A Mother's Lullaby
Solo Harp
Rene Orth
About
While composing A Mother’s Lullaby, I spent a lot of my time rocking my baby to sleep. She insists on my humming Brahms’s “Wiegenlied” during this time and will do so by singing the first three notes of the melody. Babies never fall asleep as fast as one might wish, and I often found my mind wandering about all sorts of things while humming to her. From compiling mental to-do lists, to dreaming about being on a beach, to thinking about writing this piece, and much more, my mental journeys were never completed, as I was often forcefully reminded by my baby’s sudden 3-note interruption that she was still not yet asleep. This piece is a reflection and musical description of my current experiences with lullabies.
Performance
Rene Orth |
A Mother's Lullaby |
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Duration
07:00 |
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Commissioning Year
2021 |
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Premiere
May 16, 2021 Harptistically Yours, Curtis - Online (Covid) |
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Recording
April 11, 2021 NMG Recording Studio, Rome, Italy |
Artists
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Rene Orth Composition
Rene Orth – praised as “a master composer” with a “sophisticated sound world” (Classical Voice North America) – writes music described as “always dramatic, reflective, rarely predictable, and often electronic” (Musical America). She was the inaugural Resident Composer at Opera San José in the 2022-23 season and recently completed a three-year tenure as Composer-In-Residence at Opera Philadelphia.
This season, Opera Philadelphia presented the “triumphant world premiere” (Wall Street Journal) of Orth’s 10 Day in a Madhouse as part of Festival O23, co-commissioned by Opera Philadelphia and Tapestry Opera. The New York Times writes, “opera needs works like “10 Days,” which treats the medium with affection and respect while also chafing at its tropes throughout history” and the Washington Post states Orth “has created an opera of unexpected immediacy.” With a libretto by Hannah Moscovitch, this psychological drama – which “deserves wide circulation” according to Opera – follows the trailblazing reporter Nellie Bly through her internment at Blackwell’s Asylum, exposing, as Bly did historically, notions of madness and societal biases against women. The opera starred Kiera Duffy, Raehann Bryce-Davis, and Will Liverman, with Daniela Candillari at the podium, Joanna Settle directing, and Andrew Lieberman as set designer.
Other projects in the acclaimed composer’s 2023-24 season include a commission for Vocal Arts DC premiering at The Kennedy Center in April 2024, composing a song cycle for mezzo-soprano Daniela Mack; writing a new song, A Prayer, for Grammy-winning baritone Will Liverman’s next album on Cedille Records, which is a duet for him and mezzo-soprano J’nai Bridges, setting a Sara Teasdale poem; and writing an electronics and voice piece for mezzo-soprano Raehann Bryce-Davis’ forthcoming debut album, Stand the Storm. The Chautauqua Institution will also premiere Love, Loss, and the Century Upon Us (libretto by Jerre Dye) with a 13-piece orchestra, part of a larger work called A Summer Place in Summer 2024.
In the 2022-23 season, soprano Emily Albrink and pianist Kathleen Kelly premiered Orth’s Weave Me a Name, touring it across the U.S. and even bringing it to France. They included the song cycle on Albrink’s debut album, Force of Nature, on Lexicon Classics. Orth won first prize in the 2023 National Association of Teachers of Singing (NATS) Art Song Composition Award for Weave Me a Name, which was performed at the 58th NATS National Conference in Knoxville, Tennessee. The Cincinnati Song Initiative will program the work on a future concert.
Orth’s music focuses on dramatic and lyrical storytelling, often blending electronic soundscapes and beats with acoustic music to challenge the conventions of classical music. With a rare understanding of singing and technology, the artist – who has studied violin, piano, and audio engineering – approaches her compositions as storytelling vehicles. Pushing the boundaries of instrumentation and technology to explore new harmonic languages, Orth’s music connects with audiences in new and innovative ways, sometimes introducing aleatoric and interdisciplinary elements.
Rene Orth is a graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, where she held the Edward B. Garrigues Fellowship. She received her M.M. in Music Composition at the University of Louisville as a Moritz von Bomhard Fellow, and holds additional degrees from MediaTech Institute and Rhodes College.
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Coline-Marie Orliac Harp
100 for 100
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