Solo voice

E rewa mai, e rā

Solo voice

For solo voice

Text by the composer

E rewa mai, e rā was premiered by Ana Good (soprano) at dawn on Allen’s Beach on the seaward side of the Otago Peninsula on 1 January 2000.

About the work

E rewa mai, e rā is an invocation to the sun, asking it to rise, to give light, so that all living things will thrive and be healthy, so that the rain will fall. It is 2000 years since the coming of Christ. Rise, sun. It was composed on 30 December 1999.

There are 3 versions of this work: one for low voice, one for high voice, and a traditional waiata.

Score and recording

Buy or borrow the score from SOUNZ.

E rewa mai, e rā — SOUNZ

An archival performance on CD was released in 2004.

Pakiwaitara o te Pouakai; Te heke o te Maiharoa — CD

Matariki

Solo voice

For solo mezzo-soprano

Text by the composer in te reo Māori

The first performance was given by mezzo-soprano Ana Good at the Waitaha Matariki celebration in the Dunedin Art Gallery in June 2008.

About the work

Matariki was written for a double celebration — to mark Matariki, the Māori mid-winter festival, and Ana’s birthday.

Scores and recordings

Buy or borrow the score from SOUNZ.

Matariki — SOUNZ

Hear an online performance and my introduction recorded at a concert of my works by the Auckland Chamber Orchestra.

Matariki: ACO Portrait — video

Gilian Whitehead introduces her works — video

Nau mai e te ao marama

Works with taonga pūoro, Solo voice

For voice with optional kōauau

Text by Tungia Baker

The first performance was given by Ramonda Te Maiharoa Taleni (voice) with Richard Nunns (kōauau) outdoors at the Elephant Rocks, Oamaru in January 2002.

About the work

Tungia Baker wrote the text, called Tuhituhi, for a celebration of the story of Waitaha’s prophet Te Maiharoa, who led a hikoi up the Waitaki River. Naumai e te ao marama is a song (or aria) from this work, which Ramonda Te Maiharoa Taleni has made her own. It is sometimes referred to as ‘the Waitaha aria’.

Score and recording

Borrow or buy the score from SOUNZ.

Nau mai e te ao marama — SOUNZ

There are 2 archival CD recordings.

Tūhonohono — CD

Pakiwaitara o te Pouakai; Te heke o te Maiharoa — CD

Pikeri

Solo voice

For solo voice

Whakatau-kī translated from Māori by Margaret Orbell

About the work

Pikeri is the middle section of a larger work, Pao for soprano, clarinet and piano, but can stand alone.

Pao

Scores and recording

Pikeri was published in 1993 in Kowhai, an album of songs by New Zealand women composers in celebration of 100 years of women’s suffrage. This is now out of print.

Buy or borrow the scores of Pao and Pikeri, or borrow Kowhai, from SOUNZ. They also have audio of a performance of Pikeri.

Pikeri — SOUNZ

RNZ Concert recorded Pikeri in 1995.

Pikeri — audio

Postcards from Harwood

Solo voice

Settings of 5 haiku for voice and piano

Texts by the Otago Peninsula Writing Group

Postcards from Harwood was written to celebrate my friend and colleague, John Elmsly’s 50th birthday and is dedicated to him.

The first performance was given by Glenese Blake (soprano) and Richard Liu (piano) on 28 July 28 2002 in a Karlheinz concert in the Music Theatre at the University of Auckland.

About the work

The piece sets 5 haiku — all evocations of aspects of the Otago peninsula — written by members of the Otago Peninsula Writing Group: Kay Sinclair (1 and 4), Joyce Whitehead (2) and the composer (3 and 5).

Score

Buy or borrow the score from SOUNZ.

Postcards from Harwood — SOUNZ

Requiem

Solo voice, Dance

For mezzo-soprano and organ

Text: Latin

Requiem was to have been performed in 5 cathedrals around Britain during the summer of 1982 with a company of 5 dancers. The dance component was cancelled and so the work received a performance by Elizabeth Lamb (mezzo) only in Carlisle Cathedral.

About the work

Requiem was originally intended for 5 dancers and organ — the soprano was added at my request. I initially delayed beginning work on the piece, since my sister was expecting a baby, and a requiem did not seem an appropriate preoccupation. The successful birth was however followed by 2 close family deaths and it was these which provided me with the emotional impetus to proceed with the composition.

It was subsequently presented with a solo dancer, Bronwyn Judge, at the 1987 Sonic Circus in Wellington. The singer on that occasion was Glenys Taylor and the organist Douglas Mews. It has been performed several times since and recorded.

Scores and recordings

Requiem was published by Waiteata Music Press in 2001.

Requiem — publication

Waiteata Composer Portrait — CD