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Ticket hours: 9a-5p Tues-Fri
on the phone or at the studio

Thursday May 6th 7:30pm, 2010

KRCC presents A Live Radio Show taping of NPR's Wait, wait... don't tell me!
Location: Pikes Peak Center, 190 South Cascade Avenue, Colorado Springs, CO 80903( map )
Tickets ~KRCC IS SOLD OUT OF MEMBER DISCOUNT TICKETS~ General Public reserved seating is available ONLY through Ticketswest www.Ticketswest.com . (General public tickets will NOT be available at the studio)

Sunday March 7th 7pm, 2010

KRCC presents Tommy Castro
Location: Crystol Roadhouse( map )
Tickets KRCC member tickets $12 at the KRCC studios. General public tickets available for $18 at www.AMusicCompanyInc.com $23 day of show

Saturday March 20th 8pm, 2010

KRCC presents The Haunted Windchimes
Location: Stargazers Theater( map )
Tickets ~ KRCC member tickets available for $6 at the KRCC Studios. $10 General public tickets ONLY available at www.StarGazersTheater.com

Friday March 26th 8pm, 2010

KRCC presents Tab Benoit
Location: Stargazers Theater( map )
Tickets KRCC member tickets $16 at the KRCC studios. General public tickets available for $22 www.AMusicCompanyInc.com $30 day of show.

Tuesday April 20th 8pm, 2010

KRCC and Maven Productions present Ani DiFranco
Location: Armstrong Hall, Colorado College Campus( map )
Tickets A limited number of KRCC member tickets on sale for $28 at the KRCC Studios. General Public tickets on sale for $32 ONLY AT www.MavenProductions.com or by calling Maven Productions Box Office at 303-786-7030 (General public tickets will NOT be available at the KRCC Studios.)

Memorial Weekend, May 28th-30th, 2010

KRCC presents The MeadowGrass Music Festival
Location: La Foret Conference Center, Colorado Springs, Colorado ( map )
Tickets $15 single day tickets, $40 full festival passes for KRCC members at the KRCC Studios. $20 Single day tickets, $50 full festival passes for General Public. General Public tickets at all Independent Records and Video locations, and on-line at www.ticketweb.com
Festival Details Meadowgrass.org

June 5, 2009

If Only You’d Been a Poet!

ludlowcover

Not that anyone ever doubts a poet’s ability to make a living, but … sheesh! Local Poet David Mason just won a pretty spectacular prize from the University of Oklahoma! Says The Norman Transcript:

Poet David Mason, a professor of English at Colorado College, recently was named the 2009 Thatcher Hoffman Smith Creativity in Motion Prize recipient.

The $40,000 will allow Mason to focus more time on creating the libretto for the opera adaptation of his verse novel Ludlow.

The Creativity in Motion prize is a biennial prize honoring the creative process given by the University of Oklahoma College of Arts and Sciences.

Mason previously teamed with composer Lori Laitman for the 2008 opera Scarlet Letter, her first full-length opera. This will be their second project together.

Opera is a new addition to Mason’s career as a poet. With nine books written and edited, and poems published in The New Yorker, Poetry, The New Republic, The Nation, etc., Mason was inspired to adapt Ludlow after his experience with the libretto for Laitman’s Scarlet Letter.

Ludlow tells the story of a handful of immigrants — Greek, Italian, Scottish, Mexican — caught up in a labor struggle in southern Colorado, culminating in the Ludlow Massacre of April 1914.

While the monetary prize is certainly an eye-popper in poetry terms, make no mistake that the undertaking is Herculean. As Mason, also a Professor of English Literature at Colorado College, wrote in his proposal for the grant:

Turning this book into an opera libretto will be an even greater challenge than The Scarlet Letter. I’ve got to take a vast narrative canvas, something of a modern epic, and rethink the book as a series of dramatic scenes building relentlessly toward a disastrous moment in American history. I’ve got to rethink my own use of verse technique, both free and metered verse, and the kind of diction possible for sing-able lines. I’ve got to think musically as well, using the possibilities of chorus, aria, duet, trio, quartet, etc.

All this is to say nothing of the superhuman efforts the composer will have to make. Lori Laitman prefers to be inspired by the words when she composes, and has a particular gift for honoring the cadences of language in her music. If our previous experience is any indication, we will be lucky to have piano and orchestral scores completed in time for a 2011 premiere. Once the original producers at UCA [University of Central Arkansas] have their shot at the opera, we will of course try very hard to get it staged around the country.

Ultimately, what we hope to achieve is a great American opera, a work that brings new audiences to both music and literature, and new awareness of this historical event. We want to grow as artists within our own media and through collaboration with each other, the singers and musicians and stage directors we encounter. Opera is a great art form because it brings almost all other art forms together in a spectacle of intense energy and emotional charge. We think Ludlow’s story deserves such treatment and are eager to get started on the work.

You can read the rest of the story from The Norman Transcript HERE, and you can listen to Dave Mason read a passage from Ludlow right here. Just click on the arrow below:

davemason-credit-annelennox
(photo by Anne Lennox)

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Get your copy of Ludlow HERE.

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Filed under: Local History, Poetry — Noel Black @ 2:00 am
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1 Comment »

  1. [...] College Professor, Trinidad native and author of the much-lauded epic historical poem Ludlow—did just that: He got a poem published in what is probably the best-read magazine in the country [...]

    Pingback by KRCC: The Big Something — October 9, 2009 @ 6:09 am

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