AMERICAN VOICES OF 20TH CENTURY WIND BAND MUSIC: A STUDY OF SELECTED MUSIC BY WILLIAM GRANT STILL, WILLIAM SCHUMAN, VINCENT PERSICHETTI AND AARON COPLAND
by Ellizar Abalos
A Study in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Music School of Music Advisor: Dr. Robert Spradling
Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan May, 2012
Copyright by Ellizar Abalos 2012
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To#my#wife#Vanessa#
AMERICAN VOICES: A STUDY OF WIND BAND MUSIC DEVELOPMENT THROUGH SELECTED MUSIC BY WILLIAM GRANT STILL, WILLIAM SCHUMAN, VINCENT PERSICHETTI AND AARON COPLAND Ellizar Abalos Western Michigan University, 2012 In the first half of the 20th century, through the early 1960’s, the development of wind band literature contributed a large part to the creation of an American voice. Through the efforts of the College Band Director’s National Association (CBDNA), the American Bandmaster’s Association (ABA), and the Michigan Band and Orchestra Association (MSBOA), the best of symphonic writers were invited to compose for band and help grow the medium. A large group of American symphonic composers, many of which studied with European teachers, started as popular-nationalists and then developed into modern-traditionalists. Other American symphonic writers just wanted to contribute traditional classical music rather than creating an “American” identity. Popularnationalists evoked folk tunes or its vernacular, like the Hungarian Bela Bartok, to create a national flavor. A large influence in this movement was the trend of incorporating jazz (catalyst) and the use of serialism or twelve-tone (antagonist) in academia. Arnold Schoenberg had asserted that the current tonal system had been exhausted. In response, a group of national-modernists proved this idiom false. Composers such as William Grant Still, William Schuman, Vincent Persichetti, and Aaron Copland developed a “modern” American sound that retained a connection to tonality and rejected the language of Late Romanticism without relinquishing accessibility to general audiences. While many enjoyed a small period of popularity and critical favor, Copland developed a lasting reputation. This period in wind band music development has greatly expanded textural orchestration, the extended use of harmony, using rhythm as an equal partner to melody and creating motives that develop through the piece. These techniques ultimately created the American Voice of the mid-Twentieth Century. This paper will discuss how these elements were used in the music of four selected pieces. The compositions selected include: Afro-American Symphony (1930) by William Grant Still, George Washington Bridge (1950) by William Schuman, Pageant (1954) by Vincent Persichetti, and Emblems (1964) by Aaron Copland.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS It has been a nomad’s journey to get to where I am today. Little did I know that almost nineteen years after arriving from the Philippines, in the summer of 1993, that I would finish a Master of Music degree in conducting. It was always my family’s wishes and my own that the medical track would be my future. Alas, that did not come to fruition and my passion for teaching and music will burn eternal. My first thanks goes to my main advisor, Dr. Robert Spradling, who has led me to the path of discovery in finding the best literature for wind band, imparting the philosophies of a righteous life, teaching me to accept and conquer my weaknesses and to balance the emotional and rational aspects of being a conductor. I am in debt of gratitude for all the lessons and knowledge he has imparted to me. Second, to Dr. Montgomery, whose leadership with the marching band and concert bands are uncanny and something to which I will strive to achieve in the budding years of my career. I enjoyed our impromptu talks as I searched for immediate input on my ideas and dreams. I also thank Dr. David Code and Dr. Stanley Pelkey for challenging me academically. You have both been the beacon of my academic track at Western Michigan University and I hope not to stray from the path of discovery and enlightenment. My most important gesture of gratitude goes to my wife, Vanessa Abalos, who through the first two years of our marriage allowed me the time and supported me through the entirety of the program. She is the rock and inspiration for everything I do. Thanks also to my mother and stepfather, Edita and Mark, for their undying support and understanding through the hours I spend studying, practicing and listening in solitude. Ellizar Abalos ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ....................................................................................
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS .....................................................................................
iii - iv
APPENDECIS / LIST OF FIGURES .................................................................
v - viii
CHAPTER I.
II.
WILLIAM GRANT STILL: A POPULIST, NATIONALIST AND AMERICAN COMPOSER’S STRUGGLE AND TRIUMPH .............
1
Introduction ......................................................................................
2
The Early Childhood ...........................................................................
3
The Practical Development of a young musician................................
5
Revisiting William Grant Still’s Music...............................................
9
A Conclusion and Manifest by William Grant Still ............................
12
Analysis of the Afro-American Symphony: The Central Blues Theme .............................................................................................................
17
WILLIAM SCHUMAN: A VOICE OF STEEL – THE MODERN TRADITIONALIST .................................................................................
21
Introduction ......................................................................................
22
The Early Childhood ...........................................................................
23
Development and Early Exploration ...................................................
24
Influence of Roy Harris.......................................................................
25
Schuman’s Compositional Technique.................................................
29
Key Compositions: Sixth Symphony (dual tonality)............................
32
Key Compositions: George Washington Bridge .................................
34
Analysis of George Washington Bridge: Absolute Music .................
35
iii
Table of Contents—continued III.
IV.
VINCENT PERSICHETTI: MODERN TRADITIONALIST – TWENTIETH CENTURY HARMONY ................................................
41
Introduction ......................................................................................
42
Early Childhood ..................................................................................
43
Development and Early Exploration ...................................................
44
Persichetti and Music ..........................................................................
45
Twentieth-Century Harmony by Persichetti........................................
48
Key Compositions: Pageant................................................................
49
Analysis of Pageant: Increasing the Band Repertoire .......................
50
AARON COPLAND: A NEW PERSPECTIVE.....................................
53
Introduction ......................................................................................
54
Influence of Nadia Boulanger .............................................................
56
Copland and Jazz .................................................................................
58
Cubism Influencing Copland...............................................................
59
Key Compositions: Piano Variations 1930…………….......................
61
The CBDNA 1964 Commission: Limitless Boundaries .....................
63
Analysis of Emblems: A New Perspective .........................................
64
A. Form ..........................................................................................
64
B. Harmony ....................................................................................
66
C. Rhythm ......................................................................................
68
D. Motive/Melodic Lines ...............................................................
70
E. Orchestration.............................................................................. iv
71
Table of Contents—continued F. Conclusion..................................................................................
72
BIBLIOGRAPHY.................................................................................................
73
APPENDICES A. Errata for George Washington Bridge ........................................................ B.
Performance Notes: George Washington Bridge .......................................
C.
Errata for Emblems .....................................................................................
D.
Performance Notes: Emblems.....................................................................
E.
Errata for Pagaent ......................................................................................
F. Performance Notes: Pagaent ...................................................................... G.
Errata Scherzo for Band.............................................................................
H.
Performance Notes: Scherzo for Band ......................................................
I. Pagaent, Movement I: An Essay in Modal Counterpoint .......................... J. Pagaent, Movement II: First half of Theme A........................................... K. Pagaent, Movement II: Two statements of Theme B................................. L. Pagaent, Movement II: An 8-bar coda with a very rich final chord ..........
v
Table of Contents—continued LIST OF FIGURES 1. W. Grant Still’s long lasting friendship with W.C. Handy.................................
6
2. Correspondence between Still and W.C. Handy.................................................
13
3. W.C. Handy in 1933. ..........................................................................................
14
4. W.C. Handy (late 1920). .....................................................................................
15
5. Symphonic Suite Mvt. 1, Jubilee by G.W. Chadwick (Still’s Teacher). ............
16
6. Principal Theme (1st movt., mm 7-18)................................................................
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7. Recurrence of the blues motive in a coda (3rd Mvt., mm. 19-98) .......................
