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Children’s Stories features world premieres of works based on beloved children’s literature by superstar classical composers Michael Abels (Frederick’s Fables for narrator and orchestra) and Augusta Read Thomas (Gwendolyn Brooks Settings for children’s choir and orchestra). Both pieces bring children’s literary narratives stunningly to life through music. 

Making its commercial recording debut, the Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra, under the baton of its music director, Stilian Kirov, is joined by acclaimed bass-baritone Michael Sumuel, narrating Frederick’s Fables, and youth choirs Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Chamber Choir in Gwendolyn Brooks Settings.

Michael Abels co-wrote the Pulitzer prize-winning opera Omar with Rhiannon Giddens and is celebrated for his scores for Jordan Peele’s films, including the Oscar-winning Get Out. Abels has garnered Grammy and Emmy nominations and was short-listed for an Oscar for his score for Us, which TheWrap named “Score of the Decade.” Most recently, Abels wrote the music for Disney’s new Star Wars series, The Acolyte.

Praised by The New Yorker as “a true virtuoso composer,” Augusta Read Thomas was the Chicago Symphony Orchestra’s longest-serving Composer-in-Residence (1997–2006) and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Music. Championed by Barenboim, Rostropovich, and Boulez, The American Academy of Arts and Letters described Thomas as “one of the most recognizable and widely loved figures in American Music.”

Abels’ Frederick’s Fables are based on the children’s stories by Caldecott Award-winning children’s author and illustrator Leo Lionni. Abels transforms these beloved fables into “an unseen animated film,” weaving narration and orchestra to vividly conjure images in the audience’s imagination — truly a modern-day “Peter and the Wolf.”

Thomas’s Gwendolyn Brooks Settings interprets poetry from the 1985–1986 U.S. Poet Laureate and 1950 Pulitzer Prize-winner’s Bronzeville Girls and Boys, based on a vibrant Chicago neighborhood, historically called the city’s “Black Metropolis.” Thomas’s score integrates orchestra and choir to “paint sonic images,” highlighting the meanings of Brooks’ poetic words.

Click here for a list of the IPO musicians who played on the recording.

Click here for a list of the Anima and ChiArts singers on the recording.

Children’s Stories is made possible by the generous support of the Walder Foundation, Andrea and Richard Gibb, Jerri E. Greer and Michael W. Rogers, the National Endowment for the Arts, and The Aaron Copland Fund for Music

Preview Excerpts

MICHAEL ABELS (b. 1962)

Frederick’s Fables

38:33

1
I. Frederick 8:05
2
II. The Greentail Mouse 9:06
3
III. Theodore and the Talking Mushroom 8:53
4
IV. Alexander and the Wind-Up Mouse 12:05

AUGUSTA READ THOMAS (b. 1964)

Gwendolyn Brooks Settings

31:07

5
Part 1 — Live in the along 5:13
6
Part 2 — Poetry is life distilled 4:35
7
Part 3 — I’d keep you with me always 4:06
8
Part 4 — We are each other's magnitude and bond 6:00
9
Part 5 — That clock is ticking me away! 5:40
10
Part 6 — Shine Star Shine! 5:28

Artists

1: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Sumuel, narrator

2: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Sumuel, narrator

3: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Sumuel, narrator

4: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra, Michael Sumuel, narrator

5: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Choir

6: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Choir

7: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Choir

8: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Choir

9: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Choir

10: Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and ChiArts Choir

What the Critics Are Saying



Program Notes

Download Album Booklet

FREDERICK’S FABLES

Notes by Michael Abels

Frederick’s Fables is the name of a collection of the most beloved children’s stories by renowned Caldecott Award-winning children’s author/illustrator Leo Lionni. The piece for narrator and orchestra was commissioned by the Plymouth Music Series of Minnesota (now Vocalessence) and its Artistic Director, Philip Brunelle. Brunelle had decided to approach legendary actor James Earl Jones to appear as a guest narrator at a concert. “What would you like to narrate?” Brunelle asked. Jones, whose voice had become synonymous with solemn, serious characters, said, “What I’d like to read are some children’s stories.” And so I was drawn to these stories by Leonni, which are rich with wisdom, charm, and musical possibilities.

