Aquava New Music Studio & Carmen-Helena Tllez together with the John Eaton Music Foundation, present the premiere recording of John's works El Divino Narciso, Sor Juana Songs, Tocotin, and Sor Juana's Dream. These works represent the best of Eaton's microtonal layering technique, and further establish the importance of this MacArthur Genius Award recipient, composer John Eaton. Available at most digital retail outlets including Amazon.
Album Notes
This dual album comprises his compositions based on works by the extraordinary Mexican poet and polymath Sor Juana Ins de la Cruz (1648-1695), and features some of the most exciting performers working in contemporary music in the US, including the sought-after mezzo-soprano Kate Maroney; the critically-praised tenor Tony Boutt; the award-winning mezzo-soprano Hyona Kim; and the fearless coloratura Bridget Parker; accompanied by the instrumental virtuosity of Dieter Hennings-Yeomans (guitar), Christopher Oldfather (piano), Roberta Michel (flutes), Peter Sachon (cello), Karolyn Stonefelt (percussion) and Jamie Sunshine (percussion); under the musical direction and production of Carmen-Helena Tllez and Gregory Geehern of Aquava New Music Studio (aquavanewmusic.com)
John Eaton was called "the most interesting opera composer working in America today" by the eminent critic Andrew Porter in the Financial Times, and he won the MacArthur "Genius" Award in Music in 1990. He enjoyed a career that was both distinguished and unusual. His uncompromising microtonal language addressed both the most tragic and humorous aspects of the human experience. Although known for his operas, both in grand formats ("The Cry of Clytemnestra" and "The Tempest" are examples), and in chamber combinations (such as The Curious case of Benjamin Button"), he also devoted important areas of his output to concert works for the voice, inspired by his wife, the distinguished mezzo-soprano Nelda Nelson.
In 1987, as Nelda Nelson pored over Sor Juana Ins de la Cruzs allegorical play El Divino Narciso (The Divine Narcissus,) John Eaton became fascinated by the way in which the complex theological concepts were cast into sensuous poetry. He specifically loved how the Greek character of Narcissus becomes the Divine Narcissus, that is Christ, who upon seeing his reflection in the water, sees not Himself, but Human Nature, and falls in love with her. Margarita Pea, the eminent scholar of Mexican literature, encouraged him to engage in a musical setting, since she was familiar with Eaton's mastery of exalted topics. Thus began the collaboration of John Eaton with his wife Nelda Nelson as the translator and adapter of Sor Juanas lengthy baroque play into an English libretto for a cantata, which Eaton completed in 1990. Neldas virtuosity as a coloratura mezzo-soprano influenced his setting of Spanish accents, elisions and diphthongs, but also the extraordinary vocal demands of all the roles. She has commented on Eatons ability to cut through cultural and temporal differences to focus on the greatness and uniqueness of Sor Juanas work. When he finished writing "Narciso," his interest in Sor Juanas output turned into a long-term composition project. He returned to "Narciso" in 1998, adding two framing movements intended for dance. That same year he composed "Sor Juanas Songs," a setting of three of her baroque sonnets; followed by "Tocotn," a villancico written in Nahuatl; and finally, "Sor Juanas Dream," based on her mystical and autobiographical poem El Sueo, a telling of her quest for knowledge and meaning.
Lovers and collectors of avant-garde music will admire the exhilarating variety of colors that John Eaton was able to produce out of small collections of instruments, thanks to his expert handling of microtonal tunings, extended techniques and electronic manipulation. The vocal writing is also extremely complex. The music requires attentive listening, as many events may take place in one bar, in response to nuances of emotion and imagery in the poetic text. Those interested in examining the scores may visit the catalog of the American Composers Alliance (https://composers.com/). For more information on John Eaton, please visit the page of The John Eaton Foundation (johneatonfoundation.org).