THE LOST WORDS: A SPELL BOOK
one poet, ten composers, twenty choral works
listen to the entire work – follow the score and lyrics
featuring Elektra Women’s Choir: director – Morna Edmundson
LYRICS
Listed in order of the program/performance. The playlist – above – is in the same order.
Bramble is on the march again,
into parks on city edges.
cars snarled fast, business over.
drawn to the thorns. The air flutters.
looped it in wire. People lock doors,
close shutters.
to leave – in quiet halls,
blackberries where the light falls.
A hank of rope in the late hot sun; a curl
of bark; a six, an eight:
For adder is as adder basks.
For adder is as adder hides.
live-wire curves of force:
For adder is as adder glides.
For adder is as adder sheds.
the eye misses:
For adder is as adder hisses.
Blue flowers at the blue hour –
billows blue so deep, sea deep,
colour is current, undertow.
As flake is to blizzard, as
bird is to flock, as
spring is to river, as glint is to glitter, as
feather is to flight, as light is to star, as
kindness is to good, so acorn is to wood
Cabinet-maker, could you craft me a conker?
from within?
Compel its green spikes to grow, its white plush
to thicken? Impossible. Impractical. Inconceivable.
Refine its form, mill its curves and edges?
Manufacture me that magic casket?
the Engineer together), conker cannot be made,
however you ask it, whatever word or tool you use,
regardless of decree. Only one thing can conjure
conker – and that thing Is tree.
Dazzle me, little sun of the grass!
(Tick-tock, sun clock, thistle & dock.)
(Tick-tock, sun clock, nettle & dock.)
(Tick-tock, sun clock, rattle & dock.)
(Tick-tock, sun clock, clover & dock.)
Fern’s first form is furled.
Heather is never only heather,
as moor is never merely moor.
Ever lain down in heather, got its measure,
seen how it shares its weather with
Asphodel and bilberry, crowberry and
cotton-grass, grows together with
Tormentil’s flower, moss’s cushion,
lichen’s feather?
Hold a heartful of heather,
never let it wither,
Even as you travel far from crag and river –
Remember heather, the company it keeps,
its treasure.
Here hunts heron. Here haunts heron.
Huge-hinged heron. Grey-winged weapon.
beaked with steel: heron, statue, seeks eel.
Dead still at weir sill. Still still at weir sill.
Until, eelless at weir sill, heron magically…
old-priest heron, from hereon in all sticks and planks
and rubber-bands, all clanks and
clicks and rusty squeaks.
aviator, heavy freighter – and with steady
wingbeats boosts his way through evening
light to roost.
I am ivy, a real high-flyer.
Via bark and stone I scale tree and spire.
You call me ground-cover; I say sky-wire.
Kingfisher: the colour-giver, fire-bringer, flame-flicker,
river’s quiver.
back-gleaming feather-stream.
zingfisher, singfisher! –
carves its hollow
water-nester,
zingfisher, singfisher! –
Little astronaut, where have you gone, and how is your
song still torrenting on?
in the thin air, with your magical song still tumbling on?
and my heart grows flatter – so I’ m coming to find
you by following your song,
exploding suns, to where at last, little astronaut,
you sing your heart out at all dark matter.
Magpie Manifesto:
‘Newt, oh newt, you are too cute!’
and your spotted skin so unhirsute!’
talk of cute you bring me into
disrepute, for newts aren’t cute:
we’re kings of the pond, lions of the
albeit, it’s true,’ — he paused — ‘minute.’
Otter enters river without falter – what a
supple slider out of holt and into water!
a shadow-flutter, bubble-skein, and never
and deeper, delves up-current steep and
Rock rasps, what are you?
I am Raven! Of the blue-black jacket and the
I am Raven! Prince of Play, King of Guile,
I am Raven! Solver of problems, picker of
I am Raven! I have followed men from forest
Not true! For I am Raven, who nothing cannot
Should green-as-moss be mixed with
they’d still be pale beside the ̶
would never learn the ̶
Weasel whirls through world like wildfire:
Willow, when the wind blows so your branches billow,
the wind blows so our branches billow, listen for a year,
a week, a day, but you will never hear what willows speak,
for we are willow and you are not.
When wren whirrs from stone to furze the world around
VIEW SCORE
SSAA SCORE – (130 pages)
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INSTRUMENTATION – for the entire work – TWO OPTIONS
1) Piano
2) Flute, Clarinet/Bass Clarinet, French Horn, Violin, Cello, Percussion – including Marimba. Instrumentation varies from movement to movement.
LINKS to any of the 20 MOVEMENTS
1) Acorn – by Alex Eddington (bass clarinet, French horn, cello, percussion – log drum/temple blacks) 2) Adder – by Rodney Sharman (flute, violin, cello, percussion – marimba, maracas, cabasa) 3) Bluebell – by Rodney Sharman (violin, cello, marimba )4) Bramble – by Nicholas Ryan Kelly (flute, bass clarinet, horn, violin, cello) 5) Conker – by Ramona Luengen (kazoo, claves and wooden mallets) 6) Dandelion – by Nicholas Ryan Kelly (flute, horn, cello, marimba) 7) Fern – by Ramona Luengen (flute, violin) 8) Heather – by Carmen Braden (violin, cello) 9) Heron – Katerina Gimon (horn, bass clarinet, violin, percussion – suspended cymbal, floor tom) 10) Ivy – Katerina Gimon (flute, Bb clarinet, cello, percussion – four tuned flower pots) 11) Kingfisher – Marie-Claire Saindon (piccolo, cello) 12) Lark – Carmen Braden (violin, cello) 13) Magpie – by Alex Eddington (piccolo, Bb clarinet, percussion – triangle, Agogo) 14) Newt – by Stephen Smith (piccolo, bass clarinet, violin, cello) 15) Otter – Monica Pearce (bass clarinet, log drum/temple blocks) 16) Raven – Don Macdonald (violin, bass clarinet, French horn, cello) 17) Starling – Stephen Smith (marimba) 18) Weasel – Marie-Claire Saindon (violin, cello, sus. cymbal) 19) Willow – by Monica Pearce (flute, clarinet, violin, cello) 20) Wren – Don Macdonald (flute, horn, violin, cello, percussion – sus. cymbal, glock.)