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Lucy is the affectionate name given to the 3.2 million year old skeleton "Australopithecus afarensis" discovered by Donald
Johanson in 1974. In 1979 I saw an artist's rendition of what he thought Lucy might have looked like and from that picture,
I got the inspiration to write music that would try to convey what her life was like three million years ago.
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The concept of writing about someone who lived so long ago took 10 years from time of conception to completion. In the interim,
I learned everything I could about her species, how they lived, died, survived in an ever-changing world that included every
type of environmental upheaval imaginable.
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The actual writing of the "Lucy" score took 3 summers of very intense work. I lived, breathe, slept Lucy and in the summer
of 1991, the music score was complete. The orchestration took 8 weeks but at the end of the summer, I not only had notes on
paper but a story about someone who lived 3 million years ago.
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In 1999, "Lucy" the ballet came to life and was performed by the Louisville Ballet at the Kentucky Center for the Arts. Since
her realization, she has been videotaped by KET for broadcast, won an Emmy, a Gabriel, and a NETA award, the music has been
recorded by the Greensboro Symphony, and been reprised in 2002 by the Louisville Ballet. Lucy is a tribute to our species,
our ancestors, and our descendants.
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sjaea@mindspring.com
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