related works
I Sit And Look Out : for mixed choir and orchestra / Bart Michiels; poetry by Walt Whitman
Genre:
Vocal music
Subgenre:
Mixed choir and orchestra
Scoring:
GK 2fl(picc) 2ob eh 2cl 2fg 4h 3tpt 3trb timp 2perc str
Pages from Albion moonlight : voor gemengd koor en orkest / Will Eisma; text: Kenneth Patchen
Genre:
Vocal music
Subgenre:
Mixed choir and orchestra
Scoring:
2sopr-m bar GK4 2fl ob 3cl 2fg sax-a 2h 2tpt trb tb 5perc hp org str
Genre:
Vocal music
Subgenre:
Mixed choir and orchestra
Scoring:
picc 2fl 2ob 2cl fg cfg 4h 2tpt 2trb-ten trb-b tb timp perc GK str
From the Depth : for soprano, choir and orchestra / Man-Ching Yu Donald
Genre:
Vocal music
Subgenre:
Mixed choir and orchestra
Scoring:
sopr 2fl 2ob 2cl fg 2h 2tpt trb-t timp str
composition
I Sit And Look Out : for mixed choir and orchestra / Bart Michiels; poetry by Walt Whitman
Other authors:
Michiels, Bart
(Composer)
Whitman, Walt
(Text writer/Librettist)
Description:
One gloomy day, while browsing some poetry, a poem by the great American writer Walt Whitman caught my eye: I Sit and Look Out.
The poem constitutes a critical reflection on various forms of social oppression throughout modern history. In the poem, Whitman depicts human nature as one of cruelty, injustice and indifference, suggesting the human tendency to ignore other people's suffering and not to intervene if it is not directly related to oneself.
Indeed, throughout history, individuals and societies have always succeeded in causing suffering and agony to each other, be it because of differences in belief systems, religion, skin color, gender, sexual preference or wealth.
Even today in COVID times, Whitman's analysis about human behavior remains accurate as the world is more polarized than ever before.
Inspired by the universality and topicality of Whitman's poem, I decided to use his text to write a piece for choir and orchestra, also lending his title for the work.
I wanted the music to reflect Whitman's dark depiction of humanity, thereby using the full force and colors of the orchestra. The mixed choir functions as the central observer in Whitman's poem, indifferently noting all the suffering and injustices around the world.
Despite the dark athmosphere throughout the piece, there are also shimmers of hope in moments where the orchestra & choir come together in a single unisono chant.
Bart Michiels, January 2022