In print, Lionni’s stories include his colorful illustrations, which definitely provided inspiration for the musical interludes. But much of this piece is written like the score to an unseen animated film — meaning that the music and the narration are often closely interwoven so that the story unfolds in both simultaneously. This approach makes the piece a great example for young listeners to hear how music depicts actions and emotions, and how effective music is at creating images in our imaginations.

Fables are stories that carry a lesson, or a deeper meaning. “Frederick” is a story about the importance of the arts in a society. “The Greentail Mouse” is a cautionary tale about overindulgence, or about the cost of losing sight of what’s truly important. “Theodore and the Talking Mushroom” is about the cost of lying to impress people. And “Alexander and the Wind-Up Mouse” is about what someone is willing to do for a friend. I hope they bring your young people the same joy they brought to me when I set them to music.

GWENDOLYN BROOKS SETTINGS

Notes by Augusta Read Thomas

Music for me is an embrace of the world, a way to open myself to being alive in the world – in my body, in my sounds, and in my mind. I care deeply about musicality, imagination, craft, clarity, dimensionality, an elegant balance between material and form, and empathy with the performing musicians as well as everyone who works in the presenting organizations.

Gwendolyn Brooks Settings was composed between 2018 and 2020. Collaborating with the Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra, Stilian Kirov, conductor; Anima – Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus, Evan Bruno, artistic director, and William Buhr, accompanist; and The Chicago High School for the Arts, Charles Taylor, music director, and Andrew Lawrence, accompanist, has been an exhilarating experience. I am grateful to the many extraordinary colleagues who have made this partnership possible. The magnificence and energy of massed vocal and orchestral resources is humbling, inspiring, and exemplifies teamwork. 

I am deeply thankful to Cedille Records: James Ginsburg, president; Bill Maylone recording engineer; and the whole Cedille Records team for recording Gwendolyn Brooks Settings for wide release.

In 2018, Dr. Charles Sundquist, the former artistic director of Anima — Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus, generously proposed to me the idea of making a large-scale composition for chorus and orchestra that would set texts from Gwendolyn Brooks’ famous book, Bronzeville Girls and Boys.

Gwendolyn Brooks is a legendary literary icon. I love her work and was (and remain) thrilled by this opportunity to compose Gwendolyn Brooks Settings. By consent of Brooks Permissions, I was given formal permission to set and reprint Brooks’ inspiring words.

Across the 30-minute composition — formed in six parts performed without a pause, each lasting circa five minutes — the music, singers, and instrumental musicians paint sonic images of the texts’ deeper meanings. Each part, sub-section, and musical arc captures the aura of Brooks words.

Organic and, at every level, concerned with transformations and connections, the carefully sculpted, fashioned, and notated musical materials are agile and spirited. Their flexibility allows pathways to braid harmonic, rhythmic, timbral, and contrapuntal elements that are constantly transformed. The music traverses sound worlds that are energized, balletic, colorful, vibrant, reflective, playful, majestic, intimate, lyrical, layered, and overtly reverberating with cantabile, melodic resonance, pirouettes, and fulcrum points.

Music’s eternal quality is its capacity for change, transformation, and renewal. No one composer, musical style, school of thought, technical practice, or historical period can claim a monopoly on music’s truths. I believe music feeds our souls. Unbreakable is the power of art to build community. Humanity has worked, and will always work, together to further music’s flexible, diverse capacity and innate power.

Gwendolyn Brooks Settings was co-commissioned by Anima — Glen Ellyn Children’s Chorus and the Illinois Philharmonic Orchestra with partial support from Illinois Arts Council Agency and Illinois Humanities.

Album Details

Producer James Ginsburg

Engineer Bill Maylone

Recorded
March 12, 2022 (Abels) and March 17, 2024 (Thomas), Ozinga Chapel, Trinity Christian College, Palos Heights, IL
April 12 and 15, 2024 at Hyde Street Studios in San Francisco, CA [Michael Sumuel narration]

Publishers
Frederick’s Fables © 1994 Subito Music
Gwendolyn Brooks Settings © 2020 Nimbus Music Publishing

Cover Bark Design

Photo © 2024 Faith Ringgold / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Graphic Design Bark Design

Honorary Executive Producers Andrea and Richard Gibb, Jerri E. Greer, and Michael W. Rogers

CDR 90000 233