18
8. Prinicpal Theme “Call and Response” (1st Mvt., mm. 7-10, mm. 9-10). ...........
18
9. Transitional phrase leading to an eight-measure episode that implies the variance of the rhythmic/note figure..............................................................
18
10. Episode employing figure in variation mm. 39-46…………………………… 19 11. W.G. Still’s harmonic analysis .........................................................................
26
12. Example of Harris’ Autogenesis– motive develops. ........................................
27
13. Harris Explains His Technique .........................................................................
28
14. Example #2 of Harris’ Autogenesis..................................................................
29
15. Schuman’s*Angular*melodies .........................................................................
30
16. Schuman’s Lyrical Melodies ............................................................................
30
17. Schuman’s Sensitivity in Orpheus’ lute............................................................
31
18. Dissonant vs Consonant Harmony....................................................................
32
19. Polytonality .......................................................................................................
32
20. Jazz Rhythms ....................................................................................................
32
vi
Table of Contents—continued 21. Harmonic Duality in Schuman’s Sixth Symphony...........................................
33
22.*Early*indications*of*the*‘oblique*interval*expansion ........................................... * 33* 23.*Schuman’s*impression*on*George&Washington&Bridge .........................................& 34* 24.*Bichordal Opening Bb – low brass, C – high brass (mm. 1-4).........................
35
25. Rhythmic transition...........................................................................................
36
26. Theme #2 – Chromaticism and Angular melody..............................................
36
27. Theme #3 – rhythmic and disjunct, but playful ................................................
37
28. Theme #4 Flowing, but angular ........................................................................
38
29. Form Chart ........................................................................................................
38
30. Pandiatonic Cluster ...........................................................................................
39
31. Rhythmic Motives.............................................................................................
39
32. Secundal Chords ...............................................................................................
40
33. Tension Crescendo (oblique interval expansion)..............................................
40
34. Complete Band Works......................................................................................
47
35. Movement I: An Essay in Modal Counterpoint................................................
51
36. Movement II, A Street Parade ..........................................................................
52
37. Tied Syncopation ..............................................................................................
58
38. Nude Descending a Staircase............................................................................
60
39. Rhythmic Displacement Piano Variations, Vivace, mm. 151-158 ..................
61
40. Rhythmic Displacement/Signs of Serialism, Piano Variations mm. 17-38 .....
62
41. Simple Form – Ternary.....................................................................................
65
42. Full Form ..........................................................................................................
65
43. Subsection of B ................................................................................................. vii
66
Table of Contents—continued 44. Subsection of Returning A................................................................................
66
45. Sequential Writing ............................................................................................
67
46. Ascending/Descending Motives (min. 3rd) .......................................................
67
47. Contrary Chromatic Motion..............................................................................
67
48. Section B Snare drum Motive...........................................................................
68
49. Jazz Influence ...................................................................................................
69
50. Coda Fanfare.....................................................................................................
69
51. Conjunct Melody ..............................................................................................
70
52. Disjunct Melody ...............................................................................................
70
53. Amazing Grace .................................................................................................
70
viii
WILLIAM GRANT STILL A Populist - American Composer’s Struggle and Triumph
CHAPTER ONE
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Introduction
As a forgotten keystone of twentieth century American music and composition, William Grant Still is an important part of America’s musical history. He struggled against racism and discrimination in a world dominated mostly by intellectuals, most of whom were white. His efforts were not only to get his music performed, but also to get it accepted at the highest level of performance next to names such as Henry Cowell, Aaron Copland, George W. Chadwick, and Howard Hanson. His music is unique, drawing from the roots of black music, experience of prejudice and slavery, and the importance of making music relative to the audience at hand. Still connects with his listeners. His works included symphonies, operas, chamber, wind ensemble, and choral genres. William Grant Still furthered music through modernist compositions, but stayed grounded through the creation of an American sound that was demanded by audiences and brought forth through the mastery of the modern composer. He sought a forward drive in music that made the responsibility of creating a unique American music a dualrole between composer and audience. Though mostly forgotten, because of the politics of race and class, I believe that William Grant Still’s music should be studied with seriousness and the depth at which we cover other American composers of the present and past. His teachers included well-known composers, modernist, Edgar Varese and Americana-composer, George Whitfield Chadwick. One of Still’s most famous works include Afro-American Symphony. We will analyze and study the social and musical aspects of this key composition. To begin we must explore the composer’s beginnings.
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The Early Childhood William Grant Still was born in Woodville, Mississippi in 1895 and became world renowned for his Afro-American subject and Afro-American folk idiom, which was new to the ears of the academic music world of the times. His parents, William Grant Sr. and Carrie Lena (Fambo) Still, were both teachers with college educations. Still’s father taught music at the Agricultural and Mechanical college of Alabama. Unfortunately, Still Sr. died when Still was just three months old. Still’s mother moved them to Little Rock, Arkansas, where they lived with his maternal grandmother. According to Verna Arvey, Still’s future spouse, he was to be musically educated through the influence of his maternal grandmother: “While his grandmother worked about their house, she sang hymns and spirituals. “Little David, Play on Yo’ Harp” was one of her favorites. Thus he grew up with the songs of his people, and grew to love the old hymns, which he plays today with the addition of such exquisite harmonies that they assume unsuspected beauty. A communal habit of the childhood days was that of serenading. It was pleasant to be awakened from slumber by such sweet sounds. He has always deplored the passing of the custom.” 1 An enriching force in his life included his stepfather, Charles B. Shepperson, a railway postal clerk, who deeply loved music – particularly opera. His salary was just enough to purchase a phonograph on which William listened to many Red Seal records. Charles played a large role in Still’s early musical development. Charles would engage Still in conversations about the musical shows, the singing activities, and the concerts and plays they would attend.2
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B. Haas, ed. William Grant Still and the Fusion of Cultures in American Music, Los Angeles: Black Sparrow Press, 1972, 3.
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2!Haas,!William
Grant Still,!4.!
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The most influential individual in Still’s life was his mother. She moved the young Still to a bigger city, where he would have more opportunity, such as playing in a larger high school band in Little Rock Public Schools. Carrie Lena Still, Still’s mother, had a strong determination, talent and high moral character. She commanded the attention of a room and taught her son, at home and in the classroom, the strictness of a lifelong teacher. She showed no favoritism. The hard work and dedication she gave to her son made him successful early on. William Grant Still graduated from high school at the age of sixteen, was first honor bearer and class valedictorian.3 Still’s first undertaking in college was to attain a Bachelor of Science degree from Wilberforce University in Wilberforce, Ohio. His mother highly disagreed with the idea of studying music in college. She saw no future for her son in music – especially since he was colored. She believed that the prejudice against a black composer would leave Still either working for side bands, or musical stages or local bands. She never believed that a black composer could ever live up to the standards of the white composer and the long list of accomplished European composers. Nevertheless at Wilberforce, Still pursued his passion for music. He arranged and composed music for a string quartet and later joined and became the bandleader in the Wilberforce Band. The first scores he bought were Weber’s Oberon and Wagner’s Flying Dutchman. Still learned to play violin, the oboe and clarinet. He would not finish college, leaving two months prior to graduation, but Still would receive an honorary degree of Master of Music, in recognition of his “erudition, usefulness and eminent character.”4 Still would recall, “I stayed there [Wilberforce] from 1911 to 1915. Then I went to Columbus and did some professional work for a while. And then, after a couple of !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3!Arvey,
Verna. Studies of Contemporary American Composers: William Grant Still. New York: J. Fischer & Brother, 1939, p.10.
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4!Arvey,!op.!cit.,!p.!12.!
