Your cart

Total
NZD
Shipping and discount codes are added at checkout.

Work


Night Visions

for solo soprano, SATB choir, and orchestra

Year:  2006   ·  Duration:  14m

Year:  2006
Duration:  14m

David Hamilton
Composer

Composer:   David Hamilton

Films, Audio & Samples

Sample Score

Sample: pp1-2,7-8,19-20,28,45

See details ➔

About

When I was asked to conduct Pakuranga Choral Society in their first concert for 2005, the question of suitable repertoire was discussed with the choir management. We decided that the concert need not be a major oratorio, and I suggested a programme of Bach (Cantata No. 140) and Haydn (Nelson Mass) with an offer to write something new to complement these works. I was also keen to use one of my ex-students, Morag Atchison, as the soprano soloist in the concert. My work therefore became a piece which would feature her voice, with not too heavy demands on the choir.

The texts I finally selected were all on the theme of night, and form a cycle of pieces. The first text, Night Countdown by Peggy Dunstan, describes some of the many sights and sounds of the night, but contrasting that with '...only one moon and one me'. The second text is a lullaby: Rocking my Baby by Wendy Orr. The third text, 'The Middle of the Night' by Karla Kuskin, describes someone, probably a child, lying awake and listening to the sounds of the night. There are strange noises, and the lights go out one by one. The prospect of nightmares is not far away, so you hide under your pillow and shut your eyes. Then you sing to yourself a confidence-boosting song about how you love the middle of the night and all its noises and weird animals this part of the poem is sung by the choir. The fourth piece sees me returning to the poetry of American Jack Prelutsky and The Dance of the Thirteen Skeletons. Here we do have a nightmare, thirteen skeletons dancing around a snowy graveyard! Here, the choir sings the chorus which describes the noises the skeletons make, and the accompaniment makes passing references to the well-known Danse Macabre by Saint Saëns. The final piece is appropriately titled 'Last Song', by James Guthrie. This short poem is a brief 'good night' wish.

Night Visions was first performed on 22nd May 2005 by Morag Atchison (soprano) with Pakuranga Choral Society, conducted by the composer. The orchestrated version was made in 2006 for a concert by Auckland Choral.


Commissioned note

Commissioned by the Pakuranga Choral Society


Contents note

  1. Night Countdown
  2. Rocking My Baby
  3. The Middle of the Night
  4. Dance of the Thirteen Skeletons
  5. Last Song

Text note

Texts by Peggy Dunstan; Wendy Orr; Karla Kuskin; Jack Prelutsky; and James Guthrie