Symphonic poem for orchestra
Dreams and Whispers
of Poseidon
A symphonic poem by Lera Auerbach — an orchestral sea of dream, myth, submerged memory, and elemental force.
Dedication
In memory of the lives taken by the sea on December 26, 2004.
World Premiere
27 March 2005. D. Chandler Pavilion, Los Angeles — American Youth Symphony, conducted by Alexander Treger.
The Work
Dreams and Whispers of Poseidon is a symphonic poem for orchestra. Its title opens a mythic seascape: not a literal narrative, but an orchestral field in which the sea-god’s presence is felt through dream, pressure, distance, and resonance.
Written in the shadow of the Indian Ocean tsunami of December 26, 2004, the work is dedicated to the memory of those whose lives were taken by the sea. Its mythic surface carries an unmistakably human act of mourning.
Work Information
Abbreviations PDF
Orchestral Frame
The orchestral title evokes the dual nature of the sea: vast and intimate, violent and secretive. The word “dreams” suggests suspension and inner vision; “whispers” suggests distance, submerged speech, and the half-heard voices of myth.
- Sea The orchestra becomes a field of depth, turbulence, and resonance.
- Myth Poseidon appears not as illustration, but as a presence and pressure.
- Dream The work inhabits a state between image, memory, and motion.
- Mourning The dedication grounds the mythic sea in human loss.
Publisher and Materials
Published by Boosey & Hawkes / Sikorski. Score and rental materials are available through Zinfonia.