Jenni Brandon’s “Three Desert Fables for solo oboe” Featured at The Ladies Musical Club of Seattle

Gail Perstein oboe / horn / recorder, Amber Rose Johnson soprano, Joan Lundquist, piano perform Jenni Brandon’sThree Desert Fables for Solo Oboe, plus cabaret songs by Weill, Britten, Bolcom, and Schoenberg in a concert sponsored by the Live Music Project, Seattle, the Ladies Musical Club of Seattle on Thursday, November 8, 2018, 1:00 pm2:00 pm. The performance venue is the Crossroads Community Center, 16000 NE 10th St., Bellevue, WA 98008

The Live Music Project amplifies community music resources by providing a platform for composers, performers, and performing arts organizations to promote and sustain their work, increase their visibility in the community, and tell the story of their craft. The Live Music Project is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing arts access and arts community.

Three Desert Fables for solo oboe tells the story of the unique relationship between the Joshua trees found in the Mojave Desert and the Yucca moth. The Joshua tree relies on the moth for pollination, and the moth lays her eggs in the flowers of the Joshua tree where the larvae live off of the yucca seeds. In fact, one cannot survive without the other, and this relationship is much like a fable, making this a wonderful story to tell as a solo for oboe.

The Joshua tree is dance-like and angular, its branches twisting and gnarled. In contrast the moth is fluid and lyrical, flying to the highest flowers of the Joshua tree to lay her eggs and to pollinate the white flowers of the tree. In the final section of the piece the Joshua tree and the moth dance together, relying on each other for their survival in the harshness of the desert. This piece was written in collaboration with oboists Ryan Zwahlen of the Definiens Project and Laura Medisky at the University of Wisconsin.