Dreaming a World
(2006-07)instrumentation:
narrator, children’s chorus, mixed chorus
2(II=picc).2.2.2—4.3.3.1—timp.perc(4).optional addtl perc—harp—pft—strings
duration: 21:00
(In five movements: I. Prelude, Invocation and Dance; II. Voices of Unity; III. “I Dream a World”; IV. “The Great Drum” (optional movement); V. Finale)
Commissioned by the Battle Creek Symphony Orchestra through the American Composers Forum’s Continental Harmony program; commission funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
Continental Harmony links communities with composers through the creation of original musical works.
The program is a partnership of the American Composers Forum and the National Endowment for the Arts, with additional funds provided by the Rockefeller Foundation.
Premiere performances
March 9 & 10, 2007, W.K. Kellogg Auditorium, Battle Creek, Michigan
Battle Creek Symphony Orchestra, Anne Harrigan, Music Director
Battle Creek Community Chorus, Brian Clissold, Director
Echoes of Grace Community Choir, Wyhomme Matthews, Director
Kellogg Community College Choral Union, Gerald Blanchard, Director
Battle Creek Girls’ Chorus, Brian Clissold, Director
Battle Creek Boychoir, Brooks Grantier, Director
Sojourner Truth Youth Chorus, Pauline Norris, Director
Percussionists from Battle Creek high schools, Carolyn Koebel, Percussion Coordinator/Coach
Premiere performances conducted by Anne Harrigan
The third movement anthem I Dream a World, with text by Langston Hughes, will be published in a version for children’s chorus with piano accompaniment by Pavane Publishing (distributed by Hal Leonard), January 2008.
Program note
I was very pleased to be chosen as the composer for the Continental Harmony project in Battle Creek, Michigan, having been well acquainted with the American Composers Forum’s innovative and successful program which pairs composers and communities around the United States. I knew that the Battle Creek project would be one of the more ambitious and challenging of the Continental Harmony projects, as it would call for a very large and diverse assemblage of musical performers.
The initial “theme” of the project was a celebration of multiculturalism in Battle Creek. After my initial visit to Battle Creek to meet with many of those involved with the project, Anne Harrigan, Music Director of the Battle Creek Symphony Orchestra, and I agreed to seek a broader view of this theme. The goal became the creation of a work that would celebrate multiculturalism not only in Battle Creek, but in a more general, universal sense. In today’s increasingly multicultural world, this seemed an appropriate, if challenging, theme for a large work created for concert performance.
I believed that the key to the structure of the work would be found in the texts to be spoken or sung, and the task of identifying and assembling an appropriate group of texts became the first challenge of the project. This proved to be a much more daunting task than I had imagined, and the process of researching and seeking out texts took several months—nearly as long as the process of composition itself. I sought texts that addressed the concept of the unity of all people, regardless of diverse backgrounds. More importantly, I sought texts that were poetic and which I thought would be compelling in the context of a musical presentation. This led to some interesting discoveries. I certainly had never previously set such an eclectic group of texts as are represented in this work, Dreaming a World, which is in five movements, each of which sets a text from a different source or sources.
During my visits to Battle Creek, I visited the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of Potawatomi Indians, and these visits led me to seek out Native American texts. I came upon an English translation of a Native American prayer which had the quality of an invocation, and the setting of this text became the basis of the first movement, “Prelude, Invocation, and Dance.” In this movement, the choir sings without text, in a way that is almost chant-like, and the colors of the wordless choir join with the colors of the orchestra, with the percussion instruments playing a prominent role.

The third movement, a setting of the Langston Hughes poem “I Dream a World” for children’s chorus, joined by mixed chorus and orchestra, is central to the work both in placement and in spirit, and it suggested to me the title for the larger work, Dreaming a World. In my search for texts, this was the first one I found that I immediately knew was “right” for the project, and this was the first music I composed. Hughes was one of the great American poets of the twentieth century, and I have been drawn to many of his poems which poignantly evoke the blues, and which have been set effectively by many composers. “I Dream a World” clearly and simply hopes for a reality in which people of all cultures peacefully coexist. As I read the words, I immediately imagined them sung by children’s voices, and I set this text as a simple, “anthem”-type melody for children. Knowing that in Battle Creek these words would be sung by children of various cultural backgrounds made the text seem particularly appropriate.

For the fifth movement finale of the work, I turned to the American poet who may be the favorite of American composers (certainly of mine): Walt Whitman. I have set Whitman on several occasions, and I never cease to find his unique voice compelling. To close Dreaming a World, I chose a famous passage from the end of “The Mystic Trumpeter,” a passage which has inspired settings by a number of composers. Here Whitman ecstatically imagines “a reborn race” and “a perfect world” with “war, sorrow, suffering gone.” His utopian vision, in which all humankind is united (I particularly admire the notion of “universal man”) repeats the word “joy” no less than thirteen times in its dozen lines. After a brief fanfare-like opening, the narrator breathlessly exclaims these lines, supported by the orchestra and initially wordless choruses (children and adults); then the choruses take over the final ecstatic line “Joy! joy! all over joy!”, and repeat it with increasing fervor to the work’s conclusion.

—James Ball, Battle Creek Enquirer
