Night Peace

The Music of John Luther Adams

If we can imagine a culture and a society in which we each feel more deeply responsible for our own place in the world, then we just may be able to bring that culture and that society into being.

- John Luther Adams

February 25, 2023 | 7:30 PM
St. Luke's Episcopal | Evanston IL

$20 General Admission | Free to Students


The EcoVoice Project is excited to share the music of John Luther Adams, 2013 Pulitzer Prize Winner and “reigning musical ambassador for the natural world” (The New York Times). The New Earth Ensemble will be joined by Beyond This Point to present a program featuring Adams’s choral work Night Peace, as well as chamber works for piano, harp, voice, and percussion. WFMT Music Director, Oliver Camacho will read poetry of John Haines, lifelong inspiration for Adams and librettist for his new opera Night, premiering at Lyric Opera this spring. Opening remarks will be presented by Dr. Lucy Jones, founder of the TEMPO Music for Climate Action and the Dr. Lucy Jones Center for Science and Society.

Program

Opening Remarks

Kirsten Hedegaard
Co-founder, The EcoVoice Project
Director of Choral & Vocal Activities, Assistant Professor, Loyola University

Lucy Jones
Founder, Lucy Jones Center for Science and Society
Founder, TEMPO Music for Climate Action

John Luther Adams, from “Music and the Anthropocene”

Poem: On the Mountain
Nunataks (Solitary Peaks)
for piano

Poem: Poem of the Forgotten
Poem of the Forgotten
for voice and piano

Poem: The Dances
Five Yup’ik Dances
for harp

Poem: If the Owl Calls Again
Three Canticles of the Birds
for piano and percussion

1. Dream of the Hermit Thrush
2. Cadenza of the Mockingbird
3. Dream of the Canyon Wren

Poem: Little Cosmic Dust Poem
Little Cosmic Dust Poem
for voice and piano

Poem: This Earth Written Over with Words
Tukiliit (stone people who live in the wind)
for piano

Poem: Night
Night Peace
for choir, harp, and percussion

Night Peace: The Music of John Luther Adams

The poetry of John Haines (1924—2011)
The music of John Luther Adams (b. 1953)

Performers

New Earth Ensemble
Kirsten Hedegaard, conductor

  • A.J. Buegel

  • Natalie Colas Grant

  • Alfredo Jimenez

  • Thereza Lituma

  • Chelsea Lyon

  • John Orduña

  • Keith Murphy

  • Ian Prichard

beyond this point

  • John Corkill

  • Adam Rosenblatt

Oliver Camacho, poetry readings

Thomas Aláan, voice

Susan Chou, piano

Emily Stone, harp

For John Luther Adams, music is a lifelong search for home—an invitation to slow down, pay attention, and remember our place within the larger community of life on earth. Living for almost 40 years in northern Alaska, JLA discovered a unique musical world grounded in space, stillness, and elemental forces. In the 1970s and into the ’80s, he worked full time as an environmental activist. But the time came when he felt compelled to dedicate himself entirely to music. He made this choice with the belief that, ultimately, music can do more than politics to change the world. Since that time, he has become one of the most widely admired composers in the world, receiving the Pulitzer Prize, a Grammy Award, and many other honors. In works such as Become Ocean, In the White Silence, and Canticles of the Holy Wind, Adams brings the sense of wonder that we feel outdoors into the concert hall. And in outdoor works such as Inuksuit and Sila: The Breath of the World, he employs music as a way to reclaim our connections with place, wherever we may be. A deep concern for the state of the earth and the future of humanity drives Adams to continue composing. As he puts it: “If we can imagine a culture and a society in which we each feel more deeply responsible for our own place in the world, then we just may be able to bring that culture and that society into being.” — from John Luther Adams’ website, johnlutheradams.net

American poet and essayist John Haines (1924—2011) studied art and painting at the National Art School, the American University, and the Hans Hoffmann School of Fine Art. In 1947, Haines bought a 160-acre homestead claim 80 miles outside of Fairbanks, Alaska, intending to pursue painting. According to Haines, when his paints froze, he turned to writing. His collections of poetry include seven publications between 1966 and 2001. His poems are noted for their stark, spare imagery, and evocative rendering of the brutal beauty of his adopted home. Poet Lawrence Raab noted the elemental character underlying Haines’s verse: “One feels that the poet,” Raab commented, “through the act of the poem, is reaching toward something as basic and as necessary as food or shelter.” Haines’s experiences trapping, hunting, and surviving as a homesteader in Alaska inform his work as a both a poet and essayist. According to Dana Gioia, “While one might read his early poetry as a subjective record of the time, the most accessible account comes from his two books of essays, Living Off the Country (1981) and The Stars, the Snow, the Fire (1989). These superbly-written collections of mostly autobiographical prose reveal the importance of the dream-like solitude the empty Northern wilderness provided the author.” Gioia went on to note that, “by stepping out of the man-made rhythms of the city into the slower cycles of nature, Haines entered—perhaps unknowingly at first—a world of meditation. There are few overtly religious themes in Haines' writing, but both his poetry and prose are suffused with a sense of the sacred.”

— from The Poetry Foundation, poetryfoundation.org