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years, I received the legacy that my father left me. This legacy enabled me to go to Oberlin, and I went to Oberlin immediately.”5 Still would not stay in school very long, for in 1918, he enlisted in the Navy. During this period of his life, Still experienced the first set back in his young professional career. Though college educated, his only allotted duty in the U.S. Navy as a black man would be third class mess attendant. At Oberlin, Still had studied violin, so when his superiors learned that he was a trained musician, he was directed to play the violin for the officers’ mess on the U.S.S. Kroonland.6
The practical development of a young musician Upon Still’s return from the Navy in 1918, W.C. Handy, known as the father of the Blues, offered Still his first job as an arranger and musician in New York City.7 Handy’s band traveled across the south, playing popular blues music. Years later, Still would recall, “Well anyhow, that period that I devoted to professional work, particularly in New York, was one of great value to me. I was working largely with popular music— to an extent with it—but I wasn’t confined to it, because when radio came in I was orchestrating for orchestras like Don Vorhees’ orchestra. The bulk of what Don played was serious music not in its bigger forms, but in some of its lighter forms.”8 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 5!Judith
A. Still, and Dominique-Rene de Lerma, eds. William Grant Still An Oral History. Flagstaff, Ariz.: The Master Player Library, 1998, 14. An industrious and frugal young man, Still, Sr. managed to acquire a sizable sum of money from his partnership in a grocery business. A few months after his only child was born, the elder Still died at the age of twenty-four of a mysterious ailment. Some said that he had been poisoned by a rejected sweetheart at the instigation of White men in town. Whatever the case, the money that he had saved was passed on to his son at a later time.
6!Still,!William
Grant Still An Oral History,!14.!
! W.C. Handy and Eileen Southern, "Letters from W.C. Handy to William Grant Still," The Black Perspective in Music 7, no. 2 (1979): 199-234.
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8!Still,!William
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Grant Still An Oral History,!15.
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Fig. 1 W. Grant Still’s long lasting friendship with W.C. Handy.9 IN RETROSPECT:LETTERSFROMW. C. HANDY
217
W. C. Handy and William Grant Still standing in front of the then-incomplete Perisphere on the grounds of the New York World's Fair 1939-40.
Upon his return, many professors when so impressed by his talent that they offered a scholarship that would lead to his study of composition with Dr. George W. Andrews, who gave Still a sound foundation in orchestration and theory. A foundation is all he needed to begin a successful track in the entertainment business: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 9
W.C. Handy and Eileen Southern., 217.
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“I learned to play many instruments, not for the purpose of being a proficient performer, but in order to capture the sound, [and to] have it so firmly implanted in my consciousness that I could bring it out and play with it and mix it. It took a long time. I spent many years preparing for that, as I say. Now, you see, the work that I was doing— orchestrating—was all-helpful. In addition to learning the sounds, I was learning what to do, and what not to do, as far as instrumentation was concerned.”10 A few years later, in 1920, Still was playing in Eubie Blake’s orchestra. The orchestra was featured on a popular show called Shuffle Along. While on tour in Boston, Still realized that his income was enough to afford more lessons. So, he decided to apply to study composition at the New England Conservatory of Music. Upon receiving a response, Still was told that he would study with the “generous” George Whitfield Chadwick11 (generous due to the fact of William’s race). Chadwick also offered to teach Still free of charge. Still protested, but Chadwich refused to take his money and thus began four months of pro-bono composition lessons.12 Upon his return to New York City, Still accepted a position as recording director of the Black Swan Phonograph Company. The company used all-black orchestras and focused primarily on classical and semi-classical artists and recordings. Among those featured on the label was Ethel Waters.13 Contrary to popular belief, the label did not de!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 10!Still,!William
Grant Still An Oral History,!15.
! 11!Victor
F. Yellin, Chadwick: Yankee Composer. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1990, 1-90. Chadwick was born in 1854 in Lowell, Massachusettes. He taught composition and theory at the New England Conservatory of music and is known as one of the Deans of American music. He created uniquely American sound (See Scores Example 1 for an example of his first Symphony, Mvt. 1, Jubilee).
12!Haas,!William
Grant Still,!6.!
! 13An!important!Negro!blues!singer!and!actress!who!recorded!under!the!Black!Swan!label!was!
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Ethel!Waters!(1900K1977).!!Waters!was!the!first!woman!to!sing!W.C.!Handy’s!“St.!Louis! Blues,”!and!she!popularized!the!song,!“Dinah,”!in!New!York.!!After!appearing!in!the!Negro! revue!“Africana,”!she!began!to!perform!in!a!great!number!of!popular!musical!dramas!and! films.!
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emphasize popular music, nor did it ignore black musicians. It wanted to retain a serious and reputable label. Unfortunately, the label would fold within the year Still took over as recording director. Serendipitously, during his tenure at Black Swan Phonograph, Still was able to find an opportunity to study with a great “ultra-modernist” composer of his time – Edgar Varese. In his account of the moment he found this opportunity, Still states: “Edgard Varese14 moved to New York, I think about 1921, and coming to America he met the Negro officer, Colonel Charles Young15 on the ship, and formed a friendship [with him]. He [Varese] decided that, when he came to this country, he would find some Negro musician and teach him. At the time they called it “ultra modern” music. It was quite far removed from the music that I’d been accustomed to.”16 Varese had written to Harry Pace, the owner of the Black Swan Phonograph Company, looking for a promising student to teach. Still had caught Pace in time to save the letter from going into the garbage can. Still took the letter, wrote back to Varese and managed to earn the scholarship to study with him for three complete years. At first, Still was not very taken by the modernist idiom, but he eventually grasped the concept with enthusiasm and charisma: “When I was groping blindly in my efforts to compose, it was Varese who pointed out to me the way to individual expression and who gave me the opportunity to !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 14
Felix Meyer, and Heidy Zimmerman, eds. Edgar Varese, Composer, Sound Sculptor, Visionary. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press, 2006. Born!in!Paris,!Edgard!Varese!studied!under! Roussel,!d’Indy,!Widor,!and!Busoni.!!In!1919,!he!came!to!New!York,!and!five!years!later!he! began!the!International!Composer’s!Guild!that,!for!the!next!six!years,!sponsored!the! performance!of!music!by!his!contemporaries.!!Divorcing!himself!from!traditional!musical! techniques!and!composition,!Varese!championed!ultra!modernism!in!his!work!as!a!composer! and!discouraged!the!use!of!conventional!! !!devices!by!his!pupil,!William!Grant!Still.!!Still!studied!with!Varese!from!1923!to!1925.! 15Colonel!Charles!Young!(1864K1922)!became!one!of!the!first!Negro!to!enter!West!Point,!rode!!!!!!!!
with!Teddy!Roosevelt’s!Rough!Riders!and!wrote!the!morale!song!There’s!a!Service!Flag!in!the! Window.! ! 16!Still,
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William Grant Still An Oral History, 17.
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hear my music played. I shall never forget his kindness, nor that of Chadwick and the instructors at Oberlin.”17 While taking lessons with Varese, Still worked primarily as an arranger for an assortment of broadcasting companies, including radio stations, the NBC network, CBS and Mutual networks. If composing had not been such a passion for Still, he could have made a career of arranging, but he had a calling to compose original material. Still eventually worked, at various times – with Earl Carroll – Artie Shaw, Sophie Tucker, Don Vorhees, and Paul Whiteman. One of the best selling records of all time, Frenesi, by Artie Shaw, was arranged by Still. CBS station commissioned more than one work by Still, the most important being the ballet Lennox Avenue. The stage piece depicts daily life in Harlem, New York in the 1930s and was premiered on CBS radio on May 23, 1937 (See Fig. 2).
