Guide to Strange Places

for orchestra (2001)

Notes

It began with an odd book that John Adams found in a French farmhouse where he was vacationing with his family. The book was called Guide Noir de la Provence Mystérieuse – or in English, The Black Guide to Mysterious Places of Provence.

Says Adams, “It was one of those typically French guides—minutely detailed and bristling with information and odd facts about the area (Provence): in this location there was a strange geological formation; in another unusual climactic occurrences; somewhere else a horrific historical event had taken place or perhaps a miracle had been witnessed. A chapter was dedicated to “paysages insolites”—or “strange places”. Each classication came with its own special identifying icon. It set my imagination off.…In a sense, all of my pieces are travel pieces, often through paysages insolites – it’s the way I experience musical form.
”On a certain level, Guide reminds me a bit of Fearful Symmetries, in that it’s strongly governed by a pulse, and is largely energetic; the colors are somewhat garish…you might even say “Fauvist”. I had in mind certain composers like Berlioz, Mussorgsky, or even a piece like The Sorcerer’s Apprentice – pieces that are very colorful and somewhat fantastique…. Among my own family of pieces, Guide to Strange Places belongs in the class with Fearful Symmetries, Slonimsky’s Earbox, or maybe Lollapalooza.”

Guide to Strange Places has been choreographed by Ashley Page for the San Francisco Ballet, and the Nonesuch release of a recording by David Robertson and the St Louis Symphony was listed as one of the “Ten most important recordings of the decade” by Time Magazine.

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Orchestra

Commissioned by VARA (Amsterdam),
the BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Sydney Symphony

First performed October 6, 2001
by the Netherlands Radio Orchestra
conducted by John Adams at the Concertgebouw, Amsterdam

UK premiere:
January 20, 2002, BBC Symphony Orchestra
conducted by John Adams, Barbican Center, London

Piccolo, 2 flutes (2=picc 2), 2 oboes, English horn, 2 clarinets in Bb,
Bass clarinet, contrabass clarinet in Bb ,2 bassoons, contrabassoon,
4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion (4 players),
harp, piano, celesta, strings (16-14-10-10-8)

Duration: 24 minutes

Publisher: Hendon (Boosey & Hawkes)

Recordings

Dr Atomic Sym cover

St Louis Symphony, David Robertson, conductor (Nonesuch)