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Songs of the Poet (cycle)
Norman Mathews

voice, orchestra

I. Sometimes with One I Love
Listen to a sample (piano version)
II. That Music Always Round Me
Listen to a sample (piano version)
III. Here the Frailest Leaves of Me
Listen to a sample (piano version)

IV. Tears
Listen to a sample (piano version)
V. As the Time Draws Nigh
Listen to a sample (piano version)
VI. Grand is the Seen
Listen to a sample (piano version)
VII. The Last Invocation
Listen to a sample (piano version)
(all samples performed by Tracy Bidleman)

Secular/Sacred

$20.00 for one copy of the cycle



Preview the score (11"x17")


Program/Peformance notes:

Songs of the Poet is a song cycle, not in the sense of telling a narrative, but rather in depicting some of the major themes set forth by Walt Whitman—albeit set with a dramatic arc. The composer chose a rather traditional tonal framework for the songs because he felt that this best conveyed the intense passions portrayed in the poetry. The cycle begins on an ambiguous D-major-minor tonal center but ends triumphantly in D major. In all of Mathews’s songs the piano plays an equal role with the singer. His grouping of Whitman poems deals with the essentiality of love to the human spirit and its redeeming qualities, even when unrequited; the enormous importance of music and nature to Whitman’s writing; how the artist’s work mirrors the essence of his being; and the transcendence of the soul. The title for the cycle was chosen because of the inordinate number of instances in which Whitman refers to his poems as songs.

In Sometimes With One I Love, Whitman expresses his belief that love, even when “unreturn’d,” is of imminent value. Mathews expresses the rejection with great passion, which then serves as the catalyst of artistic creation. In Ned Rorem’s fascinating but divergent approach to this same poem, he seemingly treated the rejection with resignation.

That Music Always Round Me is Whitman’s paean to music—not only performed music, but the music in nature and in everyday events. Mathews treats the various performers referred to in the poem as a full orchestra with vocal soloists, whose musical lines are suspended above the impressionistic arpeggio figures of the accompaniment.

Here The Frailest Leaves of Me is the simplest and most melodically accessible song in the cycle. Harmonically and melodically, here Mathews summons the hues and contours of the great French melodist, Francis Poulenc.

Tears is the most tragic, and, consequently, the most dissonant song in the cycle. Mathews uses polychordal harmonies (e.g., a B-minor chord superimposed over a C-minor chord) to convey the overwhelming force of tragic loss. The powerful agitato section requires the performer to impart a dark descent almost into madness, before coming to a more reflective calm.

As the Time Draws Nigh is one Whitman’s many poems contemplating the soul and the preparations for an impending death. Mathews uses the second mode of the A melodic minor scale (i.e., B, C, D, E, F-Sharp, G-Sharp, A, B), juxtaposed with the second mode of the C melodic minor scale (i.e., D, E-Flat, F, G, A, B, C, D) to create an unworldly sound. The scales commingle and eventually evolve into a B-major scale as death is accepted as a natural part of life. Though not specifically religious in nature, the song is suitable for certain religious services.

Grand is The Seen is the most overtly joyous piece in the cycle, celebrating the individual and his or her place in the universe. The song is set to an almost virtuosic accompaniment.

The Last Invocation evokes through sumptuous melody the transcendence of the soul as it frees itself from its bodily prison. This song won Mathews the Recognition of Excellence award at the Fifth Diana Barnhart American Art Song Competition in 2003 (adjudicators were John Harbison, composer of the opera The Great Gatsby, and tenor Paul Sperry). The song is suitable in both secular contexts and as part of a sacred service.


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