Overture Magazine - 2015-2016 Season January-February 2016 | Page 11

the people of the city and their relationships—and, of course, their conflicts. Once the uprisings happened last spring, it changed my thinking about the piece. I saw it as an opportunity for healing in some places during the work. How did those events change the piece? It became more broad in terms of the range of emotion. I realized the importance of creating a feeling of reconciliation, a healing aspect. There’s a lot of pain and a lot of anger in the city that I can only watch from afar. I can’t feel it the way those involved feel it. I wanted that emotion to be part of the piece, and also the healing in the wake of that emotion. As I realized the importance of those elements, the composition deepened. Dark places are not unfamiliar to you: You’ve talked about how some tragedies have inspired your works. The tsunami in Japan, 9/11, even your Pulitzer Prizewinning opera was set in wartime. Is there some kind of redemption innate in your work? Finding moments of light in the darkness? I think I’m drawn to events like this that happen to people. We’re kind of thrust into the human condition—we don’t have a lot of choice. Horrible things can happen, and you’re forced to live through them. One of the most inspiring aspects of humanity is the ability to push through these moments and come out on the other side. When I see that happening, I’m inspired, and it usually generates music. It’s not that I’m obsessed with tragedy, it’s jus ][