RING OUT

FOR YOUR GRAMMY® CONSIDERATION

 Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance 

Best Contemporary Classical Composition:
Ring Out, Wild Bells (featuring Roomful of Teeth) by Jessica Meyer

Best Engineered Album, Classical: 
Ryan Streber, Charles Mueller, Jesse Lewis, Bruce Odland

Producer Of The Year, Classical
Jessica Meyer, Louis Levitt


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LISTEN

ABOUT

A world-premiere recording of original works by the “fierce and lyrical” (The Strad magazine) New York–based violist and composer Jessica Meyer, whose compositional career began only five years ago but has already scaled notable heights. The album showcases six highly individual compositions, culminating in Ring Out, Wild Bells, written for the Grammy-winning vocal ensemble Roomful of Teeth. The preceding five works offer performances by guest artists Miranda Cuckson on violin; cellists Caleb van der Swaagh and Andrew Yee; countertenor Nicholas Tamagna; and pianist Adam Marks.


ARTISTS

BOOKLET


PRESS

In each of Jessica Meyer’s differently configured works from the last five years, knife-edge anticipation opens on to unexpected, often ecstatic musical realms, always with a personal touch and imaginatively written for the instruments.
— Laurence Vittes, Gramaphone (November 2019)
The New York-based artist infuses her first composer-portrait album with a fierce, impassioned attack; in doing so, she no doubt inspired those joining her to do the same...contrasts of dynamics, tempo, and texture are exploited plentifully, the music alternating rapidly between elegiac and raw.
— textura (October 2019)
Ring Out - In which supremely talented violist Meyer reveals herself as a delightfully varied, and emotionally connected, composer.
— an earful (November 2019)
...music that is endlessly inventive, rules-defying, surprising, lyrical when called for, and even bluntly forceful at times. The composer is a young violist who not long ago decided that yet another gig playing her fiddle would not completely fulfill her artistic impulses. And then she wrote
— Rafaels Music Notes (September 2019)
Jessica Meyer is the violist in the new-music collective counter)induction, a New York group that includes a core ensemble for performances, non-playing composers who are on the roster and write for the ensemble, and musicians like Meyer, who both play and compose. Her collection, Ring Out (Bright Shiny Things) is a superb introductory sampler that touches on a variety of Meyer’s compositional concerns.
— Allan Kozin, SF Chronicle (November 2019)
...this is an impressive maiden voyage for Meyer the composer, with performances and production values beyond reproach
— David Olds, The Whole Note (November 2019)

ABOUT THE PIECES

“But Not Until” is a duo based on a series of ironic interpersonal experiences that reminded me of the David Foster Wallace quote, “The truth will set you free. But not until it is finished with you.” This duo was the first chamber work I wrote, and it demands both an equal amount of physical and emotional virtuosity on behalf of the performers. Stark contrasts in range, color, and texture presents the complicated journey of finding one’s own personal truth.

“I Only Speak of the Sun” was inspired by Rumi’s Ode 1621 while exploring all the vibrant colors and textures these three instruments can make. Three excepts from the Ode serve as the catalyst for the emotional content found in the piece: “The Sun is my Master”, “I shine on those who are forsaken…tear off the mask, your face is glorious”, and “I will bring you love’s wine, for I am born of the sun.”

“Released”: Back in 2013, a mother of a friend of mine died in a tragic car accident on I-95. A truck unexpectedly crossed over the median and crashed head-on into her car. I often wonder what those last moments of life might be like. You hear about flickering lights and memories, and perhaps a swirling vortex of images of your life flashing before your eyes. However quick or prolonged, panicked or serene, I believe there is a moment of irrefutable recognition when you know death is coming and you are about to be released into the other side. This piece explores all of these ideas, in the hopes that one would ultimately find peace when they get there. I use the “Dead Man’s Tuning” (G – G – D – G) for this, which comes from the Appalachian Old Time fiddling tradition.

In “Seasons of Basho”, I took the enchanting haiku of master Matsuo Basho and sequenced the translated text in a way that narrates an age-old story of discovery, lust, loss, and loneliness using the unique combination of countertenor, cello, and piano. Basho’s poetry is deeply rooted in nature, and I used the cyclical changing of the seasons as a metaphor for the highs and lows of obsessive love. Lyrics are here.

“Only a Beginning” was inspired by words and music I interacted with during the Summer of 2015. The title comes from Indira Ghandi’s quote: “Martyrdom does not end something, it is only a beginning.” I happen to stumble upon this quote after a week of performing Poulenc’s “Dialogues of the Carmelites” at Caramoor and a chance encounter of hearing a friend sing the “In Paradisum” of the standard Catholic Funeral mass. With all of these events coinciding, I could not help but reflect on what sacrifice means – what we think it means, and how it actually plays out in everyday life. We may sacrifice things for God, our spouse, our children, our family, our friends, sometimes even for people we don’t even know. This piece explores what can happen to us emotionally in this act of giving, and what we ultimately learn about ourselves in the process.

“Ring Out, Wild Bells” (for vocal octet and field recording): I happened to be in Paris on an Easter Sunday morning, and while I was at a café three different churches within earshot started chiming to call everyone to mass. Amazing rhythms started to phase in and out of each other, so I ran outside with my phone and recorded it. This became the inspiration for “Ring Out, Wild Bells”, which is also a poem by Alfred Lord Tennyson (published in 1850, yet still very relevant today) that accurately sums up what I wish to see in the world.

For musical reasons, I have extracted the following text and sequenced it differently from the original poem. I have also extracted a section of my original recording of the bells and looped it. The ensemble should accompany this track for the middle section of the piece. It was an honor to have Roomful of Teeth bring this to life at the TANK’s Summer Solstice concert in Rangely, CO in 2017. Lyrics are here.