Wang Jie, Composer | Blame the Obituary
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Blame the Obituary

Blame the Obituary

Commissioned by Chamber Music Northwest, Music@Menlo and Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, with the generous support of the CMNW Commissioning Fund

World Premiere

Chamber Music Northwest 2023 season July 23 2023 PSU, Lincoln Performance Hall

Program Note

Kafka meets Cubism, “Blame the Obituary” is a 20-minute concert piece for narrator and quintet: flute, clarinet, violin, cello, and piano. At times whimsical and comical, at times devastatingly bleak, our narrator takes us on a journey into his lonely soul, writing his own obituary accompanied by a microscopic animal living in his house. A virtuosic quintet plays Wang Jie’s evocative music, while narrator Fred Child (host of America’s most listened to classical music radio show, Performance Today) narrates with pathos and self-deprecating humor. Creative conception and text by American screenwriter Charlie Peters (5 Flights Up, My One and Only). By the end, the audience will have memorable tunes and delicious harmonic passages in mind, and will have reflected on the meaning of their own loves, losses, and choices during these uniquely trying passages of life. The composer wrote:

“Often enough, conventional theater frustrates me with their music choices. Can you blame me? I’m raised amongst the best musicians from all walks of music genres. On the other hand, traditional concert music programming intensely focuses on the performance of music itself. As I live and breathe this tradition, every once a while, I like to have my cake and eat it too.

The way I see it, if the concert hall looks like a stage, and lights up like a stage, it is a theater. Even if the entire cast are none other than exquisitely executed musical notes. In this sense, “Blame the Obituary” is a fun surprise for chamber music lovers. Fun because when pure music and theater plug into each other, it’s like peanut butter meets strawberry jam. Not to mention the untapped theatrical instincts of classically trained musicians. For example, the music in “Blame” not only illustrates the narrator’s emotional world, the musicians are part of the act. Why not? Did I mention music is theater?

I imagined “Blame” to be a fully immersive concert experience. It is distinctly concert music because the narrator is first and foremost a complete musician. To execute the part, in several important sections of the piece, the narrator must perform words as music. I wove these words into the fabric of the ensemble playing. The ensemble’s rhythmically charged music and the narrator’s intricate interaction with the musicians bring a truly virtuosic production.”


Contact Wang Jie to inquire about the score
08 Nov 2023