Adams I was looking at the ceiling and then I saw the sky

An energetic recording for Adams’s experiment in American musical theatre

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: John Adams

Genre:

Opera

Label: American Opera Classics

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 116

Mastering:

Stereo
DDD

Catalogue Number: 8 669003/4

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
I was looking at the ceiling and then I saw the sky John Adams, Composer
Darius de Haas, David
Freiburg Young Opera Company
Holst-Sinfonietta Band
Jeannette Friedrich, Leila
John Adams, Composer
Jonas Holst, Mike
Kimako Xavier Trotman, Dewain
Klaus Simon, Conductor
Lilith Gardell, Tiffany
Markus Alexander Neisser, Rick
Martina Mühlpointner, Consuelo
John Adams’s stylistic range is vast, yet even in such a diverse output, I Was Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky (1995) stands apart. Conceived, in the composer’s words, as ‘a Broadway-style show’, it draws its musical inspiration from popular song, moving from doo-wop to gospel, from pop ballad to the blues. The text, a poetic piece of social and political commentary by June Jordan, introduces us to seven young Angelenos whose intertwined lives are transformed by the 1994 Northridge earthquake. There’s no recitative, no spoken dialogue; the story is told through song and ensemble. This posed a problem when Nonesuch issued a composer-conducted recording of excerpts in 1998, cutting seven of the 22 vocal numbers. Here, Naxos gives us the complete score.

I can’t say that the narrative flows a whole lot more smoothly when the show is heard in its entirety. There are still quite a few jarring gaps, although one certainly gets a better sense of the characters as well as a heightened sense of drama. Missing from the Nonesuch recording, for example, was the crucial post-earthquake scene involving Tiffany, Mike and Rick – the score’s longest number.

As for the performance: the Freiburg-based Holst-Sinfonietta Band plays its intricate part with tightly coiled energy for conductor Klaus Simon; the mostly German cast copes reasonably well with the different American dialects (only Lilith Gardell’s Tiffany fails to convince); and although the women’s voices can turn shrill when pressed, all the singers sound fresh and youthful. Indeed, Martina Mühlpointner may not have the extraordinary tonal richness of Audra McDonald (Nonesuch) but her wide-eyed rendition of ‘Consuelo’s Dream’ – one of the piece’s prettiest and most effective numbers – is also deeply affecting. Not all the songs in Ceiling/Sky are as successful as this one but I’d guess that there’s enough here to make this daring experiment in American musical theatre attractive to more than just Adams’s fans. Warmly recommended.

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