Journey of a Dragonfly

For Orchestra

Written: 2005-06/2024-25
Duration: ca. 33'
for orchestra (3 (dbl pic), 3 (dbl Eh), 3 (dbl bcl), 3 (dbl cbn); 4,3, 2 tbn, btbn, tmp, 3; perc, hp, pf, str)
Written for JoAnn Falletta and Mostly Modern Orchestra in honor of Mostly Modern Festival’s fifth season
World Premiere: Mostly Modern Orchestra, JoAnn Falletta, conductor, Mostly Modern Festival, Arthur Zankel Music Center, Helen Filene Ladd Concert Hall, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY, June 15, 2025.
PublisherBill Holab Music

Perusal Score | Sheet Music Available October 15, 2025

PROGRAM NOTE

As a child, my parents vacationed at a summer cottage in Maine by a small lake. Often by myself, I would sit on a giant boulder and watch the lake and the wildlife for hours.

One day, a beautiful bright-winged dragonfly flew across the lake and hovered before me. I was startled and intrigued: its long, slender blue body glistened in the sunlight. Finally, it began to fly around the perimeter of the lake. It stopped every few minutes and hovered in place, almost as if waiting for me to follow it. I followed the dragonfly until sunset, imagining a world in which only the dragonfly existed, on its own terms, within its own world.

Years later, I hiked around the Niagara Gorge near Niagara Falls and explored Devil’s Hole Park. There is an opening on the side of a cliff called Devil’s Hole Cave. Interestingly, early Native Americans called it the Cave of the Evil Spirit and foretold subsequent disaster to anyone who dared enter the cave. The combination of the lake, the dragonfly, and Devil’s Hole Cave all came together and helped crystalize the idea for this work.

Journey of a Dragonfly begins as the sun rises; a foreboding darkness looms in the background, contrasting the Dragonfly’s graceful entrance into a world filled with the excitement of being alive. A gust of wind carries dandelion seeds skyward alongside butterflies and rainbow-colored wildflowers. Butterflies land on flowers before the Dragonfly ventures through a dark forest and emerges, only to be chased by five blackbirds. Weaving back and forth to try and escape, the Dragonfly flies into a narrow crevice as two of the blackbirds collide with trees. While still being chased, the three remaining birds retreat as the Dragonfly discovers a dark hole leading to a tunnel. The dragonfly speeds down the ghoulish tunnel and emerges at the end of the tunnel at the side of a cliff, hovering in place. It looks around in horror and sees a gigantic cavern and then Devil Town. After flying through Devil Town and witnessing tortured souls, a bomb factory, Attorney Alley, and the Devil’s Saloon, off in the distance, the Dragonfly sees Satan’s House on a hill and decides to explore. The Dragonfly enters the house and sees the Devil Child, the Devil Mother, and the Devil himself. Suddenly, the Devil Child catches the Dragonfly in a glass jar as the parents prepare dinner in the kitchen. The Dragonfly eventually manages to escape, only to be chased by the Devil Child and then by a group of hellish bats. After a chaotic chase, the Dragonfly finds the tunnel and speeds back toward the world above. Finally free, the Dragonfly finds a flat rock to rest. The tale concludes as the Dragonfly falls asleep, the sun sets by the lake, and the evening fades to black.

Journey of a Dragonfly was written for JoAnn Falletta and Mostly Modern Orchestra in honor of Mostly Modern Festival’s fifth season.

– RP

Movements should be listed in programs as follows:

1. The Lake: Sunrise
2. Dragonfly’s Entrance
3. Chase: Blackbirds
4. Descent Into The Underworld
5. Devil Town
6. Satan’s House
7. Trapped
8. Kitchen
9. Escape
10. Chase: Bats
11. Ascent To The World Above
12. The Lake: Sunset

Press Quotes

What a beautiful piece!... You are one of the greatest nature poets in music! How extraordinary and beautiful!
— JoAnn Falletta, Grammy® Winner, Music Director, Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra
Your work is such a masterpiece! Your creativity, melodic and harmonic language, together with a masterful orchestration, are absolutely remarkable.
— José Daniel Flores-Caraballo, Opalka Family Artistic Director, Albany Pro Musica
This is mesmerizing... I love the lyricism of the opening and the cinematic images it evokes while listening to this monumental work. The chase of the Blackbirds is especially striking. This piece feels like a beautiful testament to the composer’s imagination and his deep love of nature—full of suspense, drama, and excitement, just like our own human experience.
— Dika Chartoff, Composer
Dragonfly is fantastic... I felt immersed in nature, like a transcendentalist meditation combined with a Hudson River painting for the ears. Plus a Whitman poem. I especially loved “Chase: Blackbirds.” I don’t know how the Grammy® Awards work, but this should win one. And Buffalo should hire you to write a city anthem. Kudos and congratulations.
— Laura Pedersen, American Author, Playwright, and Buffalo Native
...a dazzling orchestral experience that combines beauty, intensity, and imagination in equal measure. At its heart, this piece is not just about observing a dragonfly, but about being one—living through its joys, terrors, and moments of fragile triumph. The result is a deeply engaging performance that captures both the grace and the peril of a dragonfly’s life.
— Kluane Takhini, Multi-instrumentalist, Composer, and Producer from Yukon, Canada