Performance postponed
Supported by the Arts Midwest Touring Fund, Fifth House Ensemble visits the Canterbury School for a two-day Rivers Empyrean residency. Musicians will work with students in the classroom and at the Eagle Marsh Nature Preserve, leading them in hands-on activities that explore themes of water usage best practices and environmental conservation.
At a time when the environment is more threatened than ever with pollution and our life-giving waterways at risk, Fifth House Ensemble traces the life cycle of water from its metaphorical descent from the heavens as rain, to its long journey in streams and rivers informed by conservation experts and ecologists. Featuring a new commission by Fresh Inc Festival and Canterbury alumnus Patrick O’Malley driven by ecological data from Friends of the Chicago River, a new commission by Shawn Okpebholo that celebrates water as a precious resource by transforming it into a musical instrument, alongside music inspired by First Peoples, this program asks what it would mean to return to a sacred conception in which humans are a part of nature rather than beings standing outside of its impact.
Full ensemble + Beth Bradfish sound design
Beth Bradfish, composer and sound designer
Alex Inglisian, consulting creative engineer
Eric Donovan Lester, drumming
Program:
John Luther Adams, arr. Alex Goodin — The Wind in High Places
I. Above Sunset Pass
Alexander Miller — Glacier Blue
Brent Michael Davids — In Wisconsin Woods
Mason Bates — Red River
Shawn Okpebholo — Fractured Water (World Premiere)
Patrick O’Malley — Rivers Empyrean (World Premiere)
Austin Wintory, arr. Parker Nelson — Delphinus Delphis from ABZÛ
Dan Visconti — Low Country Haze
This performance is supported by Sweetwater.