Revisiting William Grant Still’s Music Henry Cowell, renowned American composer of the 1920’s and 1930’s, stated that it is difficult to categorize William Grant Still’s music. He states that Still, a “Negro,” uses his people’s themes and feelings as a basis for his music, with some rather vague European influence. He believed that perhaps he [Still] possessed the beginnings of a new style. As we’ve explored, many have seen Still’s work as naïve, yet his influence on other music is evident. Copland once wrote of sixteen figures, including Still, which represented “an entirely new generation of composers… These men form, for
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 17!Haas,!op.!cit.,!p.!6.!
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better or worse, the American school of composers of our own day.” Other prominent names on the list were Antheil, Cowell, Harris, Sessions, and Thomson.18 It is written in the book Music in the 20th Century (by William W. Austin, published by W.W. Norton and Company, 1966) that Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue helped inspire William Grant Still to make use of Jazz and Negro folksong in his symphonies and operas. This statement alone was questionable, considering the fact that George Gershwin’s idol was someone with whom Still performed and for whom he arranged music – W.C. Handy. Gershwin was an avid listener to the Blues idiom and admired the music arranged and performed by Handy’s ensembles. Gershwin also took every opportunity to listen to new music created by “Negro” composers and musicians. One such concert he attended was at Aeolian Hall on January 24, 1926, given by the international Composer’s Guild. The concert featured music by William Grant Still, Florence Mills as soloist and Eugene Goossens conducting. It was around the same time that Still’s Afro American Symphony was made public that Gershwin’s Girl Crazy, in which “I Got Rhythm” was featured. The third movement of the Afro American Symphony seemed to sound similar to the song I Got Rhythm. To those who had more access to Gershwin’s music, it seemed that Still had been influenced by Gershwin. The opposite, however may be true. Still may have influenced Gershwin in his writings. Gershwin was not “borrowing” any musical material exactly, but his absorption may have led to other similar thematic material – including W.C. Handy’s St. Louis Blues versus Gershwin’s later composition of Summertime.19
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J. Oja, William Grant Still, Black Music Research Journal. Vol. 12. Chicago: Center for Black Music Research - Columbia College, 1992, p. 164-165.
19!Haas,!90K91.!
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European composers were also highly involved in “borrowing” idioms from “Negro” musicians and composers. The following account is an example. The book, The Unknown Brahms, by Robert Haven Schauffler, published by Crown Publishers in New York in 1940, carries a statement by Arthur Abell, an American violinist who was one of the few who could inspire the master to talk intimately of his own work. “A year before Brahms died,” said Mr. Abell, “he asked me whether I played the banjo. ‘No,’ I replied. ‘Why?’ ‘Because at Klengel’s I met an American girl who played for me, on the curious instrument, a sort of music which she called Ragtime. Do you know this?’ – and he hummed the well known tune which goes to the words: “If you refuse me, Honey, you lose me.” ‘Well,’ the master continued with a faraway look in his eyes, ‘I thought I would use, not the stupid tune, but the interesting rhythms of this Ragtime. But I do not know whether I shall ever get around to it. My ideas no longer flow as easily as they used to!’” Brahms had an affinity to “Negro” music, but his age and health made his intention an inclination, which never found fulfillment.20 Another composer influenced by “Negro” music or spirituals was the famous Czech composer, Antonin Dvorak. “All I tried to do,” Dvorak claimed later, “was to write music in the spirit of national American melodies.” Dvorak is well known for his use of indigenous American tunes in his major work, the Symphony No. 9 – From the New World. Dvorak influenced Harry T. Burleigh, a colored composer who was a student at the National Conservatory in New York during Dvorak’s tenure as its director. Burleigh visited Dvorak at his East 17th Street home repeatedly in order to sing Plantation songs and Hoe-downs for him. Dvorak !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !
20!Haas,!93.!
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had announced intentions repeatedly to use “Negro” melodies in the New World Symphony. One spiritual that briefly makes an appearance in the first movement of the New World Symphony is “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” abbreviated in the second theme and introduced by the flute. Dvorak himself wrote in an article for Harper’s New Monthly for February 1895: “A while ago I suggested that inspiration for truly national music might be derived from the Negro melodies or Indian chants. I was led to take this view partly by the fact that the so-called plantation songs are indeed the most striking and appealing melodies that have yet been found on this side of the water, but largely by the observation that this seems to be recognized, though often unconsciously, by most Americans.”21
A Conclusion and Manifesto by William Grant Still Dvorak awakened people to the existence of an American music through his Symphony, A New World. Americans have a musical idiom of their own. From that day on, we have utilized music of our own. Though at times, our history and facts seem altered by the social norms and practices of the time, it is good to ask and wonder the truth of our musical influences. Though Still is not given credit outright for helping to shape the duality and integration of “Negro” music and symphonic form, it is very evident that he had influenced peers and colleagues that were exposed to his compositions. This is, without a doubt a fact. As Still states, “We create important abstract music and also create our own cultural music, to blend something new. American music is a composite of all races, cultures, and people. Ours is a New World and ours is a culture that is growing. We are not the Old World. We (composers) must add to our technical !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !
21!Haas,!p.!91K92!
12!
ability the folk songs, church hymns, and authentic flavor we hear in every neighborhood. In furthering American music, composers and audiences have a share in their creation of its ideal music. They must demand of orchestras what they want to hear. The American public can and must provide this proportion. If we work together, we can create an American culture that we can be proud of and give American music a place in the world it rightfully deserves.� 210 FIG.
IN MUSIC THE BLACKPERSPECTIVE 2 Correspondence between Still and W.C. Handy
BROTHERS MUSIC HANDY C@.INC ' -eHome _""^"''PB\ tSlues
NEWY'RK. N.Y. 1587 BREADWAY. I
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October 23rd, 1942 Mr. & Mrs. William Grant Still 3670 Cimarron Street Los Angeles, Calif. Dear Mr. & Mrs. Still: Under another cover, I am sending you a spiritual, my arrangement of, "That Love My Jesus Gave Me, Shine Like A Mornin' Star." I sent my brother the first autographed copy of it with the following letter, which is self-explanatory:Dear Brother Charles: "When I was a janitor for the white Baptist Church in Florence, Alabama, more than fifty years ago, the pastor preached in our Methodist Church on Sunday. You were a baby then. Our congregation sang in unison, "That Love My Jesus Gave Me Shine Like A Mornin' Star." It made the white preacher happy. After that whenever we met, I had to sing that Spiritual for the white minister, so he could teach it to his congregation. He said the words are convincing and reveal a sublime faith. My pals and I used to try to harmonize it but our difficulty was to ascertain whether the melody began on "la or re." Well, after fifty years, I have decided that this spiritual ends on "re" and begins on that syllable and have made an arrangement of solo voice and piano. "Shine Like a Mornin' Star" is an unusual melody, deeply stirring and, besides its value as devotional music, it is a study for those engaged in research. My research for this was not made in any archives or remote corners of the Southland, but from the recesses of my own mind stimulated by a memory of days and years that can never come again. I haven't heard this spiritual since those days, Charlie, and this is the first time I have seen it in print."
Sincerely, Signed: William C. Handy. P.S.
!
This is the best description that I can give the number. Tell me your reaction to it please. Analyze it if you will. Also let me know how you like it. All in best of health.
13!
