Composer Michael Markowski (b. 1986) claims that he is “fully qualified to watch movies and cartoons” on the basis of his bachelors degree in film from Arizona State University.  Despite this humility regarding his musical training (and glossing over the performance of his joyRIDE at Carnegie Hall when he was a high school senior, and his Frank Ticheli composition prize for Shadow Rituals the following year), he has gained attention as a composer of unique and sophisticated works for wind bands at all levels, film, and other media.  His works are being performed across the United States and around the world, leading to an ever-growing list of commissions and guest appearances. Learn more about him at his websiteIMDB, the Wind Repertory ProjectMetropolitan Music Community, the Everything Band Podcast, and United Under Arts.

Desert Sage is a four movement suite based on cowboy tunes that Markowski completed in 2022 for a commission by the Tartell Family and the Westchester Symphonic Winds, led by Curt Ebersole. The program notes extend at least as far as the prairie, so let’s listen first to the premiere:

Markowski goes into great detail in his program notes, to which I’ve added some links:

In early 2020, Maestro Curt Ebersole reached out to me about a potential commission project—a project that was to be generously funded by the band’s euphonium player, Marc Tartell, and his family to celebrate the life of his late father, Bob Tartell. Although he was a “dentist who grew up in the back of a candy store,” Bob loved music and spent his life singing and performing as much as he could. Even from our early conversations, it was clear that this commission had to have something to do with Song.

There is a longstanding tradition among composers to use the folk songs and dances of a particular place and people to celebrate that culture. For instance, Percy Grainger celebrated folksingers in rural England in his Lincolnshire Posy. My own teacher, Michael Shapiro, has written several pieces based on traditional Jewish melodies, such as his Variations on Eliahu Hanavi for solo cello. And perhaps most famously, the composer Aaron Copland used the old American fiddle tune “Bonaparte’s Retreat” as the basis for the Hoe-Down from his ballet, Rodeo.

For this commission, I really wanted to follow in these footsteps and celebrate where I come from: the American Southwest. As a boy from Arizona, I grew up around “cowboy” culture, but I never really realized how important it was to our American identity until I moved about as far away from it as I could possibly get: Brooklyn.

I began my research by scouring the internet for old “cowboy songs” and eventually came across a treasure trove of recordings from the 1930’s and 40’s thanks in part to the Lomax Family Collection at the American Folklife Center (a division of the Library of Congress). I immediately uncovered dozens of wonderful old songsmany about the hardships, loneliness, and tragedy of early cowboy life recorded faithfully by folks like Jess Morris and Charley Willis (Movement II: “Goodbye, Old Paint”), Carl T. Sprague (Movement III: “Bury Me Not”), and Elmo Newcomer (Movement IV: “Rye Whiskey”). There were many recordings that I fell in love with, but these three songs stood out in particular for the singers’ unique performances and for generally having the elements of a strong melody that I felt would translate well to a concert band.

In the past, composers like Grainger actually recorded their subjects first-hand (on wax cylinders, no less!). Similarly, the musicologist John Lomax traveled America recording his own subjects in the ‘30s and ‘40s. This got me wondering: were there any folk singers alive todayin 2022who were continuing the oral tradition and still singing these historic cowboy songs? After submitting a few inquiries to organizations like the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum and the Western Music Association, the name “Skip Gorman” kept coming up.

Skip is an accomplished singer and fiddle player currently living in New Hampshire who, over the last few decades, has recorded nearly every cowboy song imaginable as authentically as possible. They are beautiful acoustic recordingsbare bones and “unplugged”featuring only his voice and his guitar or fiddle as accompaniment. He is the latest generation of American cowboy singers, and I thought it would be absolutely amazing to include a contemporary folk singer in this suite of songssomebody who was actually breathing life into these dusty old songs today, getting them off the library shelves and onto the dance floor. After reaching out to Skip, I was fortunate to get his permission to re-imagine his version of “A Cowboy’s Life” from his 2012 album A Herder’s Call for the first movement of this piece.

Together, these four movements are called Desert Sage. Desert Sage (also known as Purple Sage or Salvia dorrii) is a common desert shrub with tall, vibrant purple flowers, a stark contrast to the rusty orange sand and stone that often surrounds it. Musically, this piece is an homage to the cowboys who once roamed this vast country and to the singers and musicians who have kept their stories alive. Each movement is based not only on the traditional song for which the movement is named after, but also gives credit to the particular folk singers who lent their unique personalities and pizzazz to this transcription.

He includes snippets of the lyrics to the songs on his website, which are worth a look. He also adds an epilogue:

I got to know Marc’s father the best I could through a video that Marc shared with me. It was Bob’s 65th birthday, and although his friends and family had gathered to celebrate him, Bob had actually planned an entire concert to perform for and entertain them. Over the next 45 minutes, we were serenaded by sentimental Broadway tunes like “Love is Here to Stay.” We were moved and saddened by tragic songs like “Glik” by Alexander Olshanetsky. We smiled and laughed as we listened to songs by Gilbert and Sullivan, which Bob infused with his own heritage by singing them in Yiddish. Even Bob’s wife, Lottie, accompanied him on her fiddle (a few minutes later, he would go on to present her with a gift: a new bow).

Bob was our emcee, our storyteller, our showman for the eveninghis evening. Through his talent, his passion for singing, and his inspiring generosity, he stood out from the crowda vibrant, showy purple flower among the rusty orange sand. After his performance, near the end of the video, Bob’s sons ask us to raise our glasses for a toasta “toast to my folks.” I can only assume those glasses were full of a little rye whiskey. Here’s to you, Bob.

Markowski’s sources are clear, and he provides specific recordings through his website. I’ve reproduced those here, with a couple of extras.

The first movement is based on “A Cowboy’s Life,” which Markowski heard from Skip Gorman. Gorman’s recording is available for purchase at this link. For an immediate taste of his style, check out this profile from WMUR:

Hot Rize performs a bluegrass version of “A Cowboy’s Life”:

The second movement, “Goodbye, Old Paint,” was inspired by performances from Jess Morris and Charley Willis. Here is Morris:

It also incorporates “Never Grow Old,” sung here by Grant Faulkner. Here is a more churchy version:

The third is “Bury Me Not” after Carl T. Sprague and Sloan Matthews. The Library of Congress has Matthews’s version. Here is Sprague’s performance:

The final movement is “Rye Whisky,” after Elmo Newcomer: