
Cast:
Allen Ginsberg, Baritone
Freedom Muse, Soprano
Compassion Muse, Mezzo Soprano
WAKING
IN NEW YORK is about experiencing daily life in New York through
the eyes of Ginsberg, pictured in the later part of his life. From his
apartment in the East Village, he tells everything about his state of
mind, his body, his food, his work, his political causes - the Middle
East, the death penalty, peace - all in the same breath. He is in a
constant dialogue with his muses, Freedom and Compassion. He tells stories
about the real people in his neighborhood, from the junkies and the
homeless to the yuppies. Ginsberg expresses his love of life in a down-to-earth,
occasionally satirical vision of the world, alternating with moments
of deep emotion and classic lyricism. There is an uplifting element
in Ginsberg's tolerant and all-inclusive vision of the city with its
exciting jaggedness, its energy. Elodie Lauten met Ginsberg in 1973
when at 22, she first came to New York. She stayed at his East Village
apartment, and occasionally accompanied him in his public readings.
He introduced her to Buddhism with the chanting of mantras and meditation
and became somewhat of a mentor. In her setting, she closely followed
Allen's train of thought, alternatively introspective and expansive,
edgy, playful or lyrical, sometimes triggering hints of different musical
styles and unexpected chord changes. Because of her deep understanding
of Ginsberg's personality and philosophy, she felt strongly about a
melodic setting as opposed to narrative over music, as others had done
before: in Waking in New York, every word is sung, even the most unlikely.

REVIEWS
Waking
in New York was included in Sequenza21's list of 111 most
influential post-1970 works.
"Lovely,
effecting and affecting." THE NEW YORK TIMES (Kozinn)
"The
poetry of Allen Ginsberg has inspired a wide range of composers from
Lee Hyla (whose Howl pits the Kronos Quartet against a recording of
Ginsberg reading his celebrated poem) to Philip Glass (whose Ginsberg
settings include the eclectic Hydrogen Jukebox and Symphony #6 which
is a Mahlerian adaptation of Ginsberg's Plutonian Ode.) In terms of
authenticity, however, all are trumped by Lauten's moving memorial to
her creative mentor". NEW MUSIC BOX
"Lauten reveals greater artistry the further you look beneath the
surface, successfully marking the leaps in Ginsberg's own impressionistic
narrative with appropriate changes in metre and key." GRAMOPHONE
UK
"Strange but oddly compelling work...often wild and marvelously
demented chord changes... this is a music of Gotham updated to our times,
immortalized by one of its best poetic voices, and put in motion by
a composer in tune with the pulse of her city". AMERICAN RECORD
GUIDE
Waking
in New York
VILLAGE
VOICE REVIEW by Kyle Gann