His adaptation of a mining song called “The Lousy Miner" exemplifies this process. Lyrics for the 1861 mining song, 'The Lousy Miner' from 'Put's Golden Songster.' So the composer kept the lyrics from the mining songs, but ignored the melodies entirely and instead created his own spin on them in the opera. "I wanted to make a music that was as simple and as direct as what I felt life was like for these people," Adams said. But he responded strongly to the raw emotions of the words, and wanted to use them to tell what he sees as a more truthful story of mining life in the mid 1800s. The new lyrics were simply sung to already familiar folk tunes of the day like “Oh Susanna,” “Old Folks at Home,” and “Camptown Races.”Īt a recent symposium about Girls of the Golden West, Adams confessed to not finding the melodies very interesting. They were published in chapbooks only as lyrics, without musical notation of any kind. In their original form, some of the mining songs were romantic, clownish, or happy-go-lucky, while others were more melancholy, covering such themes as missing loved ones back home, the long and difficult journey out west, and the hardships of a miner’s life. 'Girls of the Golden West' composer John Adams and librettist/stage director Peter Sellars (Photo: Courtesy of San Francisco Opera) But Adams radically transformed the melodies in his opera to show a darker side of California history - one that resonates with news headlines in this country today. Girls of the Golden West, a new San Francisco Opera production by Berkeley composer John Adams, features quite a few of these songs. Beyond details gleaned from artifacts like early photographs and hand-written letters, what we know of miners' lives during California's Gold Rush era comes to us from mining songs - the simple, homespun ditties that prospectors sang in the 1850s and '60s.