The Cupertino Courier
Cover Story
Photograph by Brian Connelly
Like many composers before her, Quist is moved by the natural sounds she hears while out of doors.
A Breath of Music
Notes found in nature inspire this budding Beethoven
By Pamela Quist
For Cupertino residents Joop and Stans Kleinjen, the Santa Clara Chorale's premiere of Pamela Layman Quist's Requiem for the People is clearly a family affair. Both Joop, who has sung with the chorale for 15 years, and Stans, who serves on its board, are enthusiastic about Quist's work and participated in its premiere both the in this country and in Europe.
The two have been active contributors to the chorale because of the unique opportunities the highly polished ensemble offers. "It's a very high quality chorale," Stans explains. "The director, Tom Collohan has pushed the group to a higher level of quality and he's taken on challenges like Pam Quist's Requiem."
Quist's Requiem for the People for chorus and orchestra was commissioned by the Santa Clara Chorale following an invitation from the Prague Radio Symphony Orchestra to perform in the Czech Republic for the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth. Quist is on the faculty at Santa Clara University.
The work premiered June 2 at SCU's Mission Church under the baton of Santa Clara Chorale director Thomas Collohan to a standing-room only audience. The chorale took the piece on tour in the Czech Republic and Vienna, Austria, where it received similar rave reviews from listeners, and a recording with the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra was made during the tour.
"I've heard every performance [starting with] the first one in the Mission Church and it was amazingly beautiful," says Stans Kleinjen.
Although the Requiem is not an easy piece to sing, Joop Kleinjen says the effort was extremely rewarding. "It was a hard piece to 'get' and I couldn't think how the different parts would come together," he explains. "When we saw the end result, it had very special meaning."
The standing ovation the SCU premiere received attests to the power of Quist's music and her ability to reach listeners of every kind. "It's an emotional piece," the composer says. "All four performances of the piece, there have been people crying."
A lecturer in music theory and composition at SCU since 2001, Quist was born in Rhode Island. With a Navy father, she moved a lot as a child. Music was an early love. "I always knew I was going to be a musician," she says. "I started playing the piano at age 7. I'd practice an hour a day on just two notes."
Strong credentials
Quist received her education at the Peabody Conservatory of Music and her Ph.D. in music composition from Johns Hopkins University. In 1972 she co-founded the Walden School, a highly rated summer music school and festival for young musicians noted for its holistic and community-based approach. In addition to teaching, Quist also raised two daughters.
Quist served as director of the Walden program until 1994. It was through her continued connection with the Walden School, through then-director Pat Plude, a former student of Quist's, that she applied for her current position at Santa Clara University to teach theory and composition.
Quist began her musical studies as a pianist but found composition was her real talent. She credits her music theory professor, the late Grace Newsom Cushman, with providing fertile ground for Quist's compositional talent to bloom.
"She made me into a theory teacher and a composer," says Quist, who has more than two dozen compositions to her credit. "She a had a unique approach to teaching theory. We didn't just learn a theoretical concept--she had us compose using it. And I discovered a tremendous love in the process. I spent four hours a day on theory lessons and was sight-reading my way through my piano lessons," she says with a laugh.
Quist says her goal is writing music that people can "connect to," describing herself as a populist composer, similar to Aaron Copeland. "I think I got pinned as a 'neo-romantic' composer because I use traditional harmonies in a non-traditional way," Quist says. "I use chords and melodies through the lens of a twenty-first century composer."
Genesis of a melody
The Requiem took shape over several years and was Quist's first composition for full chorus and orchestra. The work started with Quist's desire to write a piece after 9-11.
In the summer of 2002 she wrote the Pie Jesu soprano solo, sung at the premiere by Nancy Wait-Kromm. "It was a personal response to 9-11," explains Quist. "Throughout that year it became very much in vogue to write 9-11 pieces, but I wrote this for myself. I was happy with it as a piece--it was performed by several sopranos in recital--but I felt like it needed to be orchestrated. It was begging for more to go with it."
Over time, Quist added more to the piece. Even her passion for gardening played a role. "I wrote a lot of the Requiem in the backyard among the flowers and vegetables and birds--it's an idyllic spot," Quist says. "I feel a similar way when I work in my garden as when I sit down and write a piece of music. This area is so abundant."
The first moments of the piece were inspired by the wind chimes in her Sunnyvale backyard. "I liked the pitches," the composer explains. "It's very magical when the air stirs them--there's a sense of the breath of God."
"Another technique Quist uses is the sounds of the chorus, who through whispers and light percussive sounds are able to create an image of nature-winds rustling through reeds, rain, or whatever the listener imagines," says Wait-Kromm. "This effect is one of the most magical in the work." It was Collohan who was instrumental in the June premiere of the piece.
"Tom Collohan heard me composing through the wall of his office," Quist recalls. "He was intrigued that I was composing choral music. About a year and a half ago we had been having a collegial discussion about the [European] tour: Wouldn't it be nice if we could present a new American piece alongside of Mozart?"
So Quist dug in during the summer of 2005 and wrote the last three movements in six months and did almost all of the work's orchestration during that period.
The experience of premiering the piece in Europe was unforgettable, Quist says. In honor of the 250th anniversary of Mozart's birth, the tour visited places the great composer had lived and performed. The Requiem received equal acclaim from audiences in the Czech Republic.
"The Prague recognition is richly deserved, and speaks very well for Pam and for the school that supports her," says Hans Boepple, SCU's music department chair.
"I was so touched by the music and the passion that came out of it, " Stans Kleinjen says. "Every performance was kind of unique depending on the placement of the choir and the acoustics of the space. I totally enjoyed it every single time."
"The tour was a high point," adds Joop Kleinjen. "Two weeks of being together with people focused on singing this work in the best venues in the world."
Czech audiences were surprised at a woman composer, Quist reports. "I was interviewed by a writer for a music magazine and she kept zeroing in on the fact that I was a woman. I pointed out to her that there are many female composers in the U.S."
And Quist was surprised at the level of respect and interest music commands in the Czech Republic from audience members of every age.
"Our first Czech performance in Zlonice--a little village of about 600 people--the church was packed," she says. "In the front row there were three teenage boys. My usual expectation was, they'll never last. Then I saw one of the boys pull out a cell phone and I thought he would be text messaging. Instead, he pointed it to the front to record the concert. Not only was he there for this lengthy concert, he wanted to make sure he recorded it."
Future plans
So what's in store next for Quist?
With a new grandchild--appropriately named Aria--certainly family tops her list. And with a new school year starting, students are important as well.
But Quist is also busy on new compositions. Some of her new work will be performed at SCU's Day of the Dead concert in November and she has a piano concerto in the works. Quist also hopes to take the concerto on tour to Italy with fellow SCU faculty member and pianist Theresa McCullough.
And, Quist's Requiem is making an impression in the music world. "I have not so enjoyed a contemporary work of music in a long time," Boepple says. "I predict that it will get around in the world and become a much-performed and admired work."
For information about the Santa Clara Chorale, visit www.scc.org, call 408.369.1289 or email info@scc.org



