This piece exists as an emotional storm for me. I was in mourning while writing this piece, having lost a dear friend unexpectedly. My original concept for this piece was thrown out, and I felt I had to write what I was experiencing or the music would be inauthentic and hollow. There was a pull for this piece to be a quiet, slow and sad mediation, but that was also not completely accurate to how I was feeling. I was in shock, feeling sadness and anger, but also experiencing bouts of surreal gratefulness for life, and gratefulness for the friendship I had shared with my departed friend.
During this time, I revisited Gerard Manley Hopkins’ poetry, particularly his poem Pied Beauty. In the text, Hopkins praises the beauty in things that are strange, dazzling with many colours or riddled with splotches, even highlighting the contrasting colours of the sky during a storm. Though the text is very joyful, reading it from the perspective of grief felt incredibly potent and made me feel seen. I immediately latched onto this text, using it as inspiration for the music. The musical material combines an array of influences, from early Baroque to Beethoven to medieval dance with interruptions of intense dissonance.
for dappled things is a weaving and not always straightforward journey through a storm of many forms, and a celebration of the messiness, brokenness, and beauty of living life. We are surrounded by dappled things!
Commissioned by the Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra through the HPO’s composition fellowship, for dappled things was premiered on May 13, 2023, conducted by James Summerville.