FIG. 3 W.C. Handy in 1933
216
THE BLACKPERSPECTIVEIN MUSIC
W. C. HANDY (1933)
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FIG. 4 W.C. Handy (late 1920)
IN RETROSPECT:LETTERSFROMW. C. HANDY
215
W. C. HANDY (late 1920s?)
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FIG. 5 Symphonic Suite Mvt. 1, Jubilee by G.W. Chadwick (Still’s Teacher)
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Analysis of the Afro-American Symphony: The Central Blues Theme William Grant Still’s music is known for its innovation in incorporating the folk style of his people into the symphonic form. Still encouraged the use of spirituals in academically serious symphonic works to elevate the stance of his people in the eyes of the music world.1 The wind band piece we will study is a transcription of William Grant Still’s Afro-American Symphony, “Scherzo” Mvt. 3, which was renamed Scherzo for Band for the wind band version. The original composition was finished for full orchestra in 1930, while the transcription itself was done in 1962. It is reminiscent of the times when band transcriptions were still prominent in the performance practice of wind band groups. The central focus of this analysis is to show examples from his Afro-American Symphony and discuss its importance in establishing the use of the blues idiom in the symphonic form. The first appearance of the blues theme is seen within the first twelve-measure phrase in the introduction of the symphony’s first movement (see Fig. 6). FIG. 6 Principal Theme (1st movt., mm 7-18)22
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22!Simpson,
Ralph R. “William Grant Still – the Man and His Music.” 21.!
17!
The twelve bar measure is reminiscent of the blue’s twelve bar structure. The blues’ practice of “call and response is also utilized, creating four measure sub phrases. The “call and response” blues theme is reiterated throughout the symphony numerous times, becoming a key compositional technique (see Fig. 8). Still also uses a technique of blues rhythm, an offbeat pattern that can be varied.
We see this throughout the
symphony, where motives and variances of motives are restated, restated in a variant form, or stated with a counter-motive (see Fig. 9-10). FIG. 7 Recurrence of the blues motive in a coda (3rd Mvt., mm. 19-98)23
FIG. 8 Prinicpal Theme “Call and Response” (1st Mvt., mm. 7-10, orchestral comments mm. 9-10)
FIG. 9 Transitional phrase leading to an eight-measure episode that implies the variance of the rhythmic/note figure.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 23!Simpson, 22.! !
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FIG. 10 Transitional Phrase, Mvt. 3, mm. 35-38, Episode employing figure in variation mm. 39-4624
Returning to the blues idiom, the basic harmonic structure derived from this style follows the basic progression of I – IV – I – V – I. Still emphasizes his style by making the basic chords harmonized as basic triadic sevenths, I7 – IV7 – I – V7 – I. In Fig. 18, the composer marks the harmonic structure, during the compositional process. His first draft was a simple condensed piano score. The analysis shows that Still’s attention to melody is very important. FIG. 11 W.G. Still’s harmonic analysis, 1st movt., mm 7-18.25
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 24!Simpson, 23.! !
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It helps that Still was very familiar with the blues idiom, using chromatic notes or “blue notes” that were unique to his folk background. The “blue note”2 he uses includes D-natural, C-flat, G-flat in the melody and the F-flat within the accompaniment). The seventh degree of the scale is implemented through the basic blues progression and the sixth is implemented as a “color” that can be “treated casually and often times lowered or played out of tune.”26 Rhythm in the first phrase is also established. Syncopation is key to this particular style, making the bar-lines merely guides and allowing the phrase to be carried by the melody. Still’s unique style is derived from his rich spiritual background, the modernist lessons of Edgar Varese, and the orchestrations he created for Paul Whiteman, NBC, and W.C. Handy. His composition of effective melodies is euphonic due to its relation to the well established and popular blues idiom.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 25!Simpson, 32. ! 26!Simpson, 33.! !
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WILLIAM SCHUMAN A Voice of Steel – The Modern Traditionalist
CHAPTER TWO
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21!
Introduction William!Schuman!was!a!multifaceted!man!that!was!full!of!grit,!brilliance!and! intelligence.!!In!the!music!world,!Schuman!was!involved!in!education,! administration,!and!composition!for!most!of!his!life.!!During!the!first!half!of!the! twentieth!century,!Schuman!made!quite!an!impact!with!his!development!into!a! traditional@modernist!composer!and!as!an!advocate!of!his!philosophies!in!music! education!at!the!famed!Julliard!School!of!Music!and!Sarah!Lawrence!College.!!In! 1962,!Schuman!took!on!the!role!of!president!at!the!Lincoln!Center,!helping!to!design! and!bring!it!some!of!the!best!music!artists!to!perform!during!his!tenure.1!!! !
In!his!time!in!administration,!it!is!hard!to!believe!how!prolific!and!successful!
he!became!as!a!composer.!!Schuman’s!middle!class!roots!instilled!in!him!a!lifelong! industriousness!and!desire!for!advancement.!!In!his!time!as!a!composer,!Schuman! developed!an!American!sound!that!showed!music!that!could!be!forward!thinking,! but!yet!still!be!able!to!connect!to!the!general!audience.!!Some!of!his!key!works! include!ten!symphonies!(the!third!and!sixth!being!most!prominent),!the!New$ England$Triptych$for!orchestra,!his!opera!The$Mighty$Casey,$the!ballet!Undertow,$four! string!quartets,!and!his!cantata!A$Free$Song!–!which!won!the!first!Pulitzer!Prize!for!a! musical!work.!!Schuman!also!composed!a!number!of!key!works!for!band!which!are! still!standards!in!present!day!repertoire:!!Newsreel,$in$Five$Shots$(1941),$George$ Washington$Bridge$(1950),$Chester$Overture$(1956$–$from$the$New$England$Triptych,$ N.E.T.),$When$Jesus$Wept$(1958$–$N.E.T.),$Philharmonic$Fanfare$(1965),$Dedication$ Fanfare$(1968),$and!Be$Glad$then,$America$(1975$–$N.E.T.)2$ ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1!Simmons, Walter. The Music of William Schuman, Vincent Persichetti, and Peter Mennin, 38-39 ! 2!Grimes, Ev, and William Schuman. "Conversations with American Composers: Ev Grimes Interviews William Schuman." 46.! ! 22!
The Early Childhood William!Schuman!was!born!in!New!York!City!on!August!4th,!1910!as!a! descendent!of!German@Jewish!ancestors!that!immigrated!to!the!United!States!prior! to!the!Civil!War.!!Samuel,!his!father,!developed!a!printing!business!and!helped!his! son!accept!the!idea!of!assimilation.!!Although!Schuman’s!mother!was!strongly!tied!to! her!Jewish!background,!she!also!bought!into!the!idea!of!raising!Schuman!without!a! strong!sense!of!ethnic!identity.!!Samuel!named!his!son!after!William!Howard!Taft,! showing!his!deep!patriotism.!!Schuman!would!be!the!middle!child!of!three,!Audrey! the!oldest!and!Robert,!the!youngest.!!Robert!would!be!mentally!institutionalized! until!his!death!in!1957,!and!Schuman!spoke!little!of!him.3!!The!comfortable!standard! of!living!Schuman!experienced!and!his!family’s!patriotism!would!create!the! fundamental!grounds!for!his!successful!years.! !
During!his!teen!years,!Schuman!developed!two!keen!loves!–!baseball!and!
music.!!Both!his!sister!and!mother!played!the!piano!and!Schuman!took!violin!lessons! and!taught!himself!to!play!the!clarinet,!upright!bass!and!the!piano.!!His!formative! years!in!music!were!still!to!come,!but!he!showed!promise!while!attending!high! school!in!Manhattan!and!camp!in!Maine!at!Camp!Cabbossee.!!There,!he!and!his! friends!were!involved!in!theater!and!composition!–!Fate,$a!tango,!was!his!first!piece.!! In!1926,!Billy,!as!he!was!called,!formed!his!own!jazz!band!called,!“Billy!Schuman!and! His!Alamo!Society!Orchestra.”!!He!composed!hundreds!of!popular!songs.!!He!was!so! successful!that!his!father,!Samuel,!even!made!him!business!cards.4!!He!soon!began!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3!Simmons, 23-26. ! 4!Swayne, Steve. Orpheus in Manhattan, 22. ! !
23!
promoting!popular!songs!with!his!dear!friend!and!fellow!musician!and!composer,! Frank!Loesser.5! !
