BF0B877C-8221-453F-9E18-AE3779B8AC9B

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IDBF0B877C-8221-453F-9E18-AE3779B8AC9B
TitlecodeR01373
Title NameLiving, Breathing Earth Symphony (Symphony No. 1)
Marketing CopyDescribed by the composer as a "love song to the earth," Warshauer's symphony eloquently presents our planet as a living organism through natural sounds transformed into stirring musical phrases and vivid instrumental writing.
Instrumentation3(all dPicc).2+EH.2.2: 4.3.3.1: Timp.Perc(2).Hp.Pno: Str
CommissionJointly commissioned by the Dayton Philharmonic, South Carolina Philharmonic, and the Western Piedmont Orchestras.
Dedication(not set)
Program NotesThe trust and support of the commissioning orchestras enabled me to hold the vision of this work and bring it
forth to performance. I am grateful for the nurturing and beautiful environment of The Hambidge Center in
Rabun Gap, Georgia, where I began and continued this composition in fall, 2005, and spring, 2006. Thanks to
the South Carolina Arts Commission for awarding me the Artist Fellowship in Music Composition in 2005-06
with unrestricted funds that helped support this project. My family, especially my husband Sam, continually
provides the emotional constancy upon which I depend.
Composer’s note:
The title Living, Breathing Earth came to me in contemplating the image of the rainforests as lungs of the earth. I
felt our planet, alive with all variety of creatures and plants living in symbiosis with each other, breathing in and
out, and the planet as a whole, pulsing with breath. I also contemplated the earth rotating through space, a
spinning orb of blue and green, at just the right distance from the sun to support life, and our protective blanket
of air, the atmosphere of the earth, providing the medium for our breath.
The rhythms and shadings of the earth were my inspiration. In summer, 2005, their calls to mate were
exceptionally strong, with 20-30 second waves of overlapping sound energizing Carolina and Georgia nights and
into the days. Their energy propels the first movement, Call of the Cicadas. The second movement, Tahuayo River at
Night, gently recalls a nighttime canoe ride in the Peruvian rainforest, stars and fireflies sparkling reflections in the
dark water. Wings in Flight, the third movement, delights in the playful dance of butterflies at river’s edge, sunlight
shimmering on the water’s surface, and flocks of birds soaring above. As the daytime creatures settle down for
the night, a transition inspired by a peaceful summer sunset leads without pause to the fourth movement, titles
Living, Breathing Earth. Here, a constant pattern of five beats per measure portrays earth’s breath and her majestic
rotation, slowly turning in a kaleidoscope of shifting colors, as the sounds of teeming life from earlier movements
gradually return.
We know life on earth is in danger, with many species sick and dying from our pollution, and the atmosphere
losing its protective qualities. The very breath of the earth, the relationship between carbon dioxide and oxygen, is
out of balance. Sometimes it takes a threat of loss for us to realize the blessings we have, and to act to preserve
them. Just as when praying for the healing of a loved one we picture the person in perfect health, so in this
symphony, I celebrate the earth in her radiant fullness.
With gratitude for the miracle of life, and with prayer for the wisdom and will to heal our precious home planet, I
dedicate this first symphony to the living, breathing earth and her Creator.
Meira Warshauer
2007
Title Brand2
Year Composed2007, rev. 2019
Copyright Number(not set)
Copyright Year(not set)
Duration25
Ensemble Size13
Date Created2008-10-31 20:31:29.000000
Date Updated2025-09-30 20:31:29
Inhouse NoteCorrected May 2010
Bsc Code(not set)
Text Author(not set)
Premier Performance Memo(not set)
Recording CreditsRecorded by the Moravian Philharmonic/ Petr Vronsky, Navona Records NV5842.
Review"Living, Breathing Earth" deserves to be heard many, many more times, not only for its message that life on earth is in danger, and that we must be good stewards of the environment, but because it is such beautiful music." --W. Gerald Cochran, Classical Voice of North Carolina

"Last night I made the 3 hour trek from Canton to Dayton to hear Meira
Warshauer's new symphony (see below) performed by the Dayton
Philharmonic under Neal Gittleman, and I'm glad I did. It is a well
crafted piece with imaginative orchestration." --Jesse Ayers, Composer

I must second Jesse's rave review of Meira Warshauer's
"Symphony #1: Living, Breathing Earth". It's a piece that all-y'all
ought to get to know. It's not easy by any means, but conductors, do
check it out to see if you think it would work for your orchestra...
regardless of the difficulty, it's well worth the effort required. The audience
response was, indeed, VERY warm and receptive. --Neal Gittleman, Conductor, Dayton Philharmonic Orchestra
Awards(not set)
Title Category7
Title MovementsI. Call of the Cicadas
II. Tahuayo River at Night
III. Wings in Flight
IV. Living, Breathing Earth
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 Urlliving-breathing-earth-symphony-r01373