Jul
28
2011
0

Perhaps Gilead – Video of Iowa City Premiere – Composer Statement & Media Interviews

We had a great premiere week for Perhaps Gilead that culminated in our May 22, 2011 performance at St. Raphael Church in Iowa City. St. Raphael provided wonderful acoustics and a beautiful backdrop to the video of the concert.

Movement 1:  Constructing a Horizon: Prairie Sunset and Moonrise

 

Movement 2: The Armed Man

 

 

Movement 3: Fantasy-Potpourri: Sunday Afternoon Music at Reverend Boughton’s

 

To get the composer’s thoughts on this music, you can:

  • Read his introductory remarks to the edition of the music

Perhaps Gilead Composer’s Introductory Comments by Harvey Sollberger

Perhaps Gilead would not exist without the novels Gilead and Home by Marilynne Robinson. Ms. Robinson’s gift for linking the everyday to the eternal shows us that life is here and now – here and now but also everywhere and everywhen in that our thoughts and deeds reach and reverberate far beyond our immediate surroundings and wildest imaginings. She reminds us of the distinguished history and implied promise (or is it a threat?) bound up in Ulysses S. Grant’s dictum, “Iowa, shining star of radicalism”, as her novels simultaneously depict our earthborne nature offset by our ability to hope and remember, dream and imagine. Hers is not an easy universe, but it is, coupled with our effort and attention, a redeemable one in which a field alight with flickering fireflies can evoke the smoldering earth: “well, it was and it is. An old fire will make a dark husk for itself and settle in on its core, as in the case of this planet. I believe the same metaphor may describe the human individual, as well. Perhaps Gilead. Perhaps civilization. Prod a little and the sparks will fly.” 

Perhaps Gilead is in three movements:

Movement I, Constructing a Horizon: Prairie Sunset and Moonrise, was inspired by an incident described on page 14 of Gilead where the boy who will become Reverend Ames, on a visit with his father to the wilds of Kansas to find his grandfather’s grave, looks up and sees the setting sun and rising full moon balanced on their respective horizons with “the most wonderful light between them”. “I never could have thought this place could be beautiful. I’m glad to know that,” says his father. I saw this myself on January 29, 2010 in Strawberry Point, Iowa.

Movement II, The Armed Man references the conviction and near-Biblical intensity of Ames’s grandfather, an abolitionist and fighter – in a literal sense – for slavery’s end. In Gilead, William Faulkner’s words – “the past is never dead, it’s not even past.” – return to doubly haunt us as we perceive slavery’s ongoing legacy both in the novel’s 1950s setting as well as in our present historical moment.

Movement III, Fantasy-Potpourri: Sunday Afternoon Music at Reverend Boughton’s, is set as an opera scene without words, and draws its scenario from pages 188 and 189 of  Home from “they ate their pie” through Lila’s saying, “that’s a good song, though.” The three characters who speak in this passage, Reverend Boughton, his son, Jack, and Reverend Ames’s young wife, Lila, are “sung”, respectively, by the first violin, cello and viola in a series of recitatives. The text, though not spoken or sung in performance, is written beneath the notes so that each player knows what he or she is “saying”. I think that much of Jack’s essence is captured in this scene – his mercurial imagination and playfulness, his sense of humor and self-wounding bitter irony and, finally, his despair. This is counterbalanced here by the serenity of Lila and the yearning severity of his father.

The medley-potpourri aspect of the title refers to the music Jack performs on the piano at this Sunday gathering – a succession of hymns (“potpourri” in French means literally “rotten pot”, and refers to a stew made of different kinds of meat; it later came to refer to a medley of different musical works joined together and played in succession). Movement III references and quotes all of the music mentioned in the novel’s text, making, in effect, a potpourri of the pieces performed in Reverend Boughton’s parlor. To further tax the opera metaphor, we might see Perhaps Gilead’s quoted hymns and songs as equivalent to the arias set between and counterbalancing characters’ recitatives in eighteenth-century opera.

Can Movement III makes sense if the audience can’t hear the words and follow the “libretto”? I’m betting that it can, as a kaleidoscopically-evolving mosaic of the new and the familiar, the exotic and the mundane, powered (I hope) by elements of musical contrast  and design, change and surprise that allow the music to penetrate beyond and behind the words to the emotional truths and experiences that called them into being

And finally, I think I should address the topic of musical quotation – or borrowing. During past years I’ve frequently found myself quoting from others’ works. I do this not from some rejection of the concept of authorship (hardly!) or from lack of inspiration, but to open a door to a broader context  of musical reference and expression than I’d have without the quotations. Each quoted work or passage draws new and extended meaning from its relation to the music of mine in which it’s embedded, and in the tiny space between the incited/new and the recited/quoted, a charge of metaphysical lightening is coiled -up, one which when released flashingly illuminates the musical landscape through which the listeners, performers and I are passing. In broader terms, the quoted works already reside in me and form part of my mental and spiritual furniture. To reference them in my music is, in my terms, to supremely compliment them, and I do so with full respect for their uniqueness and creators.

