World Premiere of musical work inspired by poem “The Never-ending Shore”

Jennifer Hambrick reads her poem “The Never-ending Shore” before the world premiere of Michael Rene Torres’ in the never-ending shore of your tomorrows.

It’s a real honor when one of your own creations brings someone else a moment of reflection or inspiration. I am especially humbled to have been able to perform in the world-premiere performances recently of composer Michael Rene Torres’ new work in the never-ending shore of your tomorrows, inspired by my poem “The Never-ending Shore.”

Michael composed his new work on commission for the acclaimed Carpe Diem String Quartet, as part of their 15 for 15 Commissioning Project, celebrating the fifteenth anniversary of the quartet’s founding.

Michael’s in the never-ending shore of your tomorrows is a profound and powerful work very much in the lineage of Samuel Barber’s Adagio for Strings and George Walker’s Lyric for Strings.

Like those works, Michael’s is elegiac and soulful. Michael reached right into the heart of my poem, itself a meditation on death and transcendence into nature, and created a contemplative musical space at once within and beyond time.

Here, I introduce one of the Carpe Diem String Quartet’s world-premiere performances of Michael Rene Torres’
in the never-ending shore of your tomorrows with a reading of my poem “The Never-ending Shore:”

It is my hope that Michael will arrange his piece for string orchestra, just as Samuel Barber and George Walker arranged their elegiac quartet gems for the warm sounds of the string orchestra. This work deserves to be performed and heard widely. It is music that, in a fractured and in all-too-inhuman world, gives listeners permission to sit quietly, to feel, and to be fully human.

New Commissioned Poem Premiered in Innovative Musical Collaboration

Jennifer Hambrick performs with the Worthington Chamber Orchestra

I had the distinct honor recently to give return performances as poet and narrator on “Frontiers of Sound,” the Worthington Chamber Orchestra’s first masterworks concert of the 2025-26 concert season.

Jennifer Hambrick, Zoe Johnstone, and Jack Johnstone

To open the concert, I performed my poem “Nightwalk,” commissioned by the Worthington Chamber Orchestra and supported by the Johnstone Fund for New Music. I am most grateful to Antoine Clark, artistic director and music director of the Worthington Chamber Orchestra, for inviting me to collaborate again with him and the orchestra, and to Jack and Zoe Johnstone for their generous support.

Reading my commissioned poem “Nightwalk” to open the 2025-26 season of the Worthington Chamber Orchestra

The theme of the season’s first concert, “Frontiers of Sound,” took a close look at America’s pioneering spirit and rich history. The program’s poetic and musical offerings reflected this theme in my commissioned poem, and in musical works honoring America’s spirit of innovation. I served as narrator on an orchestration of the Old Worthington Suite by the late Marshall Barnes, former professor of music theory and composition at the Ohio State University School of Music. Composed originally for narrator, flute, clarinet, and piano, and the orchestra, Barnes’ Old Worthington Suite glowed from within in Worthington composer Jacob Reed’s lush orchestration.

Also on the concert were Aaron Copland’s Billy the Kid, along with adventurous musical works by contemporary American composers Aaron Quinn and Jerod Impichchaachaaha’ Tate.

Narrating the original chamber ensemble version of Old Worthington Suite by Marshall Barnes, on the Worthington Chamber Orchestra’s “Frontiers of Sound: Community Connect” event

An accompanying event, Frontiers of Sound: Community Connect, brought the Worthington community together for a performance of the original chamber ensemble version of Barnes’ Old Worthington Suite, in which I performed as narrator. In my WOSU Classical 101 role, I also a panel discussion about historic Worthington’s past and present.

“Frontiers of Sound” marked the first concert of the orchestra’s season-long America250 celebration. The season’s concerts are united under the theme American Crossroads and explore in music the last 250 years of U.S. history and Worthington’s past, present and potential future.

Moderating a panel discussion on the Worthington Chamber Orchestra’s “Frontiers of Sound: Community Connect” event