after Stephen Foster (2009) 20'
 SATB
Text by David Lang (after Stephen Foster)
The Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia and Leah Stein Dance Company
program note
after stephen foster is a suite of three movements from a larger piece, called battle hymns, which was commissioned by The Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia, Alan Harler, Music Director; and the Leah Stein Dance Company, Leah Stein, Artistic Director.
The complete battle hymns was premiered as a site-specific installation with dance, on 13 June 2009, at the 23rd Street Armory in Philadelphia. It received its concert premiere on 17 October 2009, also in Philadelphia.battle hymns is a large scale collection of songs about war.
Commissioned by the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia and Leah Stein Dance Company for a performance in an old armory in Philadelphia, it was intended to be something that would both take from and return something to its environment. Because of the connection to an armory I chose to make a piece out of texts that in some way had something to do with the American Civil War, not to portray the battles or show one side’s feelings about the other but to explore feelings that people of that time might have felt. I deliberately avoided texts that were too sentimental, or too dogmatic. I didn’t want anyone to get a message about this war, or about war in general. I did however want to see if I could put myself in a position to think contemporaneous thoughts.
There are five separate pieces. One is a setting of one of the most famous Civil War letters, the Sullivan Ballou letter. It is a heartbreaking letter by an officer to his wife, to be sent home only if he was killed in battle. Of course, it was sent. To keep this text from becoming too overpoweringly emotional I took every phrase from his letter and then alphabetized them, changing the text from a sorrowful narrative to a catalogue of hopes and memories and fears. Another text is a simple statement of Abraham Lincoln’s, about why slavery is wrong. Surrounding them are lyrics I have rewritten that are from songs written during the Civil War by Stephen Foster. Two of these Stephen Foster songs know that there’s a war going on; I can’t help but feel that avoidance of the war in the third, Foster’s most famous lyric and song, is a secret attempt by Foster to escape it, acknowledging the importance of the war by avoiding it entirely.
Libretto
after stephen foster words by david lang
I’ll be a soldier
I’ll be a soldier
 I’ll be a soldier
I’ll march to the drum
 I’ll lie in my tent
 when the night shadows come
 with knapsack and gun
 I’ll stand to my post
 till the din of battle’s done.
I’ll be a soldier
I’ll dream of you
 I’ll be far, far away
tell me
tell me, tell me weary soldier
 was my brother in the battle?
 was he brave? was he valiant?
 was his name among the wounded?
 was he numbered with dead?
 was my brother in the battle?
tell me, tell me weary soldier
 tell me.
did he struggle?
 did he fall? tell me.
was my brother in the battle?
 when the bugle called?
 when the cannon roared?
tell me.
oh, I wish I could have seen him.
beautiful dreamer
beautiful dreamer
 starlight and dewdrops
 sounds of the rude world
 lulled by the moonlight
 all passed away.
 beautiful dreamer
beautiful dreamer
 list while I woo thee
 gone are the cares
 beautiful dreamer
beautiful dreamer,
 mermaids are chanting
 over the streamlet
 waiting to fade
 beautiful dreamer
beautiful dreamer
 even as the morn
 then will the clouds
 of sorrow depart,
 beautiful dream