Michael James Oberhauser
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Lots of progress, not much progress

2/23/2011

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I've been working a lot. Not just on music: My job's been hectic, my chorus rehearsal schedule is sometimes a bit much (concert this weekend), doctoral applications (long done, but they took a lot of the time toward the end of 2010), and just general business from life.

I have been writing, though:

As of last night, Love is Not the Last Room is 17/18 done! Only one song left! It's a tough one, though- the last soprano solo. I've been wrestling with it for a while. Hopefully a good idea will come to me soon!

The 365 Project is coming along well. I finished Autumn back in December, and I'm really happy with it. I think it's one of the prettiest things I've ever written. I have mixed feelings about Winter so far, but the last few days have produced some music I like for that.

The Inspiration Ring has kind of taken a back burner for all of us, but it should get started up again soon.

As soon as LINTLR is completely finished, I need to dive headfirst into my orchestral piece that I've been talking about writing for such a long time. This really needs to be finished and in my portfolio!

Also, I have a new collaboration starting up soon: My friend Ashley Alden wants to create a staged song cycle, based on the life of Cleopatra, with me. She's writing the words and will sing it, and I just have to write the music! I'm looking forward to the project, though- I think it could be really interesting. More details to come on that project later.

Some other things I want to do soon:
-Review the CD of string quartets I recently got
-Blog about composing and songwriting with words first, or adding words to existing music
-Organize a recital - Yes, I know, ANOTHER one. I've been itching to get work performed again for a while!

So, this post's title: "Lots of progress, not much progress"
That's what I feel like lately. I'm getting a lot of work accomplished, but nothing's finished. I feel like I have nothing to show for all my work, but soon that will change.
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Productive Weekend (so far):

9/25/2010

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 Busy day! Aside from the normal humdrum weekend stuff (laundry, dishes, etc), I got a lot of composing done today:

First, I have a draft of my round 2 of the Inspiration Ring ready to send to Heather- a few more tweaks when I look at it again with fresh eyes and ears, and then I'll send it.

Then, I cleaned up the 365: Summer movement. I actually like it more as a whole than I did toward the beginning of the project. Since it's Autumn now, I've also started the first few measures of the Autumn movement. I changed my mind about keeping each movement in 4/4, quarter=80. Autumn is 3/4, quarter=70. It seems more autumnal to me. I really like where this is going so far.

After that, I tackled Love is Not the Last Room some more. I now have another mezzo song done. That means I have 6 out of the 18 songs done. To be fair, this one went really quickly. I sort of recycled some old material from a piece for a class. The original piece had lyrics that were under copyright, so I could only use it one time for educational purposes. Since I liked it and it could never be heard again, why not recycle the music? It fits the new piece perfectly.

Of the remaining 12 songs in LiNtLR, 5 are interludes/the introduction, so they should all go pretty quickly. So really, only 7 full songs left to write: I'm just about halfway done!
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The Inspiration Ring

8/30/2010

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So, I had another idea for a new project, which is hopefully going to happen:

A photographer, a writer, a poet, another composer and I are all sending short pieces to each other which will then serve as the inspiration for a new short piece. This new piece will be sent out again, and... you see the ring happening here.

Writer sends to composer sends to photographer sends to poet sends to composer, lather, rinse, repeat.

Once we get these first five rounds done, I'll share what we created!

Other than that, the 365 project is still chuggin' along. Love is Not the Last Room has slowed down a bit, but I think once I have a little more time this will charge ahead again.
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Re-imagined new projects

8/10/2010

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I've re-thought what I'm doing with the song cycle. It's going to be slightly more Rorem-esque in scope than I had originally planned, but I think it'll still go fairly quickly.


The song cycle is now called "Love is Not the Last Room," a line from the last poem of the set. It will be for soprano, mezzo-soprano, tenor, and baritone soloists, with a piano accompaniment. Each singer will have 3 solos. There is also a finale quartet, and there will be an intro and a few transitions with various groupings of the singers based on material from the quartet. All in all there will be 18 movements, but many are around a minute long.


I have three pieces done so far- "Oh, Every Day that Dawns" (soprano... previously written, but recycled for this), "A Cry" (soprano), "Singers" (tenor). I'm also pretty much done with the vocal line for the final quartet- it just needs some tweaking and for the piano part to be fleshed out. Several other songs are sketched out a bit, too.


More details once I have them!
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Quick edits, new projects

6/29/2010

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Hey everybody. I made a couple tiny edits to my page today (on Other Experience and Contact/Links).

I started working on my 365 Project last Monday. So far, I'm unsure about whether this will be a good, performable, presentable piece of music... but the strict nature of the writing is forcing my creative juices to flow. If nothing else, this time next year I'll be able to pull out some interesting material to use again in another project.

I've also been compiling and organizing public domain poetry for a song cycle. I actually have poetry picked out for two separate song cycles: one on Loss, and one on Love. The Loss cycle will be for soprano and either tenor or baritone. The Love cycle will be for either tenor or baritone (likely whatever voice I don't use for the first cycle.)

