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Program Note
The Composer is Dead (2006) Nathaniel Stookey (b. 1970)
In 2006 the San Francisco Symphony, with which composer Nathaniel Stookey has maintained a close relationship, commissioned, introduced, and recorded The Composer is Dead, a sinister guide to the orchestra with narration by Lemony Snicket, the pen name of Daniel Handler, author of the popular books A Series of Unfortunate Events. “Having created a furor in the United States,” according to the Hamburger Abendblatt, the work was performed twice back-to-back to sellout crowds at the Toronto Symphony Orchestra’s New Creations Festival conducted by Peter Oundjian, and has since been performed by more than thirty orchestras around the world. The premiere took place on July 8, 2006 with Lemony Snicket narrating and the San Francisco Symphony led by Assistant Conductor Edwin Outwater. The following note is adapted from the book jacket of The Composer is Dead:
There’s dreadful news from the symphony hall—the composer is dead!
If you ever heard an orchestra play, then you know that musicians are most certainly guilty of something. Where exactly were the violins on the night in question? Did anyone see the harp? Is the trumpet protesting a bit too boisterously?
In this perplexing murder mystery, everyone seems to have a motive, everyone has an alibi, and nearly everyone is a musical instrument. But the composer is still dead.
Perhaps you can solve the crime yourself. Join the Inspector as he interrogates all the unusual suspects. Then listen to the Cabrillo Festival Orchestra and hear for yourself exactly what took place on that fateful, well-orchestrated evening.
Composer’s Note:
I hope I’m not giving away too much by saying that The Composer is Dead ends with a funeral march… Classical composers have always had a preoccupation with death, partly because we are human, like you, partly because we grapple with the mysteries of the universe, partly because death sells records and always has… Someday you'll be able to tell your grandchildren that you appreciated a living composer before that living composer became, like all composers, dead. — Nathaniel Stookey
Librettist's Note:
I have been asked if I might say a word or two about the text of The Composer Is Dead, and the one or two words are “Boo hoo.” The story—which, as far as I know, is absolutely true—is so heartbreakingly glum that I cannot imagine that you will be able to listen to it without dabbing at your tears with a nearby handkerchief. — Lemony Snicket
Suggested recording: Lemony Snicket, narrator, San Francisco Symphony conducted by Edwin Outwater Published as a book and CD by Harper Collins B002U0KP3U
Photos of Marin Alsop and Orchestra by r.r. jones
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