Nights of 1998

for baritone voice & sinfonietta | 12’

World Premiere

Zachary Coates, baritone
David Dzubay, conductor
IU New Music Ensemble
Auer Hall
March 8, 2018


Commissioned by

The Georgina Joshi Foundation


Instrumentation

Flute (+picc.)
Oboe
Clarinet
Bassoon

Horn
Trumpet
Trombone
Tuba

Percussion
Piano
Harp

2 Violins
Viola
Violoncello
Double Bass

Program Note

​​Nights of 1998 sets Ernest Hilbert’s poem of the same title, from his collection All of You on the Good Earth.  The poem depicts a debaucherous downtown party in SoHo, Manhattan, replete with copious alcohol, drugs, and music.  The scorching summer night spins out of control to a sudden breaking point—the partygoers fall apart, and during the early morning hours of his comedown, the first-person protagonist experiences a (perhaps slightly hallucinatory) existential afterglow.  The boundless energy, apparent authenticity, and evocative dramatic arc of Ernest’s poem drew me in.  
 
The poem describes a diegetic music, as the baritone struggles to “play a record…and the needle shrieks like scraped chalk through the speakers,” which cleverly intersects with the non-diegetic music suggested by his racing mental state, as well as the implied sonic backdrop of the wild partygoers and the hectic downtown streets of New York City.  The poem’s sonic environment and the baritone’s varying mental states seem perfectly suited for sinfonietta, which I view at once as a motley crew of instrumental characters, as well as an ensemble capable of intense energy and agility, deafening cacophony, and gorgeous color.  As such, I use the ensemble in various dramatic guises to describe the party’s wild sonic setting, the diegetic music, and the baritone’s extreme mental states.
 
I cast the various instruments of the sinfonietta as individual characters participating in the revelry, chattering away.  As more and more instruments enter, or arrive, the texture occasionally boils over, submerging the baritone soloist in cacophony of ever-increasing intensity.  The baritone’s scraping record sounds in the overpressure bowed strings, the New York traffic blares through the glissing brass, the diagetic music’s energy pulses through the chaotic up and down of the drum set’s hi-hat.  Throughout the piece, the sinfonietta assumes the baritone’s drug-altered mental state—the music races ahead as the baritone’s dopamine levels surge, ecstatic bursts flash across the tutti ensemble, stuttering metric irregularity and tempo modulations distort the perceived flow of time, and suspended passages seem to stop time completely while the baritone makes simple but genuinely profound observations of the summer night’s beauty.  The poem begins at a boiling point; nevertheless, the baritone continues to turn up his record player, party, and mental state.  So the music begins up, and I only continue to turn the ensemble up, and up, and up--
 
until we can’t go back.

Lyrics by Ernest Hilbert

​​It’s boiling up: my tin-ceilinged cavern
Downtown.  I’m struggling to play a record,
But my fingers quiver and the needle
Shrieks like scraped chalk through the speakers.  I turn
It up, and up, and up.  I’m lit like a war
With pills, lines, so many drinks I can’t feel.
I find two women shooting heroin
In my bed.  I’m coming up so hard I puke.
O Christ the summer is stunned with lilacs!
Someone gets kicked in the nose, and then
More arrive, and more, and would you look
At all this, and God the noise, we can’t go back--
We fall apart like ancient stars, sparks--
Gold like pollen blown across all this dark.

For rental, perusal, or other inquiries, please email clarosa16@gmail.com