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Credo
Credo for string quartet (2007)
Commissioned by Chamber Music Monterey Bay
Premiere: Miró Quartet, Carmel, California, 2007
Duration 25:00
[Credo (krēdō) first person sing. of Latin credere, to believe]
When Daniel Ching of the Mirò Quartet asked me to write a quartet for a
program he was planning exploring the lighter side of America, I
wasnt sure I could deliver. It was hard to find things to sing about.
The government stubbornly and arrogantly continued to pour young lives
and billions of dollars into a hopeless war, one to whose protest
millions at home and abroad marched with what E.L Doctorow described as
the appalled understanding that America was ceding its role as the best
of hope of mankind, that the classic archetype of democracy was
morphing itself into a rogue nation. Also around this time, a disturbed
loner finally enacted his plan to gun down a record-breaking number of
his fellow students at Virginia Tech andamazinglythis failed to prompt
any heightened talks over gun control by politicians who feared they
might offend their gun-loving constituents before the next election.
One day on my weekly commute from New York to teach at the Peabody
Conservatory, I noticed as the train pulled into Baltimore the word
believe emblazoned across a building. I later learned this was part of
a campaign by the city of Baltimore to do something about the fact that
ten percent of its population is addicted to either heroin or cocaine.
As one who relies little if at all on blind faith, I found this to be a
rather alarming approach. On the other hand, sometimes it seems all you
can do is believe. For example, many of us believe well find our way
out of the mess. In the meantime, I have found solace in the strangest
places:
...in the workshop of a stringed instrument specialist in Katonah, New
York, you can believe nothing in the world matters but the fragile art
of violins and violas hanging serenely from the ceiling. He listens
chin in hand as his clients play excerpts for him, then goes to work on
their instruments with sage-like assuredness...
...on the jogging path along the Monongahela River in Pittsburgh, you
encounter above and below you the steel girders, asphalt and railroad
ties of infrastructure, an immovable network of towering bridges and
highways engineered by some deific intelligence...
...from my apartment, I watched in a window across 106th Street a mother
teaching her daughter how to dance.
I would like to thank Amy Anderson of Chamber Music Monterey Bay for
commissioning this piece and for her belief in my work. Credo is
dedicated by Lowell Figan to the memory of Janie Figan, tireless
environmentalist and devoted lover of chamber music.
Kevin Puts
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