Development and Early Exploration !
An!important!moment!in!Schuman’s!life!occurred!on!April!4,!1930,!when!his!
sister!took!him!to!see!Toscanini!conduct!the!New!York!Philharmonic.!!The! synchronized!bowings!and!the!expansive!range!of!emotion!impressed!him!most.!! The!program!that!evening!included!Siegfried’s$Funeral$Music$by!Wagner!and! Schumann’s!Rhenish$Symphony.$$The!color!and!the!possibilities!of!sound!one!could! make!with!an!orchestra!really!struck!a!chord!with!Schuman.!!He!would!soon!drop! out!of!school!to!attend!the!Malkin!Conservatory,!a!local!music!school.6!!! !
In!1933,!Schuman!enrolled!at!Columbia!University’s!Teacher!College,!the!
place!where!he!was!exposed!to!the!pedagogical!ideas!of!John!Dewey.!!He!would!later! carry!this!philosophy!to!the!Julliard!School!of!Music.!!He!developed!a!teaching! pedagogy!that!was!against!rote!learning!and!instead!guiding!the!experience.!!! Schuman!was!still!in!his!populist!form!as!a!composer!at!this!point!and!even!thought! of!dropping!out!of!school!because!his!band!was!doing!very!well.7! !
“I!would!have!left!college,!but!I!probably!would!have!been!paid!$10.00!a!
night!to!play!the!fiddle!and!sing,!maybe!$12.00!or!$13.00,!I!don’t!know.!!My!father! said,!‘You!know,!I’ve!always!agreed!with!everything!you’ve!done,!but!I!don’t!think! you!should!do!this!because!it!interferes!with!your!education.!!If!you!want!to!do!it!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 5!Simmons, 27. ! 6!Swayne,!65@67.! ! 7!Schuman, William. "On Teaching the Literature and Materials of Music." 155-160.! !
24!
after!you’re!21!and!have!finished!your!formal!education,!it’s!okay!with!me,!but!I!urge! you!not!to!do!it.!!I!urge!you!not!to.’!!So!I!didn’t.!!And!of!course!he!was!right.”8! !
In!the!early!1930’s!Schuman!was!starting!to!develop!his!voice!both!in!his!
compositions!and!teaching!philosophies.!!In!1933,!Schuman!would!hear!Roy!Harris’! Symphony$1933.$!This!piece!would!help!create!a!voice!for!Schuman!and!he!would! later!go!on!to!study!with!Roy!Harris.!!The!work!had!a!spirit!that!truly!spoke!to!him.!! In!1935,!Schuman!went!on!to!graduate!with!his!BS!in!education!from!Teacher’s! College!and!almost!immediately!went!on!to!teach!at!Sarah!Lawrence!College.!!There,! he!convinced!the!administration!to!try!his!revolutionary!techniques!in!teaching! music!with!a!more!individualized!approach.9!
Influence of Roy Harris !
In!his!compositions,!Schuman!would!grow!tired!of!Tin!Pan!Alley!style,!and!
would!soon!move!on!to!explore!a!new!voice.!!In!the!mid@!to!late@1930s,!Schuman! would!study!with!the!great!Roy!Harris,!who!had!championed!the!use!of!American! folk!tunes!and,!to!a!lesser!extent,!jazz!rhythms!in!his!compositions.!!Roy!Harris!was!a! product!of!the!teachings!of!Nadia!Boulanger,!so!naturally!Schuman!would!grow!fond! of!the!techniques!of!Igor!Stravinsky!(and!would!later!learn!of!his!anti@string!works).!! Schuman!would!recall,!“I!was!very!enthusiastic!about!Stravinsky,!as!most!people!at! that!age!were.!!It!was!either!Stravinsky!or!Schoenberg…!kind!of!like!Brahms!and! Wagner.!!It!seems!so!ridiculous!in!retrospect.”10!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 8!Swayne,!23@24.! ! 9!Schuman, William. "The Responsibility of Music Education to Music." 17-19. ! 10!Pye,
Richard. "Asking about the Inside: Schoenberg's Idea in the Music of Roy Harris and William Schuman." 69.!
!
25!
were like no others I had ever heard, his wholly original "autogenetic"concept of form, the orchestration so free and strong, the extraordinary beauty and of the melodic material' (Schuman 1979, pp. 5S6). ! sweepHarris!would!instill!in!Schuman!the!idea!of!autogenesis.!!It!would!forever! Schuman's remarks appear to suggest that the autogenetic principle goes beyond melodic elaboration, embracing the musical organism as a whole (the create!a!legacy!through!his!teacher.!!In!Figure!12,!you!can!see!the!germ!of!a!motive.!! form).lO This interpretation again bears comparison with Schoenberg's concept of the musical 'Idea' and its ultimate manifestation in the body (form) The!motives!in!Roy!Harris’!music!would!sprout!much!like!a!sapling!of!a!tree!and! of the piece: 'I myself consider the totality of a piece as the idea: the idea which its creator wanted to present.' He goes on to speak of 'a state of unrest, of grow!branches,!or!variations,!that!originate!from!the!germ!motive.!!! imbalance which grows throughout most of a piece . . . The method by which balance is restored seems to me the real idea of the composition.'11Defining the ! concept of form 'in its aesthetic sense', he refers to 'elements functioning like those of a living organism.'l2Schoenberg's many and diverse statements on the ! nature ofFIG.!12!Example!of!Harris’!technique!of!‘autogenesis.’ the musical Idea are summed up by Carpenter and Neff in 11 similar terms: 'The musical idea, the essence of the work, represents its total dynamic, ! the balance of forces within the whole' (Schoenberg 1995, p. xix). I shall return Ex. la Harris Symphony- AmericanPortrait 1929 (in Stehman 1973, p. 1039) I germ I
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!!!!!!Harris!technique!creates!a!connective!approach!that!many!American! composers!in!the!first!half!of!the!twentieth!century!would!use.!!He!was!
IDEA INTHEMUSICOFHARRISANDSCHUMAN SCHOENBERG'S
73
designated!as!one!of!the!first!true!American!composers!for!his!use!of!folk! tunes!and!the!decidedly!American!style!that!marked!the!brand!of!populist! descriptions of the melodic process in Harris's music tally closely These Schoenberg's statements regarding the nature of the 'basic motive' and withcomposers.!!Below!is!an!excerpt!of!Harris!explaining!his!music.! the process of developing variation.l3 The following12extracts illustrate the FIG.!13!Harris!explains!his!technique. ! point:
Inasmuchas almostevery figure within a piece revealssome relationshipto it, the basic motive is often consideredthe 'germ' of the idea. Homophonicmusic can be calledthe style of 'developingvariation.'This means that in the successionof motive-formsproducedthroughvariationof the basic motive, there is something that can be comparedto development,to growth (1967, p. 8). Music of the homophonic-melodicstyle of composition. . . producesits material by, as I call it, developingvariation.This meansthatvariationof the featuresof a basic unit produces all the thematic formulationswhich provide for fluency, contrasts, variety, logic and unity, on the one hand, and character,mood, expression, and every needed differentiation, on the other hand - thus elaboratingthe idea of the piece (1975, p. 397).
!
A! second characteristic of Harris's autogenetic approach is discussed by Stehman in relation to the second movement of Symphony No. 2 (1934). In this !example (Ex. lb), we see 'how an element of one phrase is used as a springboard for its successor' (1973, p. 160). There are clear resonances here with! Schoenberg's illustration of'connective technique'. In an excerpt from his Chamber Symphony Op. 9 (shown here as Ex. 2), he shows how the end of one !phrase (G:-A-B-Ct) also initiates the onset of the next phrase (marked 2 SchoenbergChamberSymphony Op. 9, bars 8G92 (in Schoenberg 1995, Ex. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !Pye,!73.! p. 139) ! 27! 12
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!! course. For the moment, let us go back to the issue of melody.
