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    CultureMap Video

    Mysterious fireflies inspire a composer to take on crazy 21st century living: Slow down and listen

    Joel Luks
    Jun 6, 2014 | 4:51 pm
    Mysterious fireflies inspire a composer to take on crazy 21st century living: Slow down and listen
    play icon

    According to Native American folklore, fireflies are remnants of stars that fell from the heavens. A Japanese legend suggests that fireflies are the tears of the child of the moon, her sadness engendered by fulfilling a destiny that required her to ascend from Earth to the sky. Some scholars say the Aztecs believed that fireflies were the souls of warriors, the lights hovering above the grasslands acting as a sign that their spirits were omnipresent.

    Whether it's the mystique of how the bioluminescent insect glows or humanity's need to layer metaphysical meaning to anything that at one time in history couldn't be explained, the flashing beetle captures the imagination of anyone who is preview to the fantastical setting it creates.

    For one American composer, the imagery of fireflies and their environs is a painterly metaphor that reminds people, especially those who are hooked on the fast-and-furious pace of 21st century urban living, to slow down, breathe, recharge and rediscover the beauty that lies in simplicity.

    "The poem is very true to our time. Our culture today is so attached and even addicted to technology and staying connected. This piece is about getting away from all that."

    Jocelyn Hagen's Soft Blink of Amber Light, inspired by Julia Klatt Singer's poem How To Live in the Modern World, was commissioned by the Houston Chamber Choir. The evocative work, scored for choir, flute, clarinet, marimba and piano, will make its world premiere as part of the professional ensemble's "Favorites and Firsts - Hear and Now" concert Saturday night at The Church of St. John the Divine.

    The program also includes other recent works commissioned by the Houston Chamber Choir from composers such as David Ashley White, Christopher Theofanidis and Dominick DiOrio.

    Music for our time

    What originally attracted Hagen to Singer's text was the author's way of intertwining vernacular and philosophical subject matters. Singer writes:

    Forget about streets with names
    follow the fireflies into
    the thicket, smell the damp earth
    let the darkness inside
    let the night steep
    let the world drift to sleep
    as you become nothing
    but the brush of wings, ancient
    mating dreams, the soft
    blink of amber light.

    "The poem is very true to our time," Hagen says. "Our culture today is so attached and even addicted to technology and staying connected. This piece is about getting away from all that and connecting with nature and yourself."

    Hagen's life has changed significantly since growing up in the small town of Valley City, North Dakota. The 2010 McKinight artist fellow settled in downtown Minneapolis after earning a Bachelor of Music degree from St. Olaf Collage and a Master of Arts in composition from the University of Minnesota.

    "The busy city life has been exciting and wonderful as an artist, but I look forward to a time when I can get back to open spaces," she adds. "I find that as an artist I have to turn everything off, step away from my desk and take long walks, play with my kids and exercise. These are the activities that help me tune in to my creativity and gather inspiration."

    "All of the great composers of our period are very interested in closing the loop. It starts with their inspiration and their composition, but it isn't complete until it is heard, enjoyed and experienced by an audience."

    With the use of a repetitive contrapuntal approach, Hagen focuses on the opening words, "forget about." As the lyrics meander about the different voices somewhat antiphonally, the texture reimagines the flickering visual milieu of fireflies fluttering about in a bucolic background. The "soft blink," she says, can be compared to a heartbeat.

    "I guess I'm also trying to tell the audience to forget about all those things," she explains. "Forget the never-ending to-do lists, the stress — and just listen."

    The composition builds with lush, French-like sonorities and dissolves into twilight, as if the text itself was dwindling into a hazy reverie.

    Closing the creative loop

    Being a catalyst for the creation of new music has been a guiding principle for the Houston Chamber Choir since its inception nearly two decades ago. Artistic director Robert Simpson seeks to engage both established and emerging composers in an effort to perpetuate the art form's relevancy. Commissions have to be practical to stage, challenging for high school, college and professional choirs, and be appealing for musicians and listeners.

    "I am old enough to have lived through a period when composers were very proud of the fact that they didn't give a hoot about the reaction of the audience," Simpson says. "It was all about them. But that's a period that's fortunately is in the past

    "All of the great composers of our period are very interested in closing the loop. It starts with their inspiration and their composition, but it isn't complete until it is heard, enjoyed and experienced by an audience."

    In the video above, watch as the Houston Chamber Choir rehearses Jocelyn Hagen's Soft Blink of Amber Light, with commentary by Simpson and singers Michael Walsh, Wayne Ashley and Mark Marotto.

    ___

    The Houston Chamber Choir presents "Favorites and Firsts - Hear and Now" on Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at The Church of St. John the Divine. Tickets are $25 for adults, $22.50 for seniors and $10 for students, and can be purchased online or by calling 713-224-5566.

    Artistic director Robert Simpson seeks to engage both established and emerging composers in an effort to perpetuate the art form's relevancy.

    Houston Chamber Choir video commissions
    Photo by Joel Luks
    Artistic director Robert Simpson seeks to engage both established and emerging composers in an effort to perpetuate the art form's relevancy.
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    news/arts

    MFAH expands

    Houston museum acquires historic Masonic lodge property for new greenspace

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 23, 2025 | 2:16 pm
    Holland Lodge masonic building
    Holland Lodge No. 1, A.F. & A.M./Facebook
    The building at 4911 will be torn down for the new greenspace.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston has acquired a prime parcel to expand its campus in the Museum District. On Tuesday, December 23, the museum announced it has purchased a two-acre parcel of land at 4911 Montrose Blvd that will bring its total footprint to 16 acres.

    Located just north of the Glassel School of Art, the property will be developed as a greenspace that will serve as a community lawn as well as be utilized for future museum events and parking. MFAH has retained landscape architects Nelson Byrd Woltz — the firm responsible for work at Memorial Park and the recently-opened Ismaili Center — to create the design for the new greenspace.

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston greenspace rendering A rendering offers a bird's-eye preview of the new greenspace.Image by by Cong Nie/Courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    At this time, the museum does not have plans to build anything on the property, according to a press release.

    To make way for the greenspace, the property’s existing building, Holland Lodge No. 1, will be torn down. Built in 1954 as a home for the oldest Masonic lodge chapter in Texas, the building features a sandstone mural facade. It has been for sale since at least 2005, according to a report in the Houston Chronicle.

    Demolition on the site is expected to begin in spring 2026 with the greenspace opening in approximately two years, according to press materials. In addition to the Glassell School, the museum’s campus includes the Audrey Jones Beck Building, the Caroline Wiess Law Building, the Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden, and the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building.

    “We are delighted to contribute to Houston’s greenspace access with this new initiative, which will expand the museum’s 14-acre campus to a thoroughly walkable 16 acres,” Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH, said in a statement. “While the primary objective for the purchase of this property is to secure land for any potential future expansion of the museum, our priority now is to create a welcoming community lawn. Thoughtfully designed by Nelson Byrd Woltz, one of the leading firms in sustainable landscape practice, the site will serve as public greenspace and provide additional parking for museum visitors.”

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