Venus and Adonis


Instrumentation: Six singers (Operatic S and T, Choral SATB), Alto Saxophone, String Quartet, and Piano (doubling optional Celesta)

Completed: October 20, 2004

Dedicated to: Brad Lubman

Duration: 45 minutes

Text: from Shakespeare's long poem of the same name, adapted by Gretchen Snedeker and Zachary Wadsworth.

Premiered: February 28, 2005, 8:00pm at the Eastman School of Music, Rochester, NY. Annamarie Zmolek, Venus; Zachary Wilder, Adonis; Laura Dunbar, Gretchen Snedeker, Zachary Wadsworth, and Nathaniel Adam, chorus; Ari Streisfeld and Christopher Otto, violins; Elizabeth Ristow, viola; Lauren Radnofsky, cello; Lynn Ligammari, alto saxophone; Bobby Mitchell, piano/celeste.


Winner of the 2005 Howard Hanson Large Ensemble Prize from the Eastman School of Music

Winner of the 2007 Long Leaf Opera One-Act Opera Competition



Audio

Aria: "I'll be a park"(Annamarie Zmolek, soprano; Musica Nova, Brad Lubman, conductor)

Aria: "The owl, night's herald, shrieks"(Zachary Wilder, tenor; Musica Nova, Brad Lubman, conductor)

Recitative: "Hard-favor'd tyrant"(Annamarie Zmolek, soprano; Musica Nova, Brad Lubman, conductor)

Sinfonia(Musica Nova, Brad Lubman, conductor)

Program Note

“Venus and Adonis” is a long lyric poem written by William Shakespeare but based on ancient mythology. In it, the Roman goddess of love, Venus, attempts to seduce the beautiful Adonis, a young mortal who is in the end more interested in hunting with his friends than romancing her. Venus tries her very hardest to woo Adonis, deceiving him into kissing her by pretending to faint. They continue to kiss until night falls and Adonis, eager to wake up early the next morning and hunt wild boars, attempts to depart. Venus tries to restrain him, but he expresses his disgust with her amorous advances and struggles away. The next morning, Venus awakes, hearing nothing of Adonis or his hunting party. She then discovers that the hunted boar was so taken by Adonis’ good looks that it, in an attempt to kiss Adonis, accidentally gored and killed him. Devastated by his death, Venus returns to the heavens.

In this piece, since Shakespeare’s text is a poem and not a play, there is a great amount of colorful, evocative narrative. In order to keep these sections without reworking the text to suit a stage production with only dialogue, I set it as a concert work with a Greek chorus. This chorus sings the stage direction and narrative that the audience would normally see acted out onstage in an opera or other theater work.

To suit the mythological context of Shakespeare’s text, much of the musical material of this oratorio imitates Renaissance and Baroque styles, from the continuo of the modern piano to the straight-tone of the Greek Chorus and the Baroque dance influence of some of the string passages. The lush sound of the saxophone, one of the most modern instruments in common use today, evokes the tone and the power of ancient reed and brass instruments. The use of modern instruments is not, however, grounded solely in convenience. The oratorio, though certainly referential to ancient music, still sounds thoroughly “modern” in both harmony and rhythm, making it more suitably played by modern instruments.

This piece is dedicated to Brad Lubman, without whose initiative and leadership this piece would never have been written or performed. Also, I would like to thank Gretchen Snedeker for, as always, helping me turn a theoretical piece into a reality (in this case by adapting the huge Shakespeare text into a concise but still wonderfully coherent libretto). Finally, thanks to Annamarie Zmolek, Zach Wilder, Nathaniel Adam, Laura Dunbar, Elizabeth Ristow, and Bobby Mitchell, all of whose practical performance input shaped this piece in ways I never could have imagined.

Performances (6)

February 28, 2005, 8:00 pm
(concert premiere)
Eastman Musica Nova Ensemble (Bradley Lubman, conductor) Annamarie Zmolek, Venus; Zachary Wilder, Adonis; Laura Dunbar, Gretchen Snedeker, Zachary Wadsworth, and Nathaniel Adam, chorus

Kilbourn Hall, Eastman School of Music, Rochester, NY
June 22, 2007, 8:00 pm
(stage premiere)
Long Leaf Opera (Alfred Sturgis, conductor) Andrea Edith Moore, Venus; Timothy Sparks, Adonis; Melinda Whittington, Jodi Karem, John Williams, Scott MacLeod, chorus; players from the North Carolina Chamber Symphony. Dancers: Carmen Borders (Venus) and Eric Uphoff (Adonis). Directed by Geoff Zeger with choreography by Boleyn Willis, set design by Randolph Umberger, and lighting design by Chenault Spence.

Memorial Hall, Chapel Hill, NC
June 24, 2007, 2:00 pmLong Leaf Opera (Alfred Sturgis, conductor) Andrea Edith Moore, Venus; Timothy Sparks, Adonis; Melinda Whittington, Jodi Karem, John Williams, Scott MacLeod, chorus; players from the North Carolina Chamber Symphony. Dancers: Carmen Borders (Venus) and Eric Uphoff (Adonis). Directed by Geoff Zeger with choreography by Boleyn Willis, set design by Randolph Umberger, and lighting design by Chenault Spence.

Memorial Hall, Chapel Hill, NC
May 31, 2009, 2:00 pm
(scenes)
Mandy Spivak, Venus; Tony Boutté, Adonis; Signe Mortensen, Julia Tobiska, Kerry Jennings, and Charles Stanton, chorus; Amanda Halstead, piano; Alan Johnson, conductor; staged by Rhoda Levine

Chandler Hall, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA
November 12, 2010, 7:00 pmBoston Metro Opera; Megan Stapleton, Venus; James Onstad, Adonis; staged and music directed by Stewart Kramer

Hope Central Church, Jamaica Plain, MA
November 13, 2010, 7:00 pmBoston Metro Opera; Megan Stapleton, Venus; James Onstad, Adonis; staged and music directed by Stewart Kramer

Hope Central Church, Jamaica Plain, MA