Stehman (1973, p. 13) cites a 'textbook example of Harris' principle of melodic construction' from the first movement of the early Symphony ! American Portrait 1929, demonstrating the (evolution of a melodic line . . . from a single initial germ motive.' Stehman's example (ibid., p. 1039) is reproduced as Ex. la. The development of the 'germ' 'motive x' is described ! primarily in terms of interval expansion (the initial semitone becomes a tone, the two intervals subsequently combining in the stepwise minor third ! of the fourth bar). This first phrase is then regarded as 'a germ idea from which the entire Elrsttheme subsequently evolves' (ibid., p.l4) (Ia, Ib, Ic, Id in Ex. la). (C)Blackwell Publishers Ltd. 2000 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 13!Pye,!74.! !
Music Analysis, 19/i (2000)
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Schuman’s Compositional Technique !!!!!Schuman!was!once!asked!during!an!interview!after!the!performance!of! his!third!symphony,!“Why!is!it!that!you!modern!composers!never!write!a! melody?”!!Schuman!replied,!“My!music!is!all!melody.!!Can!you!sing!‘The!Star@ Spangled!Banner?’!!Then!I!guarantee!to!teach!you!to!sing!the!principal! melody!of!my!symphony!in!half!an!hour.”14! !!!!!Schuman’s!music,!though!irregular!and!angular!at!times,!is!basically!vocal.!! As!a!modern@traditionalist,!he!strays!not!too!far!from!the!influences!of!his! teacher,!Roy!Harris.!!Examples!from!Symphony$No.$4$(1941)!and!American$ Festival$Overture$(1939)!in!Figure!15!and!16!are!contrasts!between!the!
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angular!and!more!conservative!–!folk!like!melody!that!Harris!had!instilled!in! him.!!!
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FIG.!15!Schuman’s!Angular!melodies15!
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he can write one that would please the most hidebound conservashowcase!his!more!sensitive!side,!as!in!Figure!17.!!In!his!most!conservative! tive: J circa60 Ex. 3 compositions,!Schuman!could!still!employ!techniques!such!as!imitation,! I t -:1. Ex. 2 "AmericanFestivalOrture"
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!!!!!He!used!harmonies!at!times!for!the!purpose!of!texture!rather!than!
The Music of William Schuman
i9
establishing!a!relationship!in!progression!or!transition!from!one!section!to! honored devices of
imitation, augmentation, diminution, and so on. The resulting harmonies are usually dissonant,by text-book the!next.!!The!dissonance!he!uses!implies!oblique!interval!expansion,!a! standards.In the period from about I937 to about 1941 Schuman technique!of!adding!additional!non@chord!tones.!!It!is!not!a!jumble!of!notes! was so fond of parallelfourths and fifths that their use became a mannerism.The later music employs such progressionsless and put!together,!but!rather!a!use!of!polytonality,!bichordal!structure!or! less. As with most of the outstanding composers of this century, harmony is not, as a rule, a structuralelement in Schuman'slarge secundal!harmony.!!Schumanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s!control!of!harmonic!texture!allows!him!to! forms; that is to say, he does not normally employ key relationachieve!incredible!contrast!when!he!returns!to!his!more!conservative!roots.!! ships as a means of binding large sections together. But his harmony is not, on the other hand, a mere haphazardresult of the On!top!of!his!dissonant!textures,!we!also!find!the!influence!of!his!early!tin! combinationof melodic lines. Insteadthe counterpointis carefully pan!alley!music!and!jazz!in!the!rhythms!he!uses!in!Third$String$Quartet$(Fig.$ planned, not to proceed from one harmony to another,as in older music, but to result in a definite kind of harmonictexture, which 20).$ is maintainedconsistently for the length of the passagein question. Schuman's command of harmony enables him to achieve greater or contrast, or both, in two ways-by 17rendering the pre! intensityFIG.!18!Dissonant!vs.!Consonant!Harmony dissonant still more texture dissonant: vailingly Ex. 4
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31!
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20
The Musical Quarterly
favorite device with him. One of the most interestingexamplesof the opening of the slow movement of Musical polytonality in his music isThe ! 20 the Quarterly for Symphony Strings.'
favorite device with him. One of the most interestingexamplesof Ex.6 Larghiasno J-40 18! music is the opening of the slow movement of FIG.!19!Polytonality polytonalityr in his l_ for_ rd CoS m the Symphony T=Strings.' G. Copyr.il, 1943,
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Here the simultaneousemployment of harmonies belonging to in an effect of intense emotion. Some pieces different keys results r inl_Time the of _ War")mend polytonally, but most ofT=(e.g., "Prayer rd CoS Copyr.il, 1943, them end in a consonant triad, which, the logical outgrowth of i " e progressions, dissonant gzi I > gives as > much of a feeling of finality as the , G.?xr, dominant-toniccadence of older music. ! Schuman'srhythms are extremely varied,and while the fundamental pulse-beat may remain regular for long stretches, particuHere harmonies simultaneous in slow shift this beat belonging to sections, the metric employment larly the patterns above of In contrapuntal a fascinating there isofoften different results inpassages an effect intense emotion. Some pieces constantly. keys of stresses. He is 19 fond of accented off-beats, interplay especially FIG. 20 Jazz Rhythms in Time of end polytonally, but most of (e.g., as in the this lively "Prayer figure derivedfrom jazz:War")
them end in a consonant triad, which, the logical outgrowth of Ex. 7 Third String Quartet,1Fna * 3 _ dissonant A 1s- h. 6.> progressions, gives as much of a feeling of finality as the t-rf^ dominant-toniccadence of older music. Copyrig, 1942, y BooseyaHawIes9j. Schuman's are extremely and while the fundavaried, are integrated in larger patterns varied rhythms These rhythms that, as a rule and especially in the instrumental mental remainworks, for long hang together logi-stretches, particupulse-beat may regular we have as has been abandoned seen, Since, key-relationship cally.in slow metricitspatterns above this beat shift thecoherence, sections, larly structural as a means of achieving place is taken by either in entirely free forms or there thematic repetition, In contrapuntal free adaptais often a fascinating constantly. passagesofin the of old forms. Schuman's tions standard employ many fond Key Compositions: Sixth Symphony tonality) of stresses. Hefugues is(dual of accented off-beats, interplay of handlingthese devices of the form, but his method especially devices and on the traditional he rings as in thethis derived from changes procedures lively figure jazz:are quite un!!!!!!!I!believe!it!is!important!to!note!that!just!before!Schuman!had!composed! orthodox. The finale of the Third Quartet is a 2
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String particularly of the manner in which he adaptsold principles example striking 2 Third Ex. 1Fna George$Washington$Bridge$(1950),!he!had!already!mastered!his!technique!of! 71 The same String Quartet, * for piano. passage appears in the second piece of the "Three-Score Set" 3 _ 2 The 1s- h. material of 6.> this movement is used also in the finale of the Fourth A thematic
Symphony. The jazz-like figure of measure 3 appears in one form or another in many using!textural!harmony.!!Schuman!completed!his!Sixth!Symphony!in!1948.!! works.
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are in These varied that, as a rule and especially in the instrumentalworks, hang together logically. Since, as we have seen, key-relationshiphas been abandoned ! as a means of achieving structuralcoherence, its place is taken by thematic repetition, either in entirely free forms or in free adapta!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! of old forms. Schuman'sfugues employ many of the standard tions 18!Broder,!19.! ! of the form, but his method of handlingthese devices and devices 19!Broder,!20.! the changes he rings on the traditionalprocedures are quite un! 32! orthodox. The finale of the Third String Quartet is a particularly striking example of the mannerin which he adaptsold principles integrated larger patterns rhythms segment!centered!on!C#!@!Bb!–!F!–!D!and!the!bass!on!C!–!D!–!Eb!–!G.!!!
