Poster Jake Runestad
Jake Runestad
James Napoli/APM
New Classical Tracks®

New Classical Tracks: Conspirare showcases Jake Runestad's choral music in new album

New Classical Tracks: Jake Runestad (extended)
00:00
0
listen
[0]
New Classical Tracks: Jake Runestad

Conspirare/Craig Hella Johnson — The Hope of Loving: Choral Music of Jake Runestad (Delos)

"Every time I start a new piece, I feel like I have no idea what I'm doing: This is the most difficult thing in the world. I don't know how to do this. Then I just start small and work my way into the piece, and then I begin to say, 'Oh yeah — that's right. That's how this works.'"

More than 100 compositions later, composer Jake Runestad is off and running. The Austin-based vocal ensemble Conspirare recently released a complete recording of his choral works.

The recording you've just released with Conspirare is called The Hope of Loving. What's that all about?

"That's the name of one of the pieces on the album. It's a piece for choir, string quartet and soloists. And it's a setting of texts by mystics throughout history. These are translations by Daniel Ladinsky, and the piece explores the various aspects of love, which sounds really general. But I feel like we don't necessarily think about that — if you pass someone on the sidewalk, why do you look away and not smile at them? That short element of engagement can be a sign of love."

In the suite, The Hope of Loving, you take advantage of some of your other composing skills, and you've incorporated a string quartet. Why was a string quartet the right fit for this suite?

"The string quartet is building tension. They're building a sense of those things that sometimes prevent us from showing love, from feeling open and vulnerable. And so, there's a theme I introduce with imitative counterpoint, and it just begins to wrap and wrap and wrap around itself, and the strings speak so beautifully in that intimate setting of a string quartet. I really love that movement and how we can find our way into it even without the use of text."

I want to talk about my favorite movement in that suite, which is actually the second piece, 'Wild Forces.' It's breathtakingly beautiful. Tell me about this work.

"There are beautiful wild forces within us / Let them turn millstones inside / Filling bushels that reach to the sky. I think the idea is that we have beauty and we have possibility inside us, and it's a matter of pushing forward and letting that out. In the case of this piece, we ultimately have this possibility of potential for love and showing it to others. And so we need to feed that in order for us to be able to exert that."

In "The Peace of Wild Things" the layers just continue to build. And then that final line — I rest in the grace of the world, and I'm free — it's kind of overwhelming.

"It is. It's a beautiful poem by Wendell Berry. He's looking at his life, and he's looking at the world and how so many elements fill him with with grief and with fear. He's looking at what his children's lives might be one day and the way the world is moving, but then he remembers he can go and lie down where the wood drake rests in the beauty and the water where the great Heron feeds. And he says 'I come into the peace of wild things, who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief.' It's this idea that we can't control the future, but we can control what's happening now."

The recording wraps up with Flower Into Kindness. Why was this the right way to wrap up this beautiful project?

"The final text for this is: I shed my words on the earth as the tree sheds its leaves / Let my thoughts unspoken flower into kindness. It's the idea that what we meditate on, what we think about and have inside of ourselves — if those are beautiful, good, positive things, then they will come out as good, beautiful, and positive things as we live our lives."

To hear the rest of my conversation, click on the extended interview above, or download the extended podcast on iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts.

Resources

Watch: Jake Runestad discusses The Hope of Loving

The Hope of Loving (Amazon)

Love the music?

Donate by phone
1-800-562-8440

Show your support by making a gift to YourClassical.

Each day, we’re here for you with thoughtful streams that set the tone for your day – not to mention the stories and programs that inspire you to new discovery and help you explore the music you love.

YourClassical is available for free, because we are listener-supported public media. Take a moment to make your gift today.

More Ways to Give

Your Donation

$5/month
$10/month
$15/month
$20/month
$

Latest New Classical Tracks® Episodes

VIEW ALL EPISODES

Latest New Classical Tracks® Episodes

Simone Dinnerstein performs Ives through the lens of her father's art
42:25
Desmond Earley brings James Joyce's poetry into the musical realm
37:57
Anna Clyne and the Knights bring folk into classic on new album

Anna Clyne and the Knights bring folk into classic on new album

English composer Anna Clyne incorporates elements of folk music on her latest recording featuring the Knights. Listen as host Julie Amacher speaks to her and Eric Jacobson from the ensemble about their recent collaboration on the latest episode of ‘New Classical Tracks.’

38:36
Christian-Pierre La Marca highlights love through the Schumanns' music
42:54
Jonathan Biss combines Beamish and Beethoven

Jonathan Biss combines Beamish and Beethoven

On the latest episode of ‘New Classical Tracks,’ with host Julie Amacher, pianist Jonathan Biss talks about his Beethoven concerto project with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, including the latest release featuring a new concerto by Sally Beamish. Listen now!

28:17
Denk, Bell and Isserlis join forces to record Mendelssohn's piano trios
19:01
ARC Ensemble highlights the chamber works of Frederick Block

ARC Ensemble highlights the chamber works of Frederick Block

On the latest episode of ‘New Classical Tracks,’ host Julie Amacher speaks with Simon Wynberg, artistic director of the ARC Ensemble, about the latest installment in the group’s ‘Music in Exile’ series, featuring chamber works by Frederick Block. Listen now!

29:45
Jeannette Sorrell and Apollo’s Fire Baroque Orchestra bring Bach to the coffeehouse
27:48
Joanne Polk returns to the exquisite music of Cécile Chaminade
32:52
Listen to New Classical Tracks' top episodes of 2024

Listen to New Classical Tracks' top episodes of 2024

We love sharing the most exciting new recordings on New Classical Tracks every year. Listen to this special end-of-year encore of the year’s most popular episode and find out which other albums made the top 10 list. Listen now!

26:28
VIEW ALL EPISODES

About New Classical Tracks®

Host Julie Amacher provides an in-depth exploration of a new classical music release each week.

Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, TuneIn, Radio Public, or RSS.

About New Classical Tracks®
YourClassical Radio
0:00
0:00