This Saturday's Simon Carrington Chamber Singers dual concerts will
feature the world premiere of their first composition competition's
winning work, Melissa Dunphy's What do you think I fought for at
Omaha Beach?The Rachel Maddow Show for
another large choral work, The Gonzales Cantata. Melissa took
some time recently to answer a few questions about the piece, her
compositional process, and her reaction to winning the SCCS competition. Based in Philadelphia and currently at work on her
doctoral degree at the University of Pennsylvania, Australian-born
Melissa has already achieved a level of success and recognition on a
national level, including a spot on
Kristin Shafel: Your piece "What
do you think I fought for at Omaha Beach?" is based on a WWII
veteran's testimony from the Maine Senate Hearing last year regarding
marriage equality, a very politically and emotionally charged topic.
Your "Gonzales Cantata" is another politically-inspired work.
As a person of Chinese/Australian descent, what has drawn you to US
politics for creative inspiration?
Melissa Dunphy: I was only mildly
politically interested and a centrist growing up in Australia, but when I
immigrated to the US in 2003 (to marry my American husband, Matt
Dunphy) I was faced with the somewhat unexpected culture shock of a
political spectrum shifted much further to the right. I'm often asked
what I miss the most about Australia, and my answer is always the same:
socialized health care and well-funded public education systems. I think
most Americans don't understand how profoundly public health care and
education affect the standard of living and quality of life - not just
for the people who need them, but for everyone in society. My husband
and I decided to settle in the US because, with over ten times the
population of Australia, there are more opportunities in the arts and
media, but the experience of moving brought me from being politically
complacent to being very civically engaged and determined to contribute
to political dialogues.
As a composer, my first rule is "write
your passions," so it was only natural that politics would begin to
inspire me musically, but the best topics are always not only
politically interesting but personally engaging. Watching the struggles
of the gay rights movement struck a particular chord in me. I was able
to get married in order to be with the person I love; why shouldn't a
gay or lesbian couple be able to do the same? I believe one of the worst
things about the marriage equality debate is that it has been
manipulated into being a partisan issue. Marriage equality has nothing
to do with the left or the right; it is about human rights. One of the
reasons I was so drawn to the speech that inspired What do you think
I fought for at Omaha Beach? was that the speaker, a lifelong
Republican, made that point in such a beautiful, poignant way. I broke
down in tears watching the video of his testimony. Anything that elicits
that strong a reaction from me is probably going to end up in a piece I
write at some point.
KS: What is your process for evolving
somewhat prosaic language into the text for a piece of music? Do you set
the testimony word-for-word, or modify it at all?
MD: I don't think there's any such thing as
an "unsettable" text. Since I was a teenager, I've been drawn to
setting very challenging texts; one of my first vocal pieces was based
on a poem "No Brian" that consisted of dozens and dozens of permutations
of those two words with various punctuation marks. I do make cuts to
the prose I use, usually for practical reasons; it takes much longer to
sing something than say it, and regular speech involves a lot of
repetition, so taking one iteration and setting it in a way that
emphasizes those words has the same effect. Sometimes, I'll rearrange
text for dramatic effect: in one section of Omaha Beach,
for example, I have most of the choir sing about what Mr. Spooner did
during WWII - battles and facts - while a small group of sopranos sings a
descant about the suffering he saw. For the most part, however, I try
to leave the actual words as they are. There's song in all prose;
sometimes it's a matter of chipping the prose away to reveal the song,
like a sculptor working on a piece of marble.
KS: What is your compositional timeline
for politically-charged pieces? Do you immediately start writing after
hearing the text or do you let them gestate? Do you feel timeliness
effect their reception?
MD: If something grabs me, I usually get
down to the business of the text straight away, but after I've cut the
text into lyrics, I'll sometimes take time before I put pen to paper (or
mouse pointer to virtual staff). I do set myself deadlines, but I try
not to worry too much about timeliness because I choose subjects that I
hope are interesting in the long term. It's the personal, human aspects
in stories that make them truly interesting. In the Gonzales Cantata,
the character study drives the narrative more than political outrage,
so I didn't mind that it took me a couple of years to get the piece out
the door - but I will admit to being very glad that Alberto Gonzales was
still in the news when it premiered. Omaha Beach had a
much shorter timeline from inspiration to premiere, but I hope it helps
to preserve Mr. Spooner's story in the public consciousness for longer
than the cable news cycle or the lifespan of an internet meme.
KS: Much of your music (posted on your
website) includes voice. What is your relationship with voice and choir?
MD: The first instrument we hear when we're
in the womb is our mother's voice, and our own voice is the first
instrument we use once we're born, so the human voice necessarily has a
very special place in music. It's little wonder that nearly all pop
music is vocal, and nearly all famous melodies in any genre of music are
singable. There's something very spiritual about the act of singing -
taking a musical concept out of your head and expressing in your body. I
do it all the time as I'm composing - even when I compose instrumental
music - and I feel very lucky that I grew up singing in choirs and have
some vocal training. Voice is such a powerful tool for composers; in any
combination or instrumentation, if a voice is audible, it will be of
primary importance to the listener. When you first distinguish Glenn
Gould's quiet humming as he plays Bach's Goldberg Variations,
your ear locks onto the timbre of his voice, and whatever line he is
singing becomes the melody, whether you like it or not! Voice is also
every composer's best friend for making very difficult or avant-garde
musical concepts more accessible to listening audiences. It is almost
too easy for me to return to vocal music again and again.
KS: I read on your website that you
have had performances of your compositions on the East and West coasts
of the US, and in Australia. Is this your first performance in the
Midwest? How does it feel to win the Simon Carrington Chamber Singers'
first composition competition?
MD: I suppose this counts as my second
performance in the Midwest, since an electronic piece I wrote, Insects,
was performed at the SEAMUS annual conference (http://seamus2010.stcloudstate.edu/)
at St. Cloud University in Minnesota this past April. I have never been
to Missouri or Kansas before, however, so I'm very excited to be able
to attend these performances.
I was quite shocked to win the
SCCS composition competition! I composed the piece over several months,
but finished it literally only days before sending in my entry, so the
only person who had seen it beforehand was my composition professor at
Penn, Dr. James Primosch. I don't think I had even shown my husband. I
had absolutely no idea how it might be received by performers, or other
musicians, or anyone else. It's always a little daunting to blindly send
out a piece of music to be judged, especially by someone as
distinguished as Simon Carrington. I usually talk myself down and
imagine the worst possible outcomes. What an incredible joy it was to
receive the news that my piece had been shortlisted. Even then, I didn't
think it would be possible to win. I must have had to read the final
outcome ten times before it sunk in - especially Mr. Carrington's
wonderful comments.
KS: What is on the horizon for you as a
composer? More vocal and/or politically charged works? Are there any
events since the Maine Senate Hearing that have caught your attention?
MD: I've had a bee in my bonnet for a
while about writing a chamber opera, particularly with strong female
leads. I get a different idea for a subject just about every week.
Watching the media coverage of Rand Paul and seeing Berg's Lulu at
the Met recently led me to wonder if I should write an opera about Ayn
Rand's outrageous love pentagon. I find her personally riveting, even if
I agree with hardly anything she wrote or said; I'm sure that even if I
completely ignored the subject of Objectivism, that opera would wind up
feeling politically charged because she so embodied her own political
philosophy. Perhaps I could throw in a clarinet solo for Alan Greenspan.
For more information about Melissa Dunphy, please visit http://www.melissadunphy.com.