Songs of the Earth Cantata for SATB Chorus, Oboe, Timpani, and Strings by Elena Ruehr Choir - Sheet Music

By Elena Ruehr

My daughter Sophie Ruehr, who is a climate scientist, introduced me to BraidingSweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, and the book had a profound impact on me. I havewritten many works relating to the complex relationship that humans have with thenatural world, and Kimmerer’s work spoke to me in one of the most honest and positiveways I have ever experienced. It seemed important to me to put her philosophy into amusical context. The result is a coalescence of the main points of Braiding Sweetgrass as Isaw them, compiled into 5 main sections as follows: Opening Prayer, Grief, Gifts,Solutions, Renewal. The Opening Prayer text is taken from the Thanksgiving Address of theOnondaga Nation. The question of cultural appropriation is one that both Kimmerer and Iare sensitive about, but it seemed important to me to include this wonderful way ofacknowledging the Earth that confirms Kimmerer’s own research and personalexperience. Grief and Gifts form an arc that ends with a positive moment. Then we startagain with a very Bach inspired oboe obligato that leads to Solutions. The final Renewal isreally a kind of populist anthem, specifically directed at the congregation of EmmanuelChurch in Boston where the work will be premiered. The idea of a somewhat didactic textreminds me of certain Baroque cantatas that Emmanuel Music often performs duringservices, and I was aware of that tradition as I was composing. The title of the entirework, SONGS OF THE EARTH, is a nod towards Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde, borrowingsome aspects of Mahler’s soundscape but interpreted with a contemporaryunderstanding, which has a very different view of the natural world as compared to thatof the early 20th Century.

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Details

Instrument:
Choir Piano Accompaniment
Ensembles:
Choir
Composers:
Elena Ruehr
Publishers:
Merion Music
Series:
Women Composers and Arrangers
UPC:
680160698448
Format:
Score
Item types:
Physical
Musical forms:
Cantata
Artist:
Elena Ruehr
Usages:
School and Community
Size:
9x12 inches
Number of Pages:
54
Shipping Weight:
0.34 pounds

Choral Piano, choir

SKU: PR.442410160

Cantata for SATB Chorus, Oboe, Timpani, and Strings. Composed by Elena Ruehr. This edition: saddle-wire stitch. Score. 54 pages. Duration 0:16:00. Merion Music #442-41016. Published by Merion Music (PR.442410160).

UPC: 680160698448. 9x12 inches. English. Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer.

My daughter Sophie Ruehr, who is a climate scientist, introduced me to BraidingSweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, and the book had a profound impact on me. I havewritten many works relating to the complex relationship that humans have with thenatural world, and Kimmerer’s work spoke to me in one of the most honest and positiveways I have ever experienced. It seemed important to me to put her philosophy into amusical context. The result is a coalescence of the main points of Braiding Sweetgrass as Isaw them, compiled into 5 main sections as follows: Opening Prayer, Grief, Gifts,Solutions, Renewal. The Opening Prayer text is taken from the Thanksgiving Address of theOnondaga Nation. The question of cultural appropriation is one that both Kimmerer and Iare sensitive about, but it seemed important to me to include this wonderful way ofacknowledging the Earth that confirms Kimmerer’s own research and personalexperience. Grief and Gifts form an arc that ends with a positive moment. Then we startagain with a very Bach inspired oboe obligato that leads to Solutions. The final Renewal isreally a kind of populist anthem, specifically directed at the congregation of EmmanuelChurch in Boston where the work will be premiered. The idea of a somewhat didactic textreminds me of certain Baroque cantatas that Emmanuel Music often performs duringservices, and I was aware of that tradition as I was composing. The title of the entirework, SONGS OF THE EARTH, is a nod towards Mahler’s Das Lied von der Erde, borrowingsome aspects of Mahler’s soundscape but interpreted with a contemporaryunderstanding, which has a very different view of the natural world as compared to thatof the early 20th Century.