This work for percussion ensemble (8 players) was commissioned by the
Empire State Repertory and Junior Percussion Ensembles for ESYO New
Music for a New Generation Festival supported by the New York State
Music Fund, and was premiered on March 2008 by the E.S.Y.O Percussion
Ensemble.
"The Great Spirit is our Father, but the Earth is our Mother. She
nourishes us; that which we put into the ground she returns to us…."
Spoken by Big Thunder of the Wabanaki nation in Maine, these words bear
eloquent testimony to an awareness of the cosmos that is shared by all
the native cultures of what is today the United States and Canada.
The main harmonic concept of the work consists of the following
consideration:
If the letters of the alphabet are given to the notes of a chromatic
scale, the letter A would be the note "C", letter B the "C#", letter C
the "D", letter E the "D#" and so on. With this configuration, the words
"Mother
Earth" create a C major/suspended chord and the words"Father Sky" create
a
C major/suspended chord with a minor seventh and a sharp eleventh,
suggesting a C augmented chord and a C whole tone scale.
The first part represents the Earth and depicts the progression from the
dawn to the full light of day. A small bridge represents the fire, and
the second
part represents the Sky with its force and thunderstorms. The same
material that represents the Earth will close the work.
The main theme of the work represents the Great Spirit and his voice
will be heard throughout the piece, through the Earth and from the Sky.
Published by Pro Percussão BR/USA