The piece has a duration of approximately 48 minutes, and has three movements:
Naive and Sentimental Music
The first movement opens with a meandering melody over simple chords that subsequently undergoes a variety of symphonic transformations.
Mother of the Man
This movement consists of slowly evolving harmonies punctuated by chords from an amplified steel guitar.
Chain to the Rhythm
In a minimalistic vein, the last movement uses rhythmic fragments that gradually build up to a thunderous climax.
Instrumentation
The work is scored for 4 flutes (3, 4 double piccolos), 3 oboes (3 doubles English horn), 3 B♭ clarinets (3 doubles bass clarinet 2), bass clarinet, 3 bassoons (3 doubles contrabassoon), 4 horns in F, 4 trumpets, 3 trombones, 2 tubas, amplified steel string guitar, piano, celesta, keyboard sampler, 2 harps, 5 percussion parts (including 3 who are principally mallet players, for a huge variety of percussive instruments: almglocken, high anvil, large bass drum, chimes, small Chinese gongs, crotales, suspended cymbals, glockenspiel, Japanese temple bowls, low gongs, marimba, “ranch” triangles, shaker, large sleigh bells, tam-tam, triangles, vibraphone, and xylophone), and strings.[1]
Critical reception
In his review of the world premiere, Mark Swed, music critic for the Los Angeles Times, praised the work for its grand reach, stating that while stylistically it resembled Adams's earlier works, "Everything is bigger and better".[3] For the New York Premiere, Bernard Holland, music critic for the New York Times, found the piece "Unlovely, yet compelling" in its multiple layers of sound and rhythm.[4] Five years later, in its local premiere with the San Francisco Symphony, Joshua Kosman, music critic for the San Francisco Chronicle, praised the work in its scope and composition, writing that it "takes its rhetoric and sense of scale from the symphonies of Bruckner, Mahler and Sibelius, and its musical content from the nexus of pop melody and old-style minimalism a la Steve Reich".[5] It was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2003 for Best Classical Contemporary Composition.[1]