  • Click on Harvey Sollberger’s photo below to hear Iowa Public Radio’s story of Perhaps Gilead for All Things Considered and Morning Edition by John Pemble
  • Click on Harvey Sollberger’s photo below to hear an interview with rehearsal out takes by videographer John Richard
Jul
11
2011
0

Connecting the Dots: Practical Applications and Lessons Learned Through Working With Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program

Connecting the Dots: Practical Applications and Lessons Learned Through Working With Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program is the fourth and final in a series of four blogs I have written about Red Cedar Chamber Music’s experience working with social media experts Greg Epstein and Andrew Nicholas through Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program (see previous blogs on April 4th, May 24th & June 21st). Note that Qwest is now CenturyLink and the name change will be finalized starting in August.

A quick word about how we got involved with this program. Back in February 2011 we needed a new internet service provider & signed up for Qwest’s Core Connect program for small businesses, which by the way has been a very reliable & cost effective program for our needs. Shortly thereafter, we got a call from Greg Epstein inviting us to participate in Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program, which is designed to help small businesses launch or enhance their internet marketing presence. We first worked with Greg who specializes in setting up social media sites like a blog, Twitter and Facebook accounts etc. We then switched to working with Andrew who has mentored us on how to write an effective blog, how to draw traffic to the blog and how to analyze the impact of the blog to see if we are getting a significant enough number of meaningful hits to warrant the time spent blogging. (To find out more specifics of what we have accomplished with Greg & Andrew, please read my first 3 Qwest blogs.)

We have been very satisfied with Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program and have really enjoyed working with Greg & Andrew who have gone out of their way to help us with all aspects of our internet presence and have truly helped us launch a more comprehensive and effective web presence. So here are some of the practical applications about which we feel really good!

Practical Applications:

  • The Blog & its connection to other social media– Blogging has been the focus of our work with Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program and we are really pleased with its functionality (easy to use) and the fact that our blog posts automatically post on Twitter and Facebook as well using dlvr.it.
  • Audio/Video presence – As a performing arts organization, Red Cedar Chamber Music is particularly interested in having a strong web presence that provides a high-quality and up-to-date representation of our product, which is the audio and video of our most recent performances. Through our Concert Series and Rural Outreach programs we premiere new music Red Cedar Chamber Music has commissioning, as well as reintroducing little-know early nineteenth century music to our audiences, and we want our Iowa audiences and the rest of the world to have access to this literature as soon as possible following our live performances.  To facilitate this goal Greg helped us:
  1. Created and designed a bandcamp account – He recommended using bandcamp to upload our music at compact disc quality, opened an account and showed us how to create icons to allow visitors to play music from our bandcamp site directly on our website and blog.
  2. Showed us how to post audio as a Facebook post – Because Facebook only accepts mp3 files for audio, we can’t use our bandcamp site as an internet source for posting audio on Facebook, so Greg showed us how to  upload our audio in mp3 format to our blog site. Our blog site then stores our mp3 audio and we can embed the link from our blog in our Facebook to create an audio post! See our Facebook posts of Stephen Foster tunes on 19th-c. period instruments from June 21st.
  3. Helped us embed audio & video clips on our homepage – We can now embed audio clips from our bandcamp site and video clips from our YouTube site onto the homepage of our website so visitors to our website can hear & view our music immediately!

What now? Okay, so now we can connect the dots! We have the sites – website, blog, Twitter, Facebook, bandcamp and YouTube, we have the ability to interconnect them and we have the tools to create effective blog posts, analyze traffic patterns to our blog & website and get up-to-date audio & video clips posted on our home page, our blog & our Facebook page.  It is now up to us to keep our sites active by doing weekly blog posts and frequent Facebook posts. We also need to drive traffic to our blog and our other social media sites by actively seeking out and interacting with other social media sites that are thematically connected to our site. This is a way of getting to know our social media neighbors who are then likely to come calling at our sites due to the common interests we share.

What is really great for us is that while our 3-months of mentoring with Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program is officially over with this post (we’ve graduated), Andrew & Greg will still be available to answer our questions & offer advice. Wish us luck and we in turn hope our blogs have been of some help & inspiration in your quest (pun intended) to establish a more effective and broad based internet presence.

I invite you to return for my next blog on Iowa as a recording mecca for classical chamber music!

