Descent: "Sequoia" from "Touching the Infinite Sky"
by Gwyneth W. Walker
TTBB - Sheet Music

Item Number: 20460675
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Tenor voice solo, TTBB choir, and piano - Intermediate

SKU: EC.8517

Composed by Gwyneth W. Walker. Secular, 21st century. Octavo. Duration 3 minutes, 15 seconds. E.C. Schirmer Publishing #8517. Published by E.C. Schirmer Publishing (EC.8517).

ISBN 600313485176. UPC: 600313485176. English.

Touching the Infinite Sky is a choral adaptation (for Men's Chorus with Tenor Soloist) of the composer's solo song cycle, Songs from the High Sierra, for High Voice and Piano. The original songs were completed in 2014. The new work was commissioned by Louisiana State University for the Tiger Glee Club, which premiered the music on October 3, 2016 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

 
The new choral adaptation employs the additional voices as an expansive background to the soloist. As the chorus joins in the accompaniment sonorities, a sense of space and depth is created, well-suited to songs about the wilderness. The chorus also shares melodic material with the soloist, in dialogue or in unison.
 
Newly-composed choral introductions are inserted before the first and last songs. The texts are comprised of fragments from the songs to follow.
 
The five letters which provide the lyrics for the songs (adapted by the composer) were selected for their range of topics and sentiments. Some portray the wildlife in the mountains ('Glacier Birds…'). Others extol the beauty of the Sierra ('Mountain Glory,' 'Yosemite Falls'). One expresses the whimsical/temperamental personality of the author ('Ice!'). And the final letter ('Sequoia') speaks reverently of the great trees, in a language both naturalistic and sacred. They are the 'greatest light in the woods, the greatest light in the world.'
 
The musical settings, especially in the piano accompaniment, are quite programmatic. Glacier birds scamper up and down the keyboard in tone clusters. 'Icy' glissandi float off. The great trees take root in large, block chords, and waterfalls cascade down in scales.
 
There is personality in the letters. The bond between John Muir and Mrs. Carr (whom he addresses formally) is one of great kinship -- a blending of the souls, a 'spiritual romance.' As he marvels at the beauty of the wilderness, he writes ardently, 'I wish that you could see this…' When he learns that Mrs. Carr, a botanist (whose plants suffer from the frost), dislikes ice, he chides her, and creates a 'mock argument' over the value of glacial ice.
 
The songs begin with an ascent into the mountains. They close with the return to the coast, to the magnificent Sequoia trees, where John Muir camps for the night, in the company of a squirrel. Charmingly, he writes 'therefore, my Carr, goodnight.' - Gwyneth Walker
 
Duration: 3:15.