Dog

Complete Work Title:

Dog (after W.S. Merwin)

Performance Medium:

female voice, bassoon, and intermedia

Duration:

10:30

Date Composed:

October 1996 – October 1997

Dedication:

for Heidi Dietrich Klein and Kristen Wolfe Jensen

Movements:

in six episodes

Additional Information:

  • The intermedia component includes 8- (or 4-) channel computer music, live FX processing, video projections, lighting, and staging.
  • Supported in part by a Faculty Research Grant from the University of North Texas.
  • Included on CEMISonics: The Threshold of Sound (Centaur CRC-2407, 1998).

Recording:

Heidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon. Recorded September 1997 at the University of North Texas Merrill Ellis Intermedia Theater (Denton, TX).

Score:

Program Note:

Dog is based upon the poem of the same name by American poet W.S. Merwin (1927-2019), from the collection titled Green With Beasts (1956). Merwin’s poem is a nihilistic study in despair and desolation, a contemplation of the dog who “guards all that is gone.” The present work explores the psychological implications of the poem through a variety of musical and visual elements — including 8-channel computer music, live processing of the voice and bassoon, video projections, and lighting. The vocalist elaborates upon the salient aspects of the poem, while the bassoonist acts as alter ego: together, these elements represent the physical presence of the dog, alternately aware of the oppressive present and reflective of a vital past. The computer music consists of three musical layers: a sonic “windscape” (utilizing processed sounds from the female voice and bassoon), suggesting “the shimmering vista of emptiness” described by Merwin; the spoken voice, presenting the poem in its entirety; and the processed dog sounds (crossed with bassoon and voice samples), representing a struggle of the psyche, as the creature comes to terms with its fate. The work is presented in six episodes, throughout which the voice and bassoon exchange roles: as the former becomes increasingly prominent, the latter assumes a more accompanimental status.

Dog was supported in part by a faculty research grant from the University of North Texas, and is dedicated to Heidi Dietrich Klein and Kristin Wolfe Jensen. The computer music was realized at the UNT Center for Experimental Music and Intermedia, with the invaluable assistance of Michael Thompson, and the video component was rendered and edited by Jon L. Henry, under the supervision of the composer. The work was first performed by soprano Heidi Dietrich Klein and bassoonist Kristen Wolfe Jensen on 1 October 1997 at the University of North Texas. It is included on the album CEMIsonics: The Threshold of Sound (Centaur CRC-2407, 1998).

Performance/Broadcast History:

DateVenueLocationPerformer(s)
5 August 2018radio broadcast on WMUA-FM—"Martian Gardens” with Max SheaAmhurst, MAHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristen Wolfe Jensen, bassoon
10 March 2000University of North Texas—SEAMUS Y2K ConferenceDenton, TXHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kathleen Reynolds, bassoon
15 October 1999Bowling Green State University—BGSU New Music and Art FestivalBowling Green, OHDeborah Norin-Kuehn, voice; Nancy Lutes, bassoon
19 April 1999Towson University—Towson University 20th Century Music FestivalTowson, MDHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; H. Gene Griswold, bassoon.
3 June 1998Arizona State University—International Double Reed Society ConferenceTempe, AZHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon
13 March 1998Louisiana State University—LSU New Music FestivalBaton Rouge, LAHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon
28 February 1998University of Texas—UTSA New Music FestivalSan Antonio, TXHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon
5 December 1997University of TexasAustin, TXHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon
1 October 1997University of North TexasDenton, TXHeidi Dietrich Klein, voice; Kristin Wolfe Jensen, bassoon

With poet W.S. Merwin (1999)