I'm excited to get to writing!
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More music on the Music page

6/12/2010

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I added parts from Four Poems and The Name on the Door to the Music page. These were recorded at the Perspectives recital, June 4, 2010, at the Artist's Inn Residence in Washington, DC. Check them out!
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A quick note on Perspectives

6/8/2010

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Perspectives went really well on Friday evening! I was very happy with the turnout and the performances. I made a recording that turned out pretty well, too. I have to do a little editing on it, and then I'll put snippets online for all of you to hear.

I haven't had much of a chance to write about this lately- I'm in rehearsals for a performance at the Kennedy Center with the City Choir of Washington (we're doing Beethoven's Choral Fantasia) and for La Rondine. Both of those are coming up very soon!

Soon I need to start work on my incidental music for the New York Fringe Festival (assuming that's still happening... it might not be.) I also want to start looking for good poems in the public domain to set to music. I'm really in the mood to write some songs. My 365 Project starts soon, too!

High five!
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Perspectives, Encounters, and Raises

5/29/2010

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First and foremost: The composition recital that Kyle, Roc, and I have been working toward is in less than a week! It's tentatively named "Perspectives," (that hasn't been ok'd by everybody else yet). The program is below:

Perspectives
A Recital of the music of Kyle Gullings, Roc Lee, and Michael Oberhauser
The Artist's Inn Residence
1824 R St. NW
Washington, DC
June 4, 2010
8:00pm

String Quartet No. 1: At Best It Sometimes Rhymes (2009)                                     Kyle Gullings
II. Two Music Boxes
III. Emanations
I. There Is a Child
                                                         *Destiny Hoyle, violin
                                                          Kate Northfield, violin
                                                       *Elizabeth O'Hara, viola
                                                           *Diana Curtis, cello
*member of Altra String Quartet

Four Poems (2010)                                                                                     Michael Oberhauser
III. Haiku
IV. Free Verse
                                                       Cristina Verderese, flute
                                                          Henry Valoris, viola
                                                              Roc Lee, piano

Three arias from the chamber opera Oblivion (2010)                                                Kyle Gullings
The Plumtree
Night in Kalapa
Sorrow Is My Own Yard
                                                      Rachel Barham, soprano
                                                      James Rogers, baritone
                                                      Cristina Verderese, flute
                                                         Kyle Gullings, piano

Piano Suite (2005)                                                                                                       Roc Lee
tristesse oblige
sepia
                                                         Hilary Henry, piano

in memoriam Hibakusha (rev. 2009)                                                                       Kyle Gullings
                                                       Kyle Gullings, baritone
                                                        Hilary Henry, piano
                                                                 narrator

The Name on the Door (2010)                                                                      Michael Oberhauser
                                                    Sarah Philippa, soprano
                                                  Katherine Sanford, soprano
                                                    Joshua Brown, baritone
                                                     Elena Forbes, clarinet
                                                       Henry Valoris, viola
                                                     Elizabeth O'Hara, viola
                                                       Yufen Chou, piano



Next part of this post: Encounters.
Working here at the Cosmos Club, I saw that there was a recital by the Vocal Arts Society scheduled one of the days I was working. I had no more work to do, so I could have gone home, but I popped upstairs to see if they needed anything. Turns out the recital was made up of all Lori Laitman's music. There were two singers there... and the composer herself on piano. I mentioned to the woman sponsoring the recital that I was a composer, and she invited me to listen to the recital and meet Lori afterwards. I did both! What a wonderful concert (everyone, look up her "Pentecost." It's incredible.), and what a sweet, friendly person! She and I are actually friends on Facebook now! :)

Part three: Raise
I mean, there's not much to say about this, except that I got a raise at work... and I'm taking on a lot more hours: Instead of working weekends, I'm now working Monday through Friday 9-5. The worst part about this is I had to give up my dogwalking job. I'll miss the mutts, but the extra money will definitely be nice!
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Inspiration! Inspiration!

5/3/2010

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I've been inspired by a lot of things recently.

First, on Saturday, May 1, I went to the University of Maryland, College Park's Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center to see a production of Ned Rorem's Evidence of Things Not Seen. I was absolutely stunned. The piece itself is incredible- stunning music for four soloists- Soprano, Mezzo-Soprano, Tenor, and Baritone with piano. The poems Rorem picked for the song cycle are incredible, too. All in all, it's 36 songs (solos, duets, trios, and quartets), with poems written by 24 different poets (Whitman, Auden, Wordsworth, Paul Goodman, and many others).

The piece is broken into three movements: Part One: Beginnings, Part Two: Middles, and Part Three: Ends. It's an hour and 40 minutes of incredibly powerful music. The singers and pianists (they switched off every couple songs) were incredible. I was so moved.

I want to write songs again. The last song I wrote just because I wanted to and not for a class or anything was in 2007. I think I need to add a song cycle or at least a handful of songs to my list of things I want to compose soon.

