BB2C15A2-AC40-4755-83F0-78988DDDCC8F

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IDBB2C15A2-AC40-4755-83F0-78988DDDCC8F
TitlecodeR01400
Title NameMuse of Amherst: Reflections on the Poetry of Emily Dickinson
Marketing CopyA musical tribute to poet Emily Dickinson for orchestra and readers. Each movement follows and reflects on a different poem. Ideal for involving participants outside the orchestra in the recitations, as well as programs with literary or women's themes.
InstrumentationReaders: 2+1.2.2.2: 4.3.3.1: Perc(2): Str
Commission(not set)
Dedication(not set)
Program NotesMuse of Amherst is a musical tribute to poet Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), a resident of
Amherst, Massachusetts. The five movements of this orchestral suite are each inspired by a
particular Dickinson poem which will be read aloud before the musical portrait.
The first movement, “Invocation,” follows the reading of the poem, “This is my Letter to the
World.” The music is intended as an invitation, a greeting and an opening message. The texture
is sparse and light, as if sending a letter out to the world, through the air. The introduction
features a solo flute, perhaps the voice of the poet. Trills in the woodwinds symbolize the poet’s
message floating out across space. The principal theme then arrives in the violins, and might be
heard to rhythmically speak “This is my letter to the world which never wrote to me.” This
music is characterized by simplicity and tenderness, as evoked by the poem.
The second movement, “Spring,” is inspired by the poem, “A Light Exists in Spring.” The poem
describes a special light in March which is so delicate that it passes away. Thus, the music opens
delicately, with a glockenspiel tremolo (marked “as a ray of sunlight”) and short motives in the
woodwinds (marked “as a speck of light”). The middle section, with the entrances of the brass
instruments, presents dancing patterns of light. This music grows into a full, celebratory dance.
And, in the end, the patterns rise and the light fades away.
“Nobody! (or "the Frog Pond”) is an homage to the frog and other insects referenced in the
poem. The frog (portrayed by the tuba) speaks first, saying “I’m nobody!” Then there is a bit of
“banter” in the winds, answering “Who are you? Are you nobody too?” Life by the frog pond is
now depicted, with the sounds of crickets, mosquitos (swatted by the strings), locusts and many
frogs. The “Nobody” theme returns. And one last frog jumps into the pond.
The poem “Wild Nights!” is an expression of “Passion.” The fourth movement is marked
“passionately,” and should be played with abandon. Rippling patterns in the strings may
suggest the sea. Oscillation between pitches may be heard as a boat tossing on the waves. There
is grandeur to the passion, and even some peaceful moments. At the end, the boat settles into its
mooring as the poem closes with the lines “might I but moor – Tonight – in Thee!”
“Indian Summer” is a celebration of the fullness of life. Thus, the music opens with expanding
chords in the strings, filled in by the winds and brass. This introductory section is marked
“unfolding, as the richness of autumn harvest.” This is then followed by delicate, scalar patterns
in the woodwinds, reflective of the image in the poem of a “timid leaf” blowing in the wind. The
blowing leaves, and the steady march to the end of the year (cello and bass patterns), form a
background texture framing a theme in the oboe, answered by the horn. This melody is a lament
of the end of summer. “These are the days when birds come back – a very few...” The enriching
chords which opened the movement now reappear in the strings. And all of the orchestra join to
celebrate Indian Summer: “Oh Sacrament of summer days, Oh Last Communion in the Haze...
and Thine Immortal Wine!"
Title Brand2
Year Composed2008
Copyright Number(not set)
Copyright Year(not set)
Duration22
Ensemble Size13
Date Created2010-02-12 20:31:29.000000
Date Updated2025-09-30 20:31:29
Inhouse Note(not set)
Bsc Code(not set)
Text AuthorText by Emily Dickinson
Premier Performance Memopremiered by the Holyoke Civic Symphony, David Kidwell – Music Director
May 4, 2008 Holyoke, Massachusetts
Recording Credits(not set)
Review(not set)
Awards(not set)
Title Category7
Title Movements1. This is My Letter to the World--"Invocation"
2. A Lights Exists in the Spring--"Spring"
3. The Frog Pond--"Nobody!"
4. Wild Nights--"Passion"
5. These are the Days When Birds Come Back--"Indian Summer"
Title Grade(not set)
Set Series ID(not set)
Title Instrument Category TextFull Orchestra
Title Sub Category Text(not set)
Title Sub Category31
Title Instrument Header41
Title Grade Text(not set)
Clean Urlmuse-of-amherst-reflections-on-the-poetry-of-emily-dickinson-r01400