Marilyn Bliss
Shadowflowers
Year: 1978
Duration (in minutes): 12'
Difficulty: High (professional)
Category: larger chamber ensembles - more than 4 players, solo voice(s) with chamber ensemble
Instruments: alto flute, cello, English horn, flute, harp, horn, oboe, percussion, piccolo, soprano, tenor voice, violin
Publisher: American Composers Alliance
Publisher website: https://www.composers.com
Purchase score URL: https://composers.com/composers/marilyn-bliss/shadowflowers
Description: Shadowflowers is an unstaged psychodrama for soprano, tenor, and chamber ensemble. The text, assembled from the poetry of Stefan George, Stéphane Mallarmé, and Guillaume Apollinaire, concerns two beautiful, yet repulsive, artificial worlds. George's poem, from "Algabal," used in its entirety, presents to the reader an underground garden, beautiful but completely artificial, black, and dead. In Mallarmé's "Hérodiade," excerpted here, the reader encounters a beautiful virgin, living in a world of white and jewels, allowing nothing to touch her. The poems are sung together, commenting on each other while carrying on their own dramatic senses. Another factor in choosing the text was the constant recurrence of the words "shadow" and "flower" in all excerpts, which contributes to the black/white, dark/bright imagery. The music is in two unbroken sections, following the shape of the text. Shadowflowers was performed at the Tanglewood Festival.