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Jaap van Zweden|Wolfe : Fire in my mouth

Wolfe : Fire in my mouth

Young People's Chorus of New York City, New York Philharmonic, Jaap van Zweden

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Composer Julia Wolfe builds large structures out of propulsive musical materials that may often take on a sinister tinge. Her works are tremendous crowd-pleasers even as they take up often grim subject matter. Fire in My Mouth, an hour-long oratorio, is perhaps her most epic work yet. For two women's choirs and large orchestra, including a pair of scissors, the work involves a musical depiction of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of March 25, 1911, in which 146 workers, mostly young immigrant women, died after a fire broke out, and they found the building's doors locked. The fire itself, gripping indeed, comes in the final fourth movement, and the work is tightly constructed leading up to that terrifying moment. The first three movements mix the hopeful attitudes of the women with the maw of the industrial hell that awaits them. Wolfe's basic pulsing material is inflected in different ways as the music proceeds. The second movement, with a long percussion opening, represents the factory where the women would die, while in the third movement, they alternate between hopes of assimilation ("I want to talk like an American") and protest. It's an extraordinarily powerful work that will receive many future hearings, perhaps in observances of American labor history. Jaap van Zweden and the New York Philharmonic, who commissioned the work, bring urgency to these live performances, and the choirs -- Philadelphia's The Crossing, and especially remarkably the Young People's Chorus of New York City -- have not a trace of rote drill in this powerful material. Highly recommended, and here's hoping the work comes to a symphony hall near you.

© TiVo

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Wolfe : Fire in my mouth

Jaap van Zweden

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Fire in my mouth (Julia Wolfe)

1
I. Immigration
New York Philharmonic
00:11:24

New York Philharmonic, Orchestra, MainArtist - Jaap van Zweden, Conductor, MainArtist - Lawrence Rock, Producer, Mixer, Mastering Engineer, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Julia Wolfe, ComposerLyricist - Donald Nally, Conductor, Chorus Conductor - The Crossing, Ensemble, MainArtist - Bob Hanlon, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Ian Good, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Kevin Vondrak, Conductor, Chorus Conductor

℗ 2019 New York Philharmonic

2
II. Factory
New York Philharmonic
00:08:41

New York Philharmonic, Orchestra, MainArtist - Jaap van Zweden, Conductor, MainArtist - Lawrence Rock, Producer, Mixer, Mastering Engineer, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Julia Wolfe, ComposerLyricist - Donald Nally, Conductor, Chorus Conductor - The Crossing, Ensemble, MainArtist - Bob Hanlon, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Ian Good, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Kevin Vondrak, Conductor, Chorus Conductor

℗ 2019 New York Philharmonic

3
III. Protest
New York Philharmonic
00:12:40

New York Philharmonic, Orchestra, MainArtist - Jaap van Zweden, Conductor, MainArtist - Lawrence Rock, Producer, Mixer, Mastering Engineer, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Julia Wolfe, ComposerLyricist - Donald Nally, Conductor, Chorus Conductor - The Crossing, Ensemble, MainArtist - Bob Hanlon, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Ian Good, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Young People’s Chorus of New York City, Ensemble, MainArtist - Francisco J. Nunez, Conductor, Chorus Conductor, Chorus Director, AssociatedPerformer - Kevin Vondrak, Conductor, Chorus Conductor

℗ 2019 New York Philharmonic

4
IV. Fire
New York Philharmonic
00:15:31

New York Philharmonic, Orchestra, MainArtist - Jaap van Zweden, Conductor, MainArtist - Lawrence Rock, Producer, Mixer, Mastering Engineer, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Julia Wolfe, ComposerLyricist - Donald Nally, Conductor, Chorus Conductor - The Crossing, Ensemble, MainArtist - Bob Hanlon, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Ian Good, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Young People’s Chorus of New York City, Ensemble, MainArtist - Francisco J. Nunez, Conductor, Chorus Conductor, Chorus Director, AssociatedPerformer - Kevin Vondrak, Conductor, Chorus Conductor

℗ 2019 New York Philharmonic

Album review

Composer Julia Wolfe builds large structures out of propulsive musical materials that may often take on a sinister tinge. Her works are tremendous crowd-pleasers even as they take up often grim subject matter. Fire in My Mouth, an hour-long oratorio, is perhaps her most epic work yet. For two women's choirs and large orchestra, including a pair of scissors, the work involves a musical depiction of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of March 25, 1911, in which 146 workers, mostly young immigrant women, died after a fire broke out, and they found the building's doors locked. The fire itself, gripping indeed, comes in the final fourth movement, and the work is tightly constructed leading up to that terrifying moment. The first three movements mix the hopeful attitudes of the women with the maw of the industrial hell that awaits them. Wolfe's basic pulsing material is inflected in different ways as the music proceeds. The second movement, with a long percussion opening, represents the factory where the women would die, while in the third movement, they alternate between hopes of assimilation ("I want to talk like an American") and protest. It's an extraordinarily powerful work that will receive many future hearings, perhaps in observances of American labor history. Jaap van Zweden and the New York Philharmonic, who commissioned the work, bring urgency to these live performances, and the choirs -- Philadelphia's The Crossing, and especially remarkably the Young People's Chorus of New York City -- have not a trace of rote drill in this powerful material. Highly recommended, and here's hoping the work comes to a symphony hall near you.

© TiVo

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