May This Day Choral Collection
These pieces began with a series of poems by Lawrence Schug that have stayed with me for many years. In their simple language and open-hearted directness, I hear something like a blessing: a way of setting an intention for the day, and sometimes a way of leaving the day with a quiet benediction.
Composer's Note: May This Day Collection
When I set these poems, I try to begin by listening rather than planning. I speak the words aloud. I live with them. I memorize them, carry them through ordinary moments, and let their images and meanings gradually work their way into my ear. At some point, patterns of pitch and rhythm arrive on their own, as if the poem is already singing and I am simply writing down what I am hearing.
As you listen, I invite you to notice how the music lingers on certain phrases, returns to a thought, or reshapes a line through repetition. These choices are not meant to decorate the text, but to dwell with it, to let the choir breathe the words until they feel shared and present. You may also hear a choral language that sits a little to the side of convention. My musical path did not begin in the choral world, and I am grateful that this has allowed me to approach these poems with fresh instincts, while still keeping the writing singable and grounded in the voice.
Musical Qualities
The collection includes both a cappella and accompanied works. I have not tried to “engineer” contrast or cohesion from one piece to the next. The unity comes from Schug’s voice itself, and from the central invitation of the title: May this day… Each piece offers a different way of asking that question, and a different way of listening for what it might mean.
These works are intentionally concise. They can open a concert, begin the second half after intermission, or close an evening with a sense of completion. However they are programmed, my hope is simple: that singers and listeners might feel the poems do what blessings often do, which is to help us imagine, for a moment, a kinder and more intentional way to move through the day.