Kabir Padavali
Kabir Padavali is a song cycle for soprano and orchestra set to the poetry of the Indian mystic Kabir by the American composer Christopher Rouse. The work was commissioned by the Minnesota Orchestra for the soprano Dawn Upshaw. It was first performed by Upshaw and the Minnesota Orchestra under the direction of David Zinman in Minneapolis on January 6, 1999. The piece is dedicated to the composer's son, Adrian Rouse.
Composition
Background
Rouse first encountered the work of Kabir while studying North Indian classical music in the early 1970s. In 1972, Rouse composed a different piece for soprano and orchestra titled Kabir Padavali, which was never performed. Over two decades later, a commission from the Minnesota Orchestra provided him the chance to re-explore Kabir's poetry. Rouse started the composition on the new piece in 1997 and completed it at his home in Pittsford, New York, on January 12, 1998.Rouse selected six poems on which to set his music from translations of Kabir's poetry by Linda Hess, Robert Bly, and Rabindranath Tagore. Linda Hess and Douglas Brooks later provided the composer with transliterations for the text from Sanskrit.
Though the music is sung in Hindi, Rouse otherwise elected not to compose the piece in the style of Hindu music. He reflected in the score program notes:
Structure
Kabir Padavali has a duration of approximately 28 minutes and is cast in six movements:- Bijak shabda 69
- Tagore 50
- Bijak sabda 55
- Bijak sabda 4
- Tagore 92
- Tagore 97