John Dowdall

Artistic Director

Jun
21
2011
0

Is Anybody Reading My Blog? How to Drive Traffic to Your Blog & Track the Results Using Google Analytics

Is Anybody Reading My Blog? How to Drive Traffic to Your Blog & Track the Results Using Google Analytics is the third in a series of four blogs I am writing about Red Cedar Chamber Music‘s experience working with social media experts Greg Epstein and Andrew Nicholas through Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program (see previous blogs on April 4th & May 24th). Note that Qwest is now CenturyLink.

Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program is being offered to select small businesses like Red Cedar Chamber Music to help them launch blogs and optimize their ability to effectively use social media to enhance marketing and drive traffic to their websites. The ultimate business goal of blogging and effectively using social media is to reach new customers and increase sales. So, how can those of us devoting valuable business time to posting blogs ensure that our blog posts are attracting traffic AND how do we get detailed feedback on our blog’s traffic patterns, who is reading our blogs and what referrals are directing them to our blog?

Ensuring that your blog posts are attracting traffic:

  • Key Words – First and foremost are the key words you incorporate into the text of your blog, which are likely to drive people interested in your blog topic to the blog. These keywords like chamber music and chamber music blog should appear numerous times throughout the blog so that search engines like Google will be able to accurately identify the content of your blog and pull up your blog site when people search the internet for these key words. The more effective you are at using key words, the greater the likelihood your site will show up high on the list of websites selected by a search engine. NOTE: Keywords should be incorporated into the natural flow of the blog test and each keyword should not comprise over circa 5% of the blog text so that Google or other search engines do not avoid listing your blog site because they feel you are keyword stuffing.  Use Google’s Keyword Tool to discover search volume for specific search terms (keywords). This allows you to incorporate keywords into your blog that people are using frequently when they do web searches.
  • Post Tags – Next are the post tags that you assign to each of your blogs. At the bottom of this blog you will see Tags: followed by tags words that I have attached to this specific blog post. Listing  tag words that are important to the content of the blog will also help search engines correctly locate your blog for inclusion in a listing resulting from a web search.
  • Comments on FaceBook- Find FaceBook sites that relate to your topic of interest and indicate that you like these sites. You can then leave comments about their FaceBook posts that will make visitors aware of your FaceBook page and increase the chances that they will visit your FaceBook page and become aware of your blog. NOTE: Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad program has helped us using dlvr.it to integrate our social media sites so that each time I post a blog, it also posts on our Twitter and FaceBook pages. You can set this up to happen with your blog posts as well at dlvr.it.

Detailed feedback on our blog’s traffic patterns through Google Analytics:

  • Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program also has helped us add Google Analytics to our WordPress Dashboard so that we can see traffic patterns related to our blog site. This tell us how many hits we have every day and if people are staying to read the blog or leaving within 30 seconds. We can also sign into Google Analytics and get more detailed information about the geographic location of those visiting the site, where they were referred from ie Google search, FaceBook, newspaper article with a listing of the blog etc. and  key words or phrases that drove them to our blog. This is invaluable information for us to verify the effectiveness of the blog and to help us modify future blogs for maximum exposure and impact.

Well, time to go and have my weekly personal consult with Andrew of Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program. He will help me review this post and make sure it is accurate. I have had a great experience with Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program and will give you a wrap up about Red Cedar Chamber Music‘s experience working with Qwest’s Social Media Launchpad Program in my final Qwest blog in July.

 

John Dowdall

Artistic Director

Red Cedar Chamber Music

May
10
2011
-

Perhaps Gilead is an all Iowa Chamber Music Project with Great Traction

 

Click on this photo of Red Cedar Chamber Music musicians and composer of Perhaps Gilead to read Gazette article by Diana Nollen

Get tickets:

May 21st & May 22nd Setting Sun to Rising Moon tickets available in advance or at the door for both concerts.

Tickets in advance: Mail check by Thursday May 19th to –

Red Cedar Chamber Music

PO Box 154

Marion, IA 52302

Tickets will be held for you at the door.

Tickets at the door: Show up at the concert site 45 minutes prior to the performance.

Tickets price:

  • Cedar Rapids: 8 p.m. May 21, 2011, First Presbyterian Church, 310 Fifth St. SE; $18 at the door, $15 in advance; $10 ages 30 and under; (319) 377-8028
  • Iowa City: 2 p.m. May 22, 2011, St. Raphael Orthodox Church, 722 E. College St.; followed by gala reception at the Musser-Dixon Victorian home, 715 E. College St.; $35 in advance or at the door (319) 377-8028
  • Information: www.redcedar.org or (319) 377-8028

 

This is it! My first blog about  Red Cedar Chamber Music and oh my is this an exciting time!