Other inspiration: This morning, my web browser had, on its home page, a story about a young woman who wore the same little black dress every day for an entire year, but styled it differently every day. (Without going too much into detail, the dress could be worn backwards. It had buttons down the front -or back, depending on how you look at it. She wore different things underneath, and different accessories to make 365 strikingly different looking outfits.)

I also kind of want to do something every day, like little black dress girl and my friend Kyle with his Haiku-a-day that he wrote while he was in Hawaii.

My idea is to start a new piano piece and write one measure of it every day for a year. My plan is to write it all in 4/4 at about 80bpm, which would make the entire piece  18 minutes and 15 seconds long, assuming I don't change tempo at any point. I also think I'll break it into four movements, based on the seasons. I'll try and write a measure each day before I go to bed, reflecting on how I felt that day, what I was thinking about, the weather, or whatever else. I'm also planning to not look back at too much of the music before - perhaps only look at the past 5 measures each time - to make the composition more in the moment. When I'm finished with a movement I'll look back and made minor edits to make the whole thing more cohesive.

The summer solstice this year is on June 21- I'll start work on the new piece then!
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A review of Shadowboxer at UMDCP

4/24/2010

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The University of Maryland, College Park, has a strong dedication to performing new works. The Maryland Opera Studio has performed an impressive number of new operas and american operas. Most recent on the list was Shadowboxer by composer Frank Proto and librettist John Chenault. This piece, commissioned by the University of Maryland at the goading of director Leon Major, is an opera based on the life of boxer Joe Louis. The opera shows Louis as a hero, but a very human hero.
 
So what?
 
That might be a little harsh. I really did enjoy my evening at the opera. It did most things well- the music, the singers, the pit, the set, the lights, the staging... all spectacular. There was just something lacking in the drama. It wasn't focused enough on any issue, and it wasn't made personal enough. Of course, this is coming from someone who had only heard the name. Joe Louis has never been a hero of mine, and I don't really care much for boxing. Even for people not too interested in boxing such as myself, though, there should have been a more satisfying dramatic arch.
 
Proto's score was probably the biggest star of the evening. A handful of people left at intermission- that's understandable, the tonal language was difficult and perhaps a little tiresome at times. Proto did an excellent job of keeping it fresher than many contemporary composers do, though, with the inclusion of jazz into the score. Every time the sparse, but amazingly effective setpiece in the back was flown out a bit to reveal the jazz band behind, the mood changed. It definitely helped keep my attention in a first act that might have been a bit too long.
 
The entire cast was very strong. There were no real weak links, but there were no real standout strong performances, either. I was mostly impressed by how well everyone worked together, both vocally and with their acting. If I had to pick a standout, I might pick mezzo-soprano Adrienne Webster as Marva Trotter, Louis' first (and second) wife. Her singing was very clear, as was her diction. I also greatly enjoyed her slight jazz stylings here and there. It didn't hurt at all, though, that she had the two best arias in the show: her flirty first act aria and, especially, her powerful divorce aria in the second act. Another very strong performance in the cast came from bass-baritone Jarrod Lee as Old Joe. He sang the entire show... difficult lines and phrases that always sounded very melodic and inspired by the action... and he never showed the slightest bit of fatigue in his voice. His physical performance was also very impressive. I also very much enjoyed Andrew Owens as Reporter #1, but he didn't have much of an opportunity to show off his voice.
 
As I mentioned above, the ensemble work was more impressive than the solo passages. The three reporters, the three beauties, and Jack Blackburn, Julian Black, and John Roxborough were all excellent working with each other. Surpassing all of that, though, was the chorus. The chorus added a great deal to the show- they snuck in sometimes and you barely noticed they were singing, and when you did, the effect was pleasingly eerie. They had to switch between more classical singing and jazz singing rather quickly. At times they were a little difficult to hear, but the effect of their voices and their presence was still there. Proto's choral writing is excellent. I'm sure it was difficult for the chorus, but their hard work and the hard work of the chorusmasters really paid off.
 
The orchestra and the jazz band were also very strong. Everything felt very together and synthesized, even from the orchestra in the pit to the band at the back of the stage. Kudos to conductor Timothy Long for that very impressive feat. Everything felt natural and easy. Proto's orchestral writing is also excellent.
 
On top of great acting and great music from everyone on, below, and behind the stage, everything looked fabulous. Leon Major is brilliant. Absolutely everything worked in this production. It's difficult to pick out favorite aspects, it was just so spot on. The set and the lighting added so much... the obvious but very effective squares of light at many times instead of the common circle of light, the projections alternating with shadows of the singers cast on the walls from floor lights... all incredible things that came from the collaboration of Major, scenic designer Erhard Rom, lighting designer Nancy Schertler, and projection designers Kirby Malone and Gail Scott White. (The only projection I didn't much care for was the radio projection. Kinda silly.)
 
This is Proto's first opera, and Chenault's first libretto. I hope they collaborate again, or at least work in their respective fields again. Shadowboxer is almost a great opera... almost. I really enjoyed it, though.
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