Writing the City

Program note

WRITING THE CITY was written in February 2011, after months spent gathering texts by various authors among which Capote, Ginsberg, Fitzgerald, Lethem, Gornick, Miller, Whitman. The piece evokes the city of New York, and particularly Manhattan and Brooklyn.

A slow opening movement gradually reveals the city — as if seen from an airplane, or from a boat on the East River in the mist, emerging into the harbor and then the view of Manhattan from the Brooklyn Promenade, near which I lived for several years. Handled like a camera, the music penetrates the city's streets and the thoughts, rituals, and idiosyncrasies of its inhabitants, culminating in an evocation of the Lower East Side of the 1980s.

Paul Auster and his very particular approach follow, infused with restraint, doubt, and confusion. The piece, using a large excerpt of T. C. Wolfe's Of Time and the River concludes with a questioning of the city's meaning itself.

The central part contains many musical quotes emblematic of NYC, among which Ellington, Debussy, Bernstein, Strayhorn, etc, inspired by one of my favorite pieces of music: the third movement of Berio's SINFONIA of 1968.

Recording — A. Laiter & D. Rubinstein, narrators — Philharmonique de Radio France, G. Rufet, cond.

Details

Instrumentation

Orchestra & two narrators

Duration

18'

Date

2011

Commissioned by

Radio France

Sheet music

Available upon request

First performance

Philharmonique de Radio France, Alexander Laiter and Donald Rubinstein, narrators; Gwénolé Rufet, conductor. Concert Passion-Fusion, Le CentQuatre, Paris, May 25 2011

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