Lift me into Heaven Slowly Songs of Libby Larsen Tracey Engleman, soprano Lara Bolton, piano Innova 975 Cowboy Songs 1 Bucking BroncoÊ 2:36 2 Lift Me into Heaven SlowlyÊ 2:37 3 Billy the KidÊ 1:10 Songs from Letters: Calamity Jane to her daughter Janey 4 So Like your FatherÕsÊ 1:44 5 He Never MissesÊ 1:44 6 A Man Can Love Two WomenÊ 2:44 7 A Working WomanÊ 4:18 8 All I HaveÊ 3:56 My Antonia 9 Landscape I: From the TrainÊ 2:29 10 AntoniaÊ 2:27 11 Landscape II: WinterÊ 4:14Ê 12 Hired GirlsÊ 1:38 13 Landscape III: Prairie SpringÊ 0:51 14 Antonia in the FieldÊ 3:03 15 Landscape IV: SunsetÊ 2:01 Try Me, Good King: Last Words of the Wives of Henry VIII 16 Katherine of AragonÊ 2:59 17 Anne BoleynÊ 4:36 18 Jane SeymourÊ 2:41 19 Anne of ClevesÊ 1:26 20 Katherine HowardÊ 4:15 Ê Ê Ð53:29Ð I have programmed and taught the songs of Libby Larsen for almost 20 years. With funds from the McKnight FoundationÕs Artist Fellowship Award, I feel so fortunate to record some of my favorite song art songs by this brilliant and generous composer. This CD was recorded in August, 2016 at Wild Sound Studio in Minneapolis, MN. Cowboy Songs, composed in 1979, are some of LarsenÕs earliest and most often performed art songs. ÊAttempting to avoid Òcontrapuntal artifice and excess melismaÓ while capturing the elegance and simplicity of American English in what she considers an Òearly study in text setting,Ó Larsen sought American texts from West of the Hudson. Drawing from two texts from American cowboy/cowgirl poetry (anonymous author of ÒBilly the KidÓ and female outlaw, Belle Starr) and a third from Blue Mountain poet, Robert Creeley, Larsen creates three musically unique but thematically related vignettes. ÊFrom the bucking horse brought to life through the piano in ÒBucking Bronco,Ó to the slow, spacious texture and utilization of the blues scale in ÒLift Me into Heaven Slowly,Ó to the interweaving of the American cowboy song ÒGoodbye, Old PaintÓ in ÒBilly the Kid,Ó LarsenÕs writing creates vivid characters and images of the Old West. Ê When Songs from Letters was commissioned by Mary Elizabeth Poore in 1989, Larsen was traveling extensively and, as the mother of a young daughter, trying to balance her own career and motherhood. At the suggestion of a friend, Larsen began to explore the life of Calamity Jane as told through the book ÒCalamity JaneÕs Letters to her Daughter,Ó published in 1976. ÊDespite the debate about the authenticity of these letters, the Calamity Jane letters resonated with Larsen on many levels: the challenges faced by working women, the honesty of the mother-daughter relationship, and the directness and pride of the language. The cycle reveals the various facets of Calamity JaneÕs character; despite the pride, bravado, and unapologetic conviction regarding her life choices, we sense sorrow tinged with regret for missing so much of her daughterÕs life. Calamity Jane is the protagonist, while circumstance is the antagonist. Ê In sharp contrast to the spacious opening of Songs from Letters, My Antonia begins with the pianist playing in the belly of piano with a rolling rhythmic motive that clearly depicts a train. The cycle begins and ends with the main character, Jim, traveling by train back to the Nebraska countryside. Between these musical bookends, we learn of the story of Jim and a young immigrant girl, Antonia, the harsh realities of early life on the Midwestern plains, and of lives on different trajectories. ÊWhile the train becomes the character of Òchange,Ó the landscape of the countryside becomes a central figure acting as the backdrop for the story. Larsen uses tempo, texture, and rhythm in the piano to depict elements of the natural landscape--from biting winter winds and sunsets over the horizon, to the rustling of spring on the prairie, the seasonal changes correlate to the various seasons of Jim and AntoniaÕs relationship. A life-long fascination with the Tudors and a commission by the Marilyn Horne Foundation led to the composition of Try Me, Good King in 2001. The texts are drawn from the final letters and gallows speeches of five of Henry VIIIÕs six wives. ÊInterwoven throughout each song are lute songs by Elizabethan composers Dowland, Campion, and Praetorius, which establish the tradition and atmosphere of the interior of the court. Other unifying gestures are repeated notes reminiscent of the plucking of a lute string, tolling bells, and rhythmic/melodic repetition marking the passage of time and the inevitability of death. A pervasive minor second marks the contrast between the Human and the Divine, and the emotions of anguish, anger, and fear. ÒIn these songs, I chose to focus on the intimate crises of the heartÓ Larsen writes. ÊÒThis group of songs is a monodrama of anguish and power.