making the commission festival director Robert Cross asked only for a
work on the Civil War. What exactly it would be was up to Gordon and Campbell.
“I couldn’t see a big three-act opera on the war,” Gordon
says. “The challenge was to make the subject manageable — to cut it
down.”
Gordon brought Campbell on board, and they both started reading.
“Virginia was so central to the war — and so divided!” Gordon
says. “We decided to focus on just one county in the state:
Rappahannock.” The two decided on music theater as their genre, and
Gordon thought in terms of a cycle of songs to be performed by a small group of
singers, each of whom plays a number of roles. Although the final score is
divided into five acts — one for each year of the war — they are
performed without interruption. The work lasts 85 minutes.
“Although the poems offer no cohesive narrative, they must be
performed without intermission,” the composer says. “That would
break the mounting intensity of the cycle.” Campbell’s texts draw
on letters, diaries and other documents from a group of people — both
black and white — who experienced the impact of war first hand. The goal
of the creative team was a work in which individuals speak with intimacy.
“But the personal is political,” Gordon says, “and the
political is personal.” The piece has the sense of a lens closing in on a
spectrum of individuals and their feelings around slavery and morality in a
profound and poignant way. “Mark’s libretto shows what everyone has
to lose — or has lost.”
A preacher opens the cycle:
“For slavery is not a sin,
It’s sanctified…
By God!”
A map maker decries the abuse of his profession:
“Making these maps
Is not to orient a man,
But parcel to a plan
For spoiling valleys, for torching forests,
For bloodying rivers, for rupturing ridges,
Fields, farms, paths, groves, all lost—
Leveled into an ashen heap.”
A soldier — unidentified by side — dies:
“And what the Hell for?
All I wanted
Was to die the Good death,
The noble death,
A death both brave and bold.
Not this slow withering away.”
In a duet former slaves ask what the future holds, and a young black woman
buries her infant child, while the dying soldier concludes:
“For fin’lly only cruelty reigns.
My heart is dead, my soul has left me,
So now let’s finish what remains.”
Rappahannock County is a work of great economy, but immense
emotional breadth — and depth. As he completed the poems Campbell sent
them to University of Richmond historian Edward Ayres, a leading Civil War
scholar. Ayers served as consultant on the project. “He has been our
godfather!” Gordon says. “He checked the texts for historical and
sociological accuracy.”
Ricky Ian Gordon, composer and Mark Campbell, lyrics and concept [Photo by Rachel Greenberg courtesy of Virginia Arts Festival]
Gordon, in his understanding of the voice, is too often compared with
Stephen Sondheim and Leonard Bernstein. Rappahannock County will
correct that view and underscore the unique and original voice with which he
writes. (Edgar Lee Master’s 1915 Spoon River Anthology, a
collection of free-form poems describing life in a fictional small town served
Campbell and Gordon as a model.) The work is scored for a chamber ensemble of
17. Wendell Harrington has designed minimal sets that rely on projections for
power. Kevin Newbury directs the premiere; Rob Fischer conducts.
Members of the Norfolk cast are soprano Aundi Marie Moore, mezzo Faith
Sherman, tenor Matthew Tuell and baritones Charles Freeman and Mark Walters.
Rappahannock County is a co-commission of the 2011 Virginia Arts
Festival, Virginia Opera, the University of Richmond and the University of
Texas in Austin, The Norfolk production will be staged at both universities in
September 2011.
Repeat performances of Rapphannock County during this 14th season
of the Virginia Arts Festival, are scheduled for Norfolk’s Harrison Opera
House on April 16 and 17. For information and tickets from $33.95 to $8.50.
call 1-877-741-2787 or visit www.vafest.org.
Wes Blomster
image=http://www.operatoday.com/Ricky-Ian-Gordon-%28c%29-Greg-D.gif
image_description=Ricky Ian Gordon [Photo by Greg Downer courtesy of Virginia Arts Festival]
product=yes
product_title=Ricky Ian Gordon: Rappahannock County
product_by=Virginia Arts Festival, Tuesday, April 12, 8:00 PM (World Premiere), Saturday, April 16, 8:00 PM and Sunday, April 17, 2:30 PM, Harrison Opera House, Norfolk. Co-commissioned by the Virginia Arts Festival, Virginia Opera, the Modlin Center for the Arts at the University of Richmond, and Texas Performing Arts at the University of Texas at Austin.
product_id=Above: Ricky Ian Gordon [Photo by Greg Downer courtesy of Virginia Arts Festival]