Commissioned by the José Limón Dance Foundation to create a
score to accompany Limón’s 1967 ballet of Psalm, I composed
Psalm at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton during the
winter of 2001-2002. During the composition period, I worked
from a video reconstruction of the ballet, pencil sketching musical
material on paper, and using a digital audio workstation com-
monly used by film composers. The choreographic inspiration—
and much of the musical inspiration—for Limón’s ballet came
from André Schwarz-Bart’s novel, The Last of the Just, which is
based upon the Jewish tradition of the Lamed-vovniks and re-
counts the struggle of Ernie Levy, an Auschwitz victim and a “Just
Man.” Limón abstracted this theme for Psalm, creating a solo role
for the Just Man, and a community of dancers which supports
him. According to Carla Maxwell, Artistic Director of the Limón
Company (and my collaborator on the project), Psalm, like many of
Limón’s works, “is about a people faced with annihilation, rising
above it all.”
—Jon Magnussen
Commissioned by the José Limòn Dance Foundation with funding
from The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, Doris Duke Fund for
Dance of the National Dance Project, the Library of Congress, Meet
the Composer, and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Premiered on 13-14 February 2002 at the 2002 Salt Lake Olympic
Arts Festival, Browning Center, Weber State University, Ogden,
Utah, with the Limòn Dance Company, baritone André Solomon-
Glover, the Weber State Concert Choir, the Kay Singers, and
conductor Jon Magnussen