Ó =Biographies: With a voice the Boston Globe called Òextraordinary in range, tonal quality, musicianship and dramatic effect,Ó soprano Tracey Engleman has gained a reputation for excellence in opera, recital, and concert. Ms. Engleman was most recently awarded the prestigious 2016 McKnight Artist Fellowship for Musicians. Ms. Engleman has performed operatic roles with the Minnesota Opera, Minnesota Concert Opera, Skylark Opera, Music by the Lake, and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. A particularly gifted performer of 20th century and contemporary music, Ms. Engleman has performed chamber music with Zeitgeist, the Chicago Chamber Musicians, the Tanglewood Music Center and the Boston Symphony and frequently premieres works by living composers. Oratorio and concert engagements include solo performances with the Minnesota Orchestra, the La Crosse Symphony Orchestra, Milwaukee Bel Canto Chorus, the Valley Chamber Chorale, Minnesota Choral Union, the Cannon Valley Orchestra, and the Rochester Choral Arts. As a proponent of art song and as a frequent recitalist, she has performed in recital at Orchestra Hall, Hope College, at the National Association of Teachers of Singing National Convention, Source Song Festival, and as part of the Schubert Club Courtroom Concert Series. An alumni of the Tanglewood Music Center and the Art Song Festival of Cleveland, Ms. EnglemanÕs awards include Regional Finalist in the Metropolitan Opera Competition, 1st Place and ÒAudience ChoiceÓ winner in the Austin Lyric Opera Young Artist Competition, Finalist in the Sun Valley Opera Competition, recipient of the Minnesota NATS Artist Award, and winner of the Milwaukee Bel Canto Chorus Regional Artist Competition. Ms. Engleman earned B.M. Performance and Music Education degrees from St. Olaf College and M.M. and D.M.A. degrees from the University of Minnesota. In addition to a busy performing career, Dr. Engleman holds a tenure-track position at St. Olaf College where she teaches Applied Voice, Vocal Pedagogy and Vocal Solo Literature. Pianist Lara Bolton has been engaged as a coach-pianist at Minnesota Opera, San Francisco Opera, Washington National Opera, San Diego Opera, Seattle Opera, Chicago Opera Theater, Opera Santa Barbara, West Bay Opera, Opera Colorado, Amarillo Opera, and Mill City Summer Opera where she currently acts as chorus master and principal pianist. Ms. Bolton is a former San Francisco Opera Adler Fellow and a Domingo-Cafritz Young Artist for the Washington National Opera. In addition to helping develop a Young Artist Program for Opera Santa Barbara, she has been a pianist for the Merola Opera Program, Music Academy of the West, Brevard Music Festival, and Interlochen Arts Camp. After attending Interlochen Arts Academy for high school, she received a B. M. Theory degree from the University of Michigan and a M.M. in Collaborative Piano from the University of Maryland-College Park. Ms. Bolton is on faculty at the University of Minnesota as a vocal coach, maintains a private coaching studio, and an active recital and recording career in both instrumental chamber music and vocal repertoire ÒMusic exists in an infinity of sound. I think of all music as existing in the substance of the air itself. It is the composerÕs task to order and make sense of sound, in time and space, to communicate something about being alive through music.Ó Ð Libby Larsen Libby Larsen (b. 24 December 1950, Wilmington, Delaware) is one of AmericaÕs most performed living composers. She has created a catalogue of over 400 works spanning virtually every genre from intimate vocal and chamber music to massive orchestral works and over twelve operas. Grammy Award winning and widely recorded, including over fifty CDÕs of her work, she is constantly sought after for commissions and premieres by major artists, ensembles, and orchestras around the world, and has established a permanent place for her works in the concert repertory. As a vigorous, articulate advocate for the music and musicians of our time, in 1973 Larsen co-founded the Minnesota Composers Forum, now the American Composers Forum, which has become an invaluable aid for composers in a transitional time for American arts. A former holder of the Papamarkou Chair at John W. Kluge Center of the Library of Congress, Larsen has also held residencies with the Minnesota Orchestra, the Charlotte Symphony and the Colorado Symphony. Special thanks to Libby Larsen, St. Olaf College,Ê and the McKnight FoundationÊ Produced by Tracey Engleman Recorded at Wild Sound Studios, August 15-19, 2016.Ê Steve Kaul, Engineer. wild-sound.com Photos: Alyssa Pouliot at lyssmarie photography,Ê Robert Smith, Philip BlackburnÊ Supported in part by a McKnight FoundationÊ Fellowship for Performing Artists innova is supported by an endowmentÊ from the McKnight Foundation. Philip Blackburn, director, design Chris Campbell, operations director innova.mu