'An Everywhere of Silver' Premiere with Baltimore Symphony

Grace-Evangeline Mason and Jonathon Heyward at The Clarice

Grace-Evangeline Mason at Joseph Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, Baltimore

On March 6-8, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and Jonathon Heyward gave the world premiere of An Everywhere of Silver as part of their EARTH/Songs Festival, also featuring Dvorák’s In Nature’s Realm and Mahler’s Das lied von der Erde on the program. Co-commissioned by the BSO and The Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center at the University of Maryland, An Everywhere of Silver is a 14-minute meditation on the fragility of nature and the power of the sea.

An Everywhere of Silver

The new orchestral piece is inspired by the eponymous Emily Dickinson poem, An Everywhere of Silver:

An everywhere of silver,
With ropes of sand
To keep it from effacing
The track called land.

‘The poem presents a ceaseless yet fragile landscape, conjuring a sense of isolation and transience; the silvery expanse suggests a limitless surface, while the ‘ropes of sand’ serve as an ephemeral boundary attempting to contain, and protect, the ever-moving sea. The piece begins with large expanses of sound to suggest the vast depths of the dark ocean, which are separated by a fragmented melody presented in horns, followed by lower brass, to reflect the stark, minimalist imagery in the poem. This is contrasted with delicate figures in high woodwinds, celeste, harp, and metallic percussion to reflect the silvery surfaces swirling above. The music travels through a collage of contrasting sections of stillness and motion, with fragments appearing and dissipating throughout the orchestra, to reflect the changing nature of the sea and the shifting relationship between the sea and the sand, nature and ourselves. There are also more playful moments in the music, as the sea traces, teases, and dances with the shoreline. The piece ends with an evocation of the waves; large sweeping strings lay the foundation for a strong statement of the melody in unison horns tracing above. An Everywhere of Silver highlights the importance and beauty of the ocean, as well as the cyclical nature of time, which cannot be halted, and the prevailing notion that nature is much bigger than ourselves.’ ©G.E.M.2026