Shop for Music

Footnotes cover
View Perusal

About the Composer

Dale Trumbore

Dale Trumbore is a Los Angeles-based composer and writer whose music has been praised by The New York Times for its “soaring melodies and beguiling harmonies.” Her music has been widely performed in the U.S. and internationally by ensembles including the Los Angeles Children’s Chorus, Los Angeles Master Chorale, Pacific Chorale, Pasadena Symphony, The Singers...

Dale Trumbore

Footnotes to a History of Music

Dale Trumbore

This evocative, dreamy work weaves an intriguing fictional tale.

Difficulty:
Duration:
DT0021
Add to cart

SATB div., soli

“Footnotes to a History of Music” sets a poem by contemporary poet Kristina Marie Darling. Here, a string of elusive footnotes suggest a tale of strange hymns, canaries interspersed within an orchestra, and a mysterious fire. While soloists from within the chorus alternate singing and speaking words to tell their tale, the chorus illuminates the background and missing pieces of the story using only neutral syllables and wordless melodies. This piece was commissioned and premiered by Choral Chameleon (Vince Peterson, Artistic Director).

Text

1. A printed form of musical notation, made up primarily of symbols.

2. When she unfurled the score, a sequence of unfamiliar chords sounded, that incandescent singing.

3. “Only then did I wish to document the strange hymns I heard that evening. I longed for a record in all of its officiousness.”

4. Arrangement.
1. A thing composed of various parts.
2. An agreement, settlement, or understanding.
3. An adaptation for performance.

5. In this nineteenth-century stage production, canaries appear alongside instruments in a more conventional sense: harps, violins, and cellos. Despite the decorative nature of the feathers, the conductor struggled to contain the unruly birds.

6. Amanuesis. Meaning the physical labor of transcribing music.

7. “I began to understand the role of the unconscious mind in his process of composition. It may be compared to an iceberg submerged in a large body of water.”

8. The phonograph, with its projection of unusual bird calls, was regarded as an evil device. This hidden Faustian motif extends well into the novel’s denoument, with its intricate diagrams of the concert hall.

9. At this point in the score, the notes are obscured by fire damage. A residue of ashes where the music once was.

— Kristina Marie Darling

$5.00 per licensed PDF

Intended use:

*
Checkout

Music from Dale Trumbore

  • How to Go On Mezzo cover

    How to Go On (Art Song Arrangement – mezzo-soprano)

    Dale Trumbore

    Difficulty:
    Duration: ,
  • Returning TTBB cover

    Returning (TTBB)

    Dale Trumbore

    Difficulty:
    Duration:
  • You FInd Yourself Here TTBB cover

    You Find Yourself Here (TTBB)

    Dale Trumbore

    Difficulty:
    Duration:
  • A Seed Marks Time (SATB Full Score & Parts)

    Dale Trumbore

    Difficulty:
    Duration:

Customer Reviews

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Footnotes to a History of Music”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *