Song of the Open Road

  • for high male voice and orchestra (1 flute, 1 piccolo flute, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, harp and strings)

  • Duration: 3' 30"
  • In 1 movement
  • Composed in 2010
  • Parts: To purchase the score and rent the parts, please email rc@robertcasteels.com, or send a request to Orchard Post Office P.O. Box 714 Singapore 912324
Programme notes:

This song for high male voice and orchestra was first composed in 2008 with a piano accompaniment, then orchestrated in 2010. Song of the Open Road is part of a larger collection of poems entitled Leaves of Grass, the magnum opus of American poet Walter Whitman (1819 – 1892). Song of the Open Road is an invitation to embark on a journey of shared joy. In it Whitman describes the virtues of the open road and the joy that awaits those who travel it. He ends with an invitation to “stick together as long as we live.”  Musically, the poem’s protagonists (“you”, “I” and “we”), distinctive words (“road” and “Soul”) as well as positive and negative expressions are each associated with a distinctive feature such as a single pitch, an interval, a chord or a rhythm.

Composer, conductor in Singapore with specialty in fusion music

Copyright © Robert Casteels 2021. All rights reserved.