The Seas Between Us (2024)
Concerto for Solo Flute and Orchestra
[2(picc.)22(B. Cl.)2(C. Bn.) | 4221 | Timp | 3 perc | Hp | Strings]
In Three Movements:
I. At Sea II. To Dance III. Beyond Waves
Commissioned by Elizabeth and Justus Schlichting for world premieres in 2024-25 by:
Orquesta Filarmónica de la Ciudad de México, Scott Yoo, Music Director
Orquesta Filarmónica del Estado de Chihuahua, Ivan del Prado, Music Director
Orquesta Sinfónica de Yucatán, José Areán, Artistic Director
Orquesta Filharmónica de Boca del Río, Veracruz
New England Philharmonic (Boston), Tianhui Ng, Music Director
Dedicated to Ajeandro Escuer
Available for programming in 2025-26 and 2026-27 seasons
Duration: 25 minutes
Alejandro Escuer, flute
New England Philharmonic | Tianhui Ng, conductor
NEC's Jordan Hall - Sunday, October 20, 2024
Audio recorded by Antonio Oliart
Video recorded by Azure Sound & Video
View Online Score
Program Note
I grew up close to the sea, by a tidal estuary that exhibited a dramatic range of being. On a grey, wintry day it could be so still that you could not tell where the sea ended and the clouds began, yet, during a storm, its white-capped waves could thrash so violently you dared not venture too close for risk of being swept away. On clear days, I would stand on the shore and look out across the bay imagining the open sea beyond and the faraway lands that awaited on its opposite shores.
Shortly before writing this piece, flutist Alejandro Escuer’s home was destroyed by sea surf whipped up by a hurricane. I was moved by both the painfulness of this experience but also his and his family’s determination to rebuild. As I began this flute concerto, I took walks by the sea, contemplating the vastness of the ocean, pondering its inherent dualities. The sea brings both destruction and new life as well as an uncertainty of the unknown paired with the rhythmic certainty of the tide that can be even more anticipated than one’s next breath. It separates societies from each other and connects them. It is a home and the path to new beginnings. It encapsulates such strength, gracefulness, madness and beauty.
In this concerto I imagine the solo flute as a protagonist in a drama, a bird-like character with equal measures of innocence and wisdom, like one of poet Emily Dickinson’s birds, emblematic of a hope that perches within. Over the course of the work, the solo flute brings the orchestra together and then leads it forward. The flutist comforts, mourns, yearns, pleads and dances.
The concerto is structured in three movements. The first, At Sea, begins with us cast away in a vast expanse. The second, To Dance, unites disparate elements, beginning with a festive sense of the macabre and ending with the parade-like energy of a big-band jazz march. Close in mind were the numerous world traditions that mourn death by celebrating life through dance. The final movement, Beyond Waves, begins far removed from the second. The conductor’s sweeping gestures send waves of breathing sound rippling across the stage. There is a processional quality to the music, with music of both violence and intimacy. By the end we find ourselves skyward bound, gently swaying in the quiet. As I wrote the ending, I remembered the hot air balloon ride I took two months prior over the pyramid of Teotichuacán and its Avenue of the Dead. I am afraid of heights and so I thought I would be terrified, yet I was instead mesmerized by the gracefulness and solitude of being captive to the whims of the wind. I felt far removed from both my life on the ground below and the immense history of the ancient civilization we floated by, yet also more present on a path to a deeper understanding of both.
The Seas Between Us is commissioned by Elizabeth and Justus Schlichting for the Orquesta Filarmónica de la Ciudad de México, Orquesta Filarmónica del Estado de Chihuahua, Orquesta Sinfónica de Yucatán, and Orquesta Filharmónica de Boca del Río, and co-commissioned by the New England Philharmonic. It is dedicated to flutist Alejandro Escuer. This work was composed during a fellowship residency at MacDowell.
- Eric Nathan