Review: Ted Hearne's Sweet, Sad American Elegy
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 14, 2024


Review: Ted Hearne's Sweet, Sad American Elegy
The Crossing choir performs Ted Hearne’s “Farming” at Caramoor in Westchester County, N.Y., July 9, 2023. “Farming,” with a patchwork text that includes the words of William Penn and Jeff Bezos, was sung by the 24 vocalists of the Crossing. (James Estrin/The New York Times)

by Zachary Woolfe



KATONAH, NY.- Google search results broke my heart this weekend.

Which was strange, because they didn’t include anything overtly emotional. They were lines like: “Yes, we are open. Call our consultants today.” And: “Reliable, seasonal work force.” The kind of thing you get when you look up “H-2A visa program,” which grants temporary admission to the United States for agricultural workers.

But set to soulful, almost retro, doo-wop-honeyed music by Ted Hearne in “Farming,” these bland fragments seemed to touch the very core of our country: its rapacious economy, its broken immigration system, its corroded politics.

Performed at Caramoor in Westchester on Sunday by the 24 vocalists of the Crossing, the precise and luminous new-music choir led by Donald Nally, it was the sweetest, saddest song.

A suggestive, chaotically ambitious, often poignant reflection on colonization, consumption, marketing, entrepreneurship — you name it! — “Farming” reaches well beyond that Google search. Its quilt-like libretto encompasses 17th-century letters by William Penn, founder of Pennsylvania, and 21st-century musings by Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, as well as absurdist out-of-context bits from UberEats’ Twitter feed and the Farmer’s Fridge customer loyalty program. (“Green are the Farmer’s Fridge reward currency,” the singers intone with maniacal severity.)

As he has in superb works such as “The Source” (based on the Afghanistan war logs leaked by Chelsea Manning) and “Sound From the Bench” (which set excerpts from Supreme Court proceedings), Hearne takes these found-text nuggets and gives them music that moves from lushly meditative to frenetic and obsessively repetitive — a visceral translation into sound of the information overload that is contemporary life.

The singing is sometimes pure and sometimes processed into exaggeratedly AutoTuned “Alvin and the Chipmunks” automation. On guitars, keyboards, percussion and electronics, the six instrumentalists also veer from moody industrial rock and elegiac synth drones to jittery, hypersaccharine pop. (Occasionally resting, as in “Search,” that Google section, somewhere in between.)

Not quite an hour long, the nine-part “Farming” is Hearne’s latest collaboration with the Philadelphia-based Crossing, which premiered it a few weeks ago in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and toured it to the Netherlands before this performance at Caramoor, its first in New York. The threat of rain Sunday forced a move inside and an adaptation of the staging and complex sound design.




Given the circumstances, the production and sound were impressively polished. A QR code included with the program linked listeners’ phones to the libretto; accessing it also involved signing onto Caramoor’s Wi-Fi, and it seemed that many in the audience weren’t doing it.

Without following the words, it would be nearly impossible to have any idea what was going on in this non-narrative but intensely text-focused work. I’m no fan of wasting paper, but this was an appropriate occasion to print out the libretto for everyone — and future iterations might want to experiment with supertitles.

And Ashley Tata’s perkily surreal corporate-parody staging, which put the performers in bright orange, magenta and white uniform-type costumes, felt like a complexity too many in a piece full of them. The attempt to tie together the work’s many thematic strands by enacting onstage what Hearne’s program note called “a new corporation, powered by quasi-religious fervor,” was confusing — though maybe things were clearer in the original, outdoor conception.

While this piece is less scattered than Hearne’s most recent major work, “Place,” a deeply personal reflection on gentrification, “Farming,” too, feels like a grab bag into which there’s always assumed to be room for yet one more idea. The central pairing of Penn and Bezos, the two pioneers — their vast differences, their essential similarities — would probably have been a more than sufficient subject here.

The Penn quotations conjure some of the fundamental, irreconcilable tension of our country’s founding: his efforts to maintain good relations with the Indigenous population, on the one hand, and the commercial interests he wanted to expand, on the other.

To what extent are Bezos’ manipulative doublespeak and high-minded invocations of empowerment through selling a break with Penn’s colonial promises? To what degree are they merely a continuation of what were sour lies to begin with?

These are the kind of huge, unanswerable questions that Hearne’s works have presented so enigmatically yet powerfully over the past decade, fired by his passionate, resourceful music. I found other parts here — the Farmer’s Fridge, the Twitter fragments, the staging — a distraction from that burning central point.

Yet I would have hated to lose “Search.” And Hearne’s earnest too-muchness, his eagerness to stuff as much as possible into each piece, has become such a central feature of his artistry that it’s hard to think of it as a weakness. It’s who he is.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

July 12, 2023

Artifacts stolen from Kenya decades ago are returned

Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art acquires important Rosalba Carriera portrait

The White House has been a recipient of the Eli Wilner Frame Funding Program

Color Theory auction at Hindman to celebrate legacy of Josef Albers

Chrysler Museum repatriates cultural artifact to Nigeria

The ultimate Batman collection, spanning decades and continents, leaps into auction at Heritage in August

Harn Museum of Art opens 'Under the Spell of the Palm Tree: The Rice Collection of Cuban Art'

Four pages found in a couch are ruled Aretha Franklin's true will

The Fralin Museum of Art at The University of Virginia highlights 70 years of Abstract painting in new exhibition

'Intimate Strangers' at Yancey Richardson to feature the photographs and videos of 16 artists

The group exhibition 'Bellyache' to open at CHART starting today

Kunstmuseum Den Haag announces "Breaking Boundaries - Art of the 1960s"

"Colossal: Painting on a Grand Scale" on view at The Belvedere

'Sarah Cunningham: The Crystal Forest' now opening at Lisson Gallery

Online auction features over 315 antique, vintage & contemporary lots

No.1 Royal Crescent and the Herschel Museum of Astronomy first museums in Bath to offer digital Bloomberg Connect guides

Green Art Gallery now representing artist Dorsa Asadi

Yuan Fang, Yirui Jia, Liu Yin, Homer Shew to open exhibition at Kiang Malingue

Yale Center for British Art welcomes two new collection curators

80WSE opens an exhibition of works by A.L. Steiner

One of Kyiv's oldest gardens brings peace to the war-weary

With art colleges closing, a Chicago museum has an alternative

Review: Ted Hearne's Sweet, Sad American Elegy

Pokémon card draws $175,000 to lead Heritage's $1.8 million Trading Card Games Auction

The impact of unique art styles on video game popularity

Wedding Necklaces Any Bride Will Love

The Science Behind Facials: How They Work To Improve Skin Health

How NFTs Have Revolutionized the Art Market and Digital Art

Baccarat Myths and Misconceptions: Debunking Popular Beliefs

Single line fonts and their exciting potential for future design applications




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful