articles / Pop Culture

Ellen Reid: Composing Her Way Through LA

Composer Ellen Reid | Photo by Arnaud Pyvka

Hit play below to listen to our Arts Alive interview with Ellen Reid.  
Ellen Reid: Composing Her Way Through LA
    Ellen Reid is busy. This year, she’s had new music premiered by the LA Chamber Orchestra, performances of her music at the Hear Now Festival, a premiere coming up this fall with LA Opera, a new sound installation and composition for the LA Phil’s 100th anniversary season, and on Sunday the biggest piece ever commissioned by the LA Master Chorale. She’s basically like a composer-in-residence for the city of Los Angeles.

“All of a sudden it’s all happening at this moment,” Reid told me recently in an interview at the KUSC studios. “I love all of these organizations, I follow them, I love what they’re doing, and to be able to work with them is what we live for as composers.”

Ellen Reid collaborated with librettist Sarah LaBrie and cultural anthropologist and researcher Sayd Randle for this new work for the LA Master Chorale which is called dreams of the new world. It’s an exploration of various frontiers in American history, as viewed through three different places and time periods: Memphis in the 1890s, Houston in the 1970s, and present-day Los Angeles.

Reid told me she and her collaborators interviewed dozens of people in each of those cities over the course of the two years they spent creating the piece. She says the resulting work represents an opportunity for us, in a divided country, to listen to one another and find areas of common ground and empathy.

“I think this piece is happening at such an interesting moment when people on different sides of the political spectrum can’t even talk about anything. The way it happened is that we interviewed people with a wide variety of opinions about what was happening, what had happened, and what the future should look like. And we wove these different points of view together in a way where the music holds space for the different points of view.”

“I tried really hard to always write with the point of view of the person we were interviewing. So, if they were getting excited about making a fortune and betting the ranch, the music is going to be really exciting there! That way as the audience listens to it, they are going between all these different points of view, which I think then just raises questions. Because we’re all complicit in the future and we’re all involved in it.”

BL: Yeah, like we have a stake in what comes next, right?

ER: Yeah, we have a stake but we’re also creating it. So, my hope was to not tell anyone what to think, but just to raise questions. Then, hopefully a conversation can happen.

dreams of the new world, by composer Ellen Reid, premieres Sunday night at the LA Master Chorale. For more information, visit LAMC.org.

Written by:
Brian Lauritzen
Brian Lauritzen
Published on 10.01.2018

MORE LIKE THIS

Classical Music Through an Autistic Lens

Classical Music Through an Autistic Lens

Explore the unique experience of listening to classical music through an autistic lens. This article shares insights from an autistic listening party, discussing sensory reactions to different compositions.

Pop Culture
12/17/2019
Paving the Way for a Future of Female Composers

Paving the Way for a Future of Female Composers

Composers Missy Mazzoli and Ellen Reid aim to increase female representation in orchestras through Luna Composition Lab, a mentorship program for young female composers.

Pop Culture
10/01/2018
Sci-Fi Pioneer Octavia Butler Makes Her Way to TV

Sci-Fi Pioneer Octavia Butler Makes Her Way to TV

Explore the life and works of renowned sci-fi author Octavia E. Butler, showcased at The Huntington Library. The exhibit featured her manuscripts, ideas, and journey to becoming a celebrated writer.

Pop Culture
05/22/2018
How Matthew Aucoin Balances Conducting and Composing

How Matthew Aucoin Balances Conducting and Composing

LA Opera Artist-in-Residence, Matthew Aucoin, balances conducting Verdi’s Rigoletto and his own opera, Crossing. He discusses the challenges of juggling composing and conducting roles.

Pop Culture
10/01/2018
The Story Behind LA Composer Dale Trumbore’s World Premiere

The Story Behind LA Composer Dale Trumbore’s World Premiere

LA composer Dale Trumbore's piece, Infinitely and Without Apology, premieres at the Pasadena Symphony. Inspired by a poem, it explores women's experiences and resilience.

Pop Culture
10/01/2018
How the LA Phil Is Forging a Path to Greater Diversity

How the LA Phil Is Forging a Path to Greater Diversity

LA Phil's bass trombonist, John Lofton, discusses the new Resident Fellows program aimed at diversifying orchestras by supporting musicians from traditionally underrepresented backgrounds.

Pop Culture
10/01/2018