A Grammy-nominated composer and one of the worldβs leading tenors will premiere the fifth new work in the Tucson Desert Song Festivalβs Wesley Green Composing Project.
Peruvian composer Jimmy LΓ³pez Bellido will be in the audience when tenor Michael Fabiano and his longtime accompanist Laurent Philippe perform the world premiere of βQuiet Poemsβ at 7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 15. The recital, presented by Arizona Opera, closes out the winter leg of the 2024 Tucson Desert Song Festival.
βI think the piece has something important to say both musically and in terms of the text, and I think that Michael is just the ideal vehicle for this piece,β LΓ³pez said during a phone interview last week from his San Francisco area home.
βQuiet Poemsβ reunites LΓ³pez with his go-to librettist Nilo Cruz, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Cuban playwright with whom he collaborated on two of his defining works: his 2014 opera βBel Canto,β commissioned by Lyric Opera of Chicago through its Renee Fleming initiative; and βDreamers,β the 2019 oratorio for soprano, mixed chorus and orchestra that recounted the stories of undocumented young people facing the possibility of deportation to homelands they had never known.
LΓ³pez and Cruz, who also will be at Thursdayβs recital, built the oratorio around interviews in 2018 with several Berkley βdreamerβ students. It was at a time when then-President Trump was leading the charge to nullify President Obamaβs 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrival program. DACA allows a reprieve from deportation for undocumented adults who had come to the U.S. as children with their parents and grew up in the States.
During the pandemic, LΓ³pez said Cruz was so moved by media images of immigrant children being held in cages that he revisited some of the poems from βDreamers.β He also wrote new ones that took a deeper look at the notion of children being held in captivity not only along the border but in war-torn regions like Ukraine. He showed the poems, more than 30 of them, to LΓ³pez in fall 2021 and proposed doing a project that followed βDreamers.β
βWhen he showed those (poems) to me, I felt like, yeah, this is something we should explore further,β LΓ³pez said.
LΓ³pez selected four poems β βThe Orchid Boy,β βTango For A Rapist,β βLullaby for the Insomniac Childβ and βThe Girl of the Cloudsβ β for his βQuiet Poemsβ song cycle, written for Fabiano. Throughout the process, he worked closely on revisions with the 39-year-old Fabiano, whose career has taken him to nearly 90 international stages including every major operatic stage.
Fabiano had reached out to LΓ³pez a couple of years ago after watching a video of one of the composerβs symphonic poems.
βI asked him if he had any music for tenor and piano,β said Fabiano, who hasnβt done a lot of contemporary music in his recitals, but said βIβve really wanted to.β
Fabiano and Philippe worked closely with LΓ³pez on the song cycle, tweaking some areas to better fit his voice and learning the tonal structure that included delayed harmonies where the vocal line comes in after the piano leads the harmony.
Fabiano
βJimmy writes progressive but also easy for the ear at the same time,β Fabiano said. βItβs kind of a hybrid. Itβs structurally tricky.β
LΓ³pez said that a year into the project, everything was coming together with one exception: they needed a commission.
Enter Tucson Desert Song Festival.
A board member had seen LΓ³pezβs βBel Cantoβ in Chicago and suggested commissioning the 45-year-old, who had been nominated for a Latin Grammy in 2022 for his violin concerto βAurora.β
βGeorge (Hanson) comes in the picture and says is there any projects you might have in mind? Any singers you want to work with?β LΓ³pez recalled of the call with the song festival coordinator. βThe stars aligned.β
βIβm very excited about this piece,β Hanson said. βIt looks like a really compelling work. Whatβs exciting about this is that they have all worked on the piece.β
βI hope (the audience) comes away feeling that the music is impactful and the text is new and interesting,β said Fabiano, making his Arizona debut. But Fabiano, whose career is largely centered in Europe, said he has long heard of the Tucson Desert Song Festival through friends who have participated including Philippe.
βItβs a veritable institution,β he said. βIβve known about it a long time.β
Fabiano and Philippe will join Hanson, LΓ³pez and Cruz for a conversation at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 14, about the creative process that it took to bring βQuiet Poemsβ to life. The conversation will be in Holsclaw Hall at the University of Arizona School of Music, 1017 N. Olive Road, and admission is free.
Tickets for Thursdayβs recital, also at Holsclaw Hall, are $40 through tucsondesertsongfestival.org.
In addition to LΓ³pez, the Tucson Desert Song Festival has tapped prominent American composers Richard Danielpour (βSongs of Love With Loss,β 2020), Jake Heggie (βWhat I Miss the Most,β 2021), Jennifer Higdon (βSummertime Music,β 2022) and Ricky Ian Gordon (βMarvin Gaye Songs,β 2023) for its commissioning program.



