May 1974, a Greyhound Bus (The Majik Bus to Cohoes)
For complete Letters from Cohoes song cycle click below.
Description
Letters From Cohoes was originally conceived for Baritone, flute, harp and string Quartet. The first movement is set in Eva Tanguay’s voice and works well dramatically for mezzo-soprano.
Eva Tanguay (1879-1947) was born in Canada and billed herself as “the girl who made vaudeville famous”. She was known for her suggestive songs and extravagant costumes. She has been likened to Madonna or Lady Gaga. Her one recording was “I Don’t Care” in 1922.
Her parents moved to Holyoke, Massachusetts in the 1880’s and she began her career as a teenager at the Cohoes Music Hall. At the age of nineteen she made her debut in New York City.
Tanguay was the highest paid woman of her day but was said to have lost more than two million dollars in the Wall Street crash of 1929. Tanguay had a reputation for outlandish behavior and was once fined $50 in Louisville, Kentucky for throwing a stagehand down a flight of stairs. She died, blind and nearly destitute, at the age of 68 in Hollywood. In 1953 Mitzi Gaynor portrayed Eva Tanguay in a fictionalized version of her life in the motion picture, The I Don’t Care Girl. Her ghost is said to still haunt Cohoes Music Hall in upstate New York.
Letters from Cohoes is a highly fictionalized, musical portrayal of Eva Tanguay’s ghost. In its original form it was scored for flute (doubling on alto flute, contrabass flute and piccolo), harp, string quartet and solo baritone. It is in four movements, taking the form of letters.
Letter 2. May 1974, a Greyhound Bus
The Majik Bus to Cohoes
A young stage manager takes a long bus ride to a new job in Cohoes, NY only to be visited in a dream by the ghost of Eva.
There was a girl with wild eyes glaring from the house.
She looked so wounded!
Instrumentation
Baritone and Piano
Duration
4:08
Audio
View Sample Score
Digital Download Price
$9.99
Print on Demand Price
$12.75 plus shipping