One woman, in a quiet alto, remembers the sound of birds. Another woman, her voice rich, remembers "running across the street to my grandma's house." A third recalls the smell of baking bread.
The distinct voices, with varied timbres and tempos, are describing home.
They're speaking, not singing, but in a new piece, those voices become musical. Working with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, composer Lembit Beecher has intertwined 47 recorded interviews with Twin Cities residents, constructing a new orchestral piece called "Say Home." The interviewees come from different places and often say very different things. Contradictory things.
But sometimes, the voices form a kind of chorus.
"There can be something emotional and expressive and powerful about three people saying, in a row, 'Home is about people, not about place,' " said Beecher, the chamber orchestra's composer in residence. "Where if you hear one person say it, it sounds less interesting or maybe cliché. Ironically, when you hear a whole bunch of people saying it, it seems to acquire more meaning.
"You start noticing the differences in their enunciation, and you start thinking about what a sentence like that really means."
The 35-minute piece debuts next weekend as part of a new St. Paul Chamber Orchestra festival called Tapestry19, two weeks of varied concerts that tackle the concept of home — "where, when and how we feel at home in a dynamic and ever-changing world, " as the SPCO puts it.
"Say Home" is one of several premieres. For this weekend's program, St. Paul-raised vocalist and pianist PaviElle French created "A Requiem for Zula," a tribute to her mother and her home, the Rondo neighborhood. On Friday, 17-year-old composer Maya Miro Johnson will debut a work Beecher called "the most adventurous piece on the program."