In 2023, the Barry Lopez Foundation co-commissioned a new work by composer John Luther Adams, Crossing Open Ground, in partnership with the Aspen Music Festival and School. Taking its name from a 1988 collection of Barry Lopez’s essays, Crossing Open Ground was inspired by John and Barry’s decades-long friendship and their mutual connection to landscapes in Alaska and beyond. A large-scale work for winds, brass, and percussion intended to be performed on an expansive outdoor state, it is scored for forty musicians, with a variable duration of roughly 54 to 81 minutes, allowing the music to breathe with terrain, light and audience movement. The world premiere took place on a shimmering August afternoon at the Aspen Music Festival in 2023.
In this time when we humans have become a geologic force, most of us live in increasingly homogenous environments and in the amorphous nonplaces of the internet. Searching for real experiences in real places, we travel to far-flung destinations, where we make photographs of ourselves to prove that we were there. Yet it’s increasingly rare that we are fully present anywhere, and the knowledge that we truly belong to any place eludes many of us. Crossing Open Ground is a ceremony of rediscovery and re-consecration of place— an invitation to listen to the older, deeper resonances beneath our feet, wherever we may be. Each musician and each listener is free to follow their own individual path through the physical and musical landscape of the work. Out of the experience of walking and listening together, a renewed sense of community and place emerges. The title, Crossing Open Ground, is borrowed from a book by my dear friend, the late Barry Lopez, to whom the work is dedicated. —John Luther Adams
Since its debut at the Aspen Music Festival, Crossing Open Ground has been performed at Lincoln Center, NYC in April 2024; Snow Canyon State Park, St. George, Utah in October 2025; Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn in May 2026; and, upcoming in the fall of 2026, at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute Campus, Lenox, MA.
Read John Luther Adams on his friendship with Barry Lopez: Orion, The Liminal Line: Remembering Barry Lopez, 2024

John Luther Adams, Aspen, CO, August 6, 2023 © Diego Redel
For almost forty years, John Luther Adams made his home in the boreal forest of interior Alaska, where he discovered a unique musical world grounded in space, stillness, and elemental forces.
In the 1970s and 1980s, Adams worked full-time as an environmental activist. But the time came when he felt compelled to dedicate himself entirely to music. He made this choice with the belief that, ultimately, music can do more than politics to change the world. Since that time, he has become one of the most widely admired and influential composers in the world, receiving the Pulitzer Prize, a Grammy Award, and many other honors. In works such as Become Ocean, Become Desert, An Atlas of Deep Time, and Canticles of the Holy Wind, Adams brings the sense of wonder that we feel outdoors into the concert hall. His outdoor works such as Inuksuit, Sila: The Breath of the World, and Crossing Open Ground invite us to remember and reclaim our connections with place, wherever we may be.
Now in his 70s, Adams’s deep concern for the state of the earth and the future of humanity drives him to continue composing. As he puts it: “If we can imagine a culture and a society in which we each feel more deeply responsible for our own place in the world, then we just may be able to bring that culture and that society into being.” Since leaving Alaska, Adams and his wife Cynthia have lived in the Sonoran Desert of Mexico, the Atacama Desert of Chile, and the Chihuahuan Desert of New Mexico. They now make their home in the Red Centre of Australia.