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$5.00
Listening to Mukesh is the third song in the set of Three Nansi Songs.
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$5.00
It will never be the same is the second song in the set of Three Nansi Songs.
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$5.00
Harping on what should be is the first song in the set of Three Nansi Songs.
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$12.00
Commissioned by The Graduate Singers, Three Nansi Songs is a set of three songs inspired by the poetry of Singaporean poet Pooja Nansi – I. Harping on what should be; II. It will never be the same; III. Listening to...
$5.00
Composer's Notes
Among all of Shakespeare’s sad poems, I find that “Come away, death” is one of the darkest and the most tragic ones. The feeling of loss and emptiness are present in each phrase like a never-ending...
$5.00
My first encounter with the Lake District came from the very first book I borrowed from the University of Aberdeen’s library: The Illustrated Lake Poets by Molly Lefebure. Alongside the poetry of Coleridge, Southey...
$5.00
The morning calls of the Asian Koel (eudynamys scolopaceus) is often heard in many parts of suburban Singapore. Heard more often than it is seen, the bird makes distinctively loud, repetitive, and high-pitched “uwu”...
$5.00
This short work is dedicated in memory of my late maternal grandmother. Though 2020 has been a year where social distancing is the norm, and families are unable to make their usual grave visitation arrangements, we...
$5.00
The fourth and final movement of a choral cycle, the name Agape is taken from C.S. Lewis’s 1960 book, The Four Loves. Agape is a love not of human pursuit, but one that God gave freely. It is the most one-sided of the...
$5.00
The third movement of a choral cycle, the name Eros is taken from C.S. Lewis’s 1960 book, The Four Loves. The British pastoral style in the Renaissance is encapsulated in the poetry of Christopher Marlowe, which gives...
$5.00
The second movement of a choral cycle, the name Philia is taken from C.S. Lewis’s 1960 book, The Four Loves. Friendship and trust is put to the test, perhaps more than in any other situation, on the battlefield....
$5.00
The first movement of a choral cycle, the name Storge is taken from C.S. Lewis’s 1960 book, The Four Loves. In Barbauld’s text, the lush imagery of the countryside serves as a beautiful backdrop for familial dynamics...
$18.00
The constituent pieces in this choral cycle are based on the thematic ideas presented in C.S. Lewis’s 1960 book of the same title. Four separate poems were combined to make a larger narrative form that encompasses the...
$5.00
Based on a tune found in Skene manuscripts, the melody of this Scottish bagpipe lament is often played in solemn memorial events. Jean Elliot of Minto (1727 - 1805) wrote poetry to the tune as a lament to the deaths...
$5.00
Peace is often difficult for those struggling with the loss of a loved one. This work is the composer's response to Charles Villers Stanford's setting of Justorum Animae, which he still remembers performing at a wake...