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Folk Hero: Wayne Horvitz evokes a revolutionary spirit through music

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  • Folk Hero: Wayne Horvitz evokes a revolutionary spirit through music

    Folk Hero: Wayne Horvitz evokes a revolutionary spirit through music
    by Gavin Borchert

    Seattle Weekly
    27 Oct. 2004


    Timely historian Horvitz.
    (Robin Laananen)

    When Wayne Horvitz began work on Joe Hill three years ago, he didn't
    intend it to be an overtly political piece. As a musician, he's more
    interested in storytelling, in re-creating a period, a mood, a life; as
    songs get too focused on a specific message, he feels they move into
    territory where words alone can do a better job anyway. Or as he puts
    it, "I always felt Joan Baez's 'I Dreamed I Saw Joe Hill' was the
    moment in the movie Woodstock to go out and get popcorn."

    Yet the political climate in America has moved Horvitz to think harder
    about the issues Hill and the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
    raised: questions of economic justice, the disparity of wealth, the
    lives and aspirations of the working class. A history buff, Horvitz's
    first attraction to the subject was its mythological, folktale aspect:
    the fiery labor crusader accused of murder and executed after a
    blatantly unjust show trial, despite worldwide protests and calls for a
    retrial from Woodrow Wilson on down.

    Joe Hill: 16 Actions for Orchestra, Voice, and Soloist, to be premiered
    on Saturday, Oct. 30 (i.e., three days before the election), at Meany
    Hall, is a 90-minute song cycle with a dash of opera; unstaged, with
    just a light narrative frame. Vocalists Danny Barnes and Robin Holcomb
    represent, or allude to, Hill and the feminist crusader Elizabeth
    Gurley Flynn (1890–1964), an activist for Hill's release who visited
    him on his last night in prison. Performance artist Rinde Eckert
    narrates and takes other roles as needed. "Oratorio," if it didn't
    connote Victorians in evening dress singing Bible stories, might be the
    best term.

    Horvitz chose lyrics from the IWW songbook and reset them to original
    music, placing them alongside traditional songs like "Spike Driver's
    Blues." The scoring for chamber orchestra (two dozen players, drawn
    from the Seattle Symphony and other orchestras), otherwise fully
    written out, includes a prominent improvised part for guitarist and
    long-time collaborator Bill Frisell. The partly sung, partly spoken
    text linking the songs and instrumental interludes was written by Paul
    Magid (best known as one of the Flying Karamazov Brothers). Composer
    and librettist came up with the idea of a Joe Hill piece separately; a
    friend brought them together. For both men, American labor history and
    family history intertwine: Horvitz's father and grandfather were
    involved in labor negotiations, and Magid's grandfather, an Armenian
    immigrant, was himself a Seattle longshoreman and IWW member.

    Distinguished from his jazz improvisations, Horvitz's recent
    through-composed works (a much better term than "classical") reflect a
    deep love for traditional blues and mountain music. Spare and serene,
    they make me think of Ives at his least aggressive and gimmicky, Virgil
    Thomson without his occasional self- consciousness and sense of
    "writing down," and, in their airy, unopulent textures and mood of
    reverence, Arvo Pärt. Like Bartók, Horvitz evokes a vernacular spirit
    without outright quotation. His settings of the IWW texts, his
    deconstructions and reharmonizations of their original tunes, are a
    mirror image of Hill's practice. Hill and other contributors to the IWW
    songbook took familiar hymn tunes and added incendiary new lyrics.

    Horvitz does use one original song by Hill: "Rebel Girl," an epithet
    which became Flynn's nickname. In a curious irony, Hill's music comes
    straight out of the commercial, "cultivated,"
    sheet-music-in-the-piano-bench tradition; it's Horvitz's original music
    which, drawn from a vernacular source, seems to more authentically
    reflect the story's folktale element—especially as sung by Barnes and
    Holcomb, powerfully emotive singers in the blues-folk style.

    Joe Hill's single Seattle performance will be coproduced by Earshot
    Jazz and Meany Hall, moving laudably beyond presenting to
    co-commissioning new work. A second performance in Burlington, Vt., is
    scheduled for next year; beyond that, Horvitz plans to shop the piece
    around. It should be attractive to conductors with a taste for
    adventure—although anyone looking for "crossover" pops-concert material
    in the manner of Edgar Meyer (who does it cleverly and engagingly) or
    Mark O'Connor (who does it cheesily) probably ought to look elsewhere.
    Horvitz's music is less a matter of reconciling two musical worlds than
    of creating his own, drawing from the same fundamental humanist spirit
    that is the common source of honest, heartfelt music of any tradition.

    --Boundary_(ID_MLkKxkRdYXemjt2ebVHsXw)--
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