Steven Rice - Here We Sleep for Sinfonietta
Duration: 20:00
Completed: 2011
Instrumentation: 1111/1111/pno, hrp, 2 perc./11111
A performance excerpt:
Program Notes
They said that the service, which was intended to express a kind of English patriotism
and unity, was disquieting, even terrifying. With the surviving writings describing the
event it is difficult to make out any specifics for sure and so we aren't sure if
William Stedman's music was performed, although records survive of the commissioning
of these works for the occasion on which James I made the English queens "consorts in
realm and tomb" by burying Elizabeth I on top of Mary I. Fragments of chamber music
for that event were kept together in Westminster Abbey, including an "in nomine" (the
final "in nomine" of this composition is a completion of that "in nomine" fragment)
by William Stedman, the chamber musician and composer who may be the father of the
more famous musician Fabian Stedman. Many of these sketches also appear to be related
to the lists of changes and lines that would later become change ringing. The lists are
uncharacteristic of the kinds of changes that would eventually become standard change
ringing compositions, but perhaps William also created a composition for the bells of
Westminster Abbey on that day, for those Westminster bells that were removed in 1971
and replaced with bells that more closely approximate a major scale. Those bygone bells
were noted for their solemnity, depth, and jangling deviations from western tuning
systems both of today and that time. If these pieces were performed, such musical
changes and pitch relations would certainly have been unfamiliar to most of the
attendants. The puritan William Ames wrote that he found the music to be of two types,
"cacophonous popery" and "popery of unenlightened and defunct musical qualities",
and the service inspired a tract that is important in the development of temperance
music that describes the "morally pure qualities" of the tradition. On the other hand,
some anonymous others were clearly impressed with the music for the interment of
Elizabeth I and wrote that the music "gave the feeling that a powerful host of
heaven swirled about the space". What is known for sure is that while music played
and Elizabeth I's body was uncomfortably lowered on top of Mary I, a loud sound
startled those attending and a kind of riot broke out in which many precious
pieces of artwork were destroyed and several people died. When the composer Baljinder
Sekhon II brought the musical fragments of William Stedman to my attention, I went
to study them at the one of the libraries of the William Stedman trust. After I had
viewed the documents for some days, the apparently penniless librarian demanded that
I compose "a symphony" based on these fragments and events. I told him that I would be
happy to take up the idea given a fee that I named, but instead of paying me, the
librarian took to hounding me about my activities day in and out, causing trouble
and in general scaring me. After certain legal recourses failed, I drafted an
agreement in which I would write such a composition if the librarian never came near
me again. Of course, many of William's sketches cannot be deciphered with any certainty,
but I was inspired by my encounters with the librarian to make my best
guesses and those short bits of material served as a starting point for the rest of
Here We Sleep.