Librettist Gene Scheer based the text of August 4, 1964 on various diaries, letters, news reports, and other historical documents regarding the day's events. The work explores its narrative from two perspectives: those of the grieving mothers of James Chaney and Andrew Goodman, and those of Johnson and Secretary of DefenseRobert McNamara in the Oval Office.[1] On the inspiration for the work, Stucky recalled:
I was 14 years old in 1964, at the time of these events. I was a junior high school student in Texas when John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas in 1963 and it was only a year later that the incidents in Mississippi and Vietnam occurred. I felt very close to and conflicted about these events. When Gene sent me his idea for the opening of the libretto – in which the mothers of Chaney and Goodman sing “It was the saddest moment of my life: August 4, 1964, the day they found my son’s body” – I knew not only that I could compose this piece but that I had to![1]
The piece is scored for choir, orchestra, and four vocal soloists cast in historic roles:
Mrs. Goodman, mezzo-soprano
Mrs. Chaney, soprano
President Lyndon B. Johnson, baritone
Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, tenor
Structure
A performance of August 4, 1964 lasts approximately 70 minutes. The work is composed in twelve movements:[4]
The Saddest Moment
Historians
Oval Office 1
I Wish to Be a Part of that Fight
The Secret Heart of America
Oval Office 2
Elegy
Letter from Mississippi
Oval Office 3
August Fourth
Had We Known
What is Precious is Never to Forget
Reception
Reviewing the world premiere of August 4, 1964, James R. Oestreich of The New York Times praised the piece as "a complex tribute to a complex man with a deeply divided legacy" and added, "Mr. Scheer created a tapestry of overlapping streams of consciousness, and Mr. Stucky responded with a varied, colorful and mercurial score."[5]Alex Ross of The New Yorker said of the work, "In Stucky’s piece, formidable vocal and instrumental resources are marshalled to evoke, in a virtuosically eclectic style, the passions and flaws of a monumental figure."[6] Paul Kirby of Theater Jones further elaborated:
Sheer's libretto includes poetry of Stephen Spender, as well as recollections from various historical sources. He presented the composer with certain problems: some sections based on historical records, while necessary to tell the story, were prosaic and dry (one is rarely called upon to set a presidential agenda or cabinet meeting to music). Stucky solved this problem brilliantly in several places (though not all) by creating overlapping statements by the soloists or by the chorus, which gave them the proper musical impetus. In another place, Sheer's juxtaposing of the ideas of the death of sons (in Mississippi and then immediately "so many sons" in Vietnam) was extremely effective.[7]
Scott Cantrell of The Dallas Morning News was notably more critical. Despite calling Stucky "a master of orchestral writing," Cantrell ultimately described the vocal writing as "serviceable, but often stilted" and said of the work, "It’s a strange pièce d’occasion, and too expensive with the demanding solo and chorus parts to attract many other performances. The money and efforts might have gone to something promising more of an afterlife."[8]