We are just 11 days away from the official premiere weekend of Perhaps Gilead, a terrific new composition by Marion, Iowa native and internationally renowned composer Harvey Sollberger.

Perhaps Gilead is inspired by the companion novels Home and Gilead written by Pulitzer Prize-winning Iowa novelist Marilynne Robinson. Red Cedar Chamber Music commissioned Perhaps Gilead and will be performing it in an upcoming series of concerts called Setting Sun to Rising Moon, culminating with official premiere concerts at First Presbyterian Church at 310 5th St. SE in Cedar Rapids at 8 p.m. on Saturday May 21, 2011 and at St. Raphael Orthodox Church at 722 E. College St. in Iowa City at 2 p.m. on Sunday May 22, 2011.

Order tickets:


Media Coverage: I will give you some of the highlights of this amazing all-Iowa project here, but check out this terrific media coverage to get the full flavor of the project

  • Click photo of Diana Nollen to read her great, in-depth article that beautifully describes the Perhaps Gilead project and lists all the performances! (Cedar Rapids Gazette April 10, 2011)

     

  • Click on Harvey Sollberger's photo to hear Iowa Public Radio's story of Perhaps Gilead for All Things Considered and Morning Edition by John Pemble

 

  • Click on Harvey Sollberger's photo to hear an interview with rehearsal out takes by videographer John Richard

 

  • Click on musician's photo to see a video of Perhaps Gilead performed at Grinnell College featuring a section from the third movement Fantasy-Potpourri: Sunday Afternoon Music at Reverend Boughton's (4-22-11)

 

  • Click on photo to hear KCCK Setting Sun to Rising Moon Interview on 5-12-11 by George Dorman

  • Click photo of Laird Addis to read his article – Iowan Sollberger composes 'Perhaps Gilead', which appeared in the Iowa City Press Citizen on 5-1-11

 

  • Click photo of Carey J. Hahn to read his article – Marion composer to bring to life Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, which appeared in the Marion Times on 3-21-11

So, what makes this project so special and an all-Iowa treat?

Our Iowa composer:

•                Harvey became a leading exponent of contemporary composition and expanded instrumental techniques on the flute while at Columbia University where he co-founded (with Charles Wuorinen) the Group for Contemporary Music in New York at Columbia University in 1962 and directed that ensemble for 27 years.

•                He was born in Cedar Rapids but was raised and attended elementary through high school in Marion and then attended the University of Iowa.

•                He has had numerous major commissions but is recently retired from University of CA San Diego.

•    He now lives in Strawberry Point, Iowa and is Red Cedar Chamber Music’s composer in residence.

The Iowa Inspiration of Perhaps Gilead : Red Cedar Chamber Music commissioned Harvey Sollberger to write a 15 minute work for flute, guitar and string quartet and he became so immersed in the project he wrote us a 30 minute work .

•                Harvey became engrossed with the Iowa-based novels HomeGilead by Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Marilynne Robinson, who teaches at the Iowa Writer’s Workshop

•                 His new musical work interprets the philosophical and emotional content of these novels in soundscape.

•     Harvey believes Perhaps Gilead is the best piece he has created in over 50 years of composing

The Iowa Author and Novels that Inspired Perhaps Gilead :

HomeGilead are companion novels by a renowned Iowa author Marilynne Robinson about her fictional small town of Gilead, Iowa. Set  in the 1950s, HomeGilead deal with important social & philosophical issues ie. slavery/integration as seen through the eyes of two ministers in the town who are lifelong friends

The Iowa Performers :

All 6 performers of Perhaps Gilead are well-known Iowa musicians

  • Carey Bostian is principal cellist with Orchestra Iowa
  • Lisa Ponton is principal violist with Orchestra Iowa
  • Miera Kim is associate principal second violin with Orchestra Iowa
  • Violinist Nancy McFarland Gaub is co-Artisitic Director of the critically acclaimed Roycroft Chamber Music Festival and a Lecturer in Music at Grinnell College
  • Flutist Jan Boland & guitarist John Dowdall are founding directors of Red Cedar Chamber Music

The Iowa Sponsorship and Collaboration :

  • The Iowa Arts Council is proudly sponsoring the premiere performance and many of the pre-premiere events.
  • Artist sponsorship of Carey Bostian is provided by Mary Lou Pazour.

Oh, and once the premiere concerts are completed, we get a one – week break and then we record Perhaps Gilead, which will be released on our 10th Fleur de Son Classics compact disc.

But that is the subject of another blog.

Stay tuned!!

John Dowdall

Artistic Director

Red Cedar Chamber Music



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