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! 679-125.MTS.Pye_pp243-274 9/8/03 1:34 PM Page 254 !!!!!!The!texture!is!unique,!but!it!can!be!related!to!Vincent!Persichetti’s!
harmonic!treatise!in!which!he!states,!"the!heroic!dualism!caused!by!the! resistance!of!the!diatonic!to!the!chromatic!and!a!focusing!of!that!opposition! 254 music theory spectrum 25 (2003)
/ Łý − Ł Ł Ł ý Ł ý −Ł −Ł −¦ ŁŁŁ ² Ł ¦ ¦ŁŁŁ ² ððð ŁŁ ý ² Ł Ł ² ŁŁð ² ŁŁ ðð − Ł Ł ¹ − Ł Ł 679-125.MTS.Pye_pp243-274 − − ŁŁ ŁŁ ŁŁ ýý 20 Ł Š # ¼ ² ð 9/8/03 ŁŁ 1:34 PM Pageð247 ðð ¦ ŁŁ FIG.!21!Harmonic!Duality!in!Schuman’s!Sixth!Symphony. ! . Str. / Ł Ł Ł −Ł Ł Ł ¦ ŁŁ ý ¦ ð ² ð ² Ł − Ł Ł Ł Ð − Ł ¦ Ł ¦ Ł schuman’s Ý # ¼ −Ł ¹ ¦bespoke ¹ ¹ sixth symphony½ ¹ −Łin¹william ¹ Ł set¼ genera Ł ¹ pitch-class ½ . m. 1 in!the!form!of!two!triad!plus!added@note!sonorities.”! 80
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4-20 4-14 4-20 To what extent, then, is it possible to construct a Parksequivocal harmonic focus are frequent and extensive, as, for style generic model of this duality, in both its focused and example, in the case of the Leggeramente section (mm. general forms, and how might such a model “render grasp169–273), where 4-14 sonorities (including occasional sub104 able aspects of structure that are otherwise elusive”? For exsets and supersets) underpin the thematic materials throughample, do the opposing tetrachords form part of a pervasive out. The sonorities that define particular sections of the work duality, infusing both the thematic (horizontal) and har3 3 in this way are denoted by their set-class names in the exam3 monic (vertical) dimensions? ple. It should be noted, however, that harmonic identity is 3 The role played by the primary tetrachords as the foci of a only one of many strands of opposition and coherence that broader chromatic and diatonic duality strongly suggests a pervade the Sixth Symphony. In particular, thematic identity theoretical model presenting two opposing genera.5-21 Ideally, remains crucial7-21 to the definition of form, with themes often such a(b) model would formalize the difference between set deployed in the manner of a cantus firmus, providing a classes intuitively associated with one or other of the primary thread of continuity through often complex contrapuntal tetrachords while also admitting some degree of ambiguity textures.21 In this role, Theme A is fragmented into its conexample 6(a)–(c). Schuman, Symphony No. 6, mm in set classes displaying a looser affiliation. The Parks model stituent motives, most notably in the closing measures of the of bespoke genera construction would appear to be ideally work (Aa in m. 630, and Ab in m. 638) or otherwise modi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! suited 20 to !Pye, such Richard a task. Before examining the proposed harwhile Pitch-Class retaining its identity (‘A’ inasmm. 94, 140, 273 etc.). C. "The Construction and Interpretation of fied Bespoke Set Genera 4-14 complex (for Sixth example, contrast is Models HarmonicDuality in map William Schuman's Symphony." 255.radically transformed into The monicof duality inofdetail, it will helpful members to out the musical It is also5-29[01368], more the quasi-fugal 1 !within which it operates. 7-z38[0124578], and 6-z46[012469] in Moderato con tempo, terrain6-z19[013478], subject (A ) that opens the moto in m. a50.shift f 21!Pye,!257.! Three further themes (B, C, and D) perform similar roles, mm. 95–100, seen in Ex. 7[d]). The tripartite structure of 80–123 to woo ! Formal design. A general topography of the work is pre33! this passage is reflected in the following taxonomy of set the be-bob inspi sented in Example 2, using thematic and harmonic identity 21 Cf. Dickinson 1985, 458, who finds motives used “serially” in the cenpresented indelineation. Examples the melodic segm as the classes principal means of structural Areas7–9. of untral Adagio.
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Key!Compositions:!George&Washington&Bridge& !!!!!George!Washington!Bridge!was!composed!in!1950!and!published!in!1951.!! The!first!performance!took!place!in!Interlochen,!MI.!!The!spearhead!of!the! project!was!William!D.!Revelli!and!the!University!of!Michigan!for!the! Michigan!School!Band!and!Orchestra!Association!(MSBOA).!!This!form!of! absolute!music!reflects!to!Schumanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s!experiences!of!passing!by!the!George! Washington!Bridge!everyday.!!He!agreed!only!to!compose!the!piece!if!the! commission!would!guarantee!a!large!number!of!schools!would!purchase!the! music.!!The!performances!were!not!guaranteed.!!This!deal!eliminated!the! need!for!a!large!commission.!!Schuman!wrote!a!snippet!on!his!interpretation! of!what!the!impression!the!piece!represents.!
FIG.!23!Schumanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s!impression!on!George&Washington&Bridge.22&
! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 22!Rhodes, Stephen. "A comparative analysis of the band compositions of William Schuman." ProQuest Dissertations and Theses, 61.! !
34!
!
! ! Analysis!of!George&Washington&Bridge:&Absolute!Music! ! !
George&Washington&Bridge&was!written!during!the!prime!years!of!Schumanâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s!
career.!!We!see!in!his!composition!a!mature!style!that!reflects!many!earlier!pieces,! but!also!expands!the!harmonic!texture!we!had!seen!in!his!Sixth!Symphony.!! Schuman!uses!in!George&Washington&Bridge!short!and!motivic!themes,!long!and! sustained!lines,!bitonality,!call!and!response!between!choirs!of!instruments,!and! massive!blocks!of!sounds!similar!to!earlier!works.!! !
There!are!four!main!themes!in!this!work.!!The!first!theme!opens!with!bitonal!
chords!in!Bb!major!in!the!low!brass!and!C!major!in!the!high!brass.!!The!chords,!being! a!step!apart!increases!the!harmonic!texture!and!dissonance.!!The!grit!of!the!chords! really!represents!the!absolute!music!he!depicts.!!! FIG.!24!Bichordal!Opening!Bb!â&#x20AC;&#x201C;!low!brass,!C!â&#x20AC;&#x201C;!high!brass!(mm.!1E4).23!
! ! !
A!rhythmic!bridge!takes!us!from!the!first!motive!to!the!second!motive.!!In!the!
bridge,!rhythm!plays!an!equally!important!role!as!the!harmonic!structure.! ! ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 23!Rhodes, 62.! !
35!
!
FIG.!25!Rhythmic!transition.24! ! ! ! ! ! !
The!rhythmic!“bridge”!allows!us!to!set!a!contrast!to!the!second!theme,!which!
is!less!strident,!but!more!chromatic!and!harmonically!ambiguous.!As!you!can!see!we! have!F#@F!natural!and!C!natural!–!C#.!!The!intervals!in!the!second!theme!below!are! angular,!having!many!thirds!and!fourths.!!The!end!of!the!phrase!ends!with!intervallic! angular,!perfect!5th,!syncopation.! FIG.!26!Theme!#2!–!Chromaticism!and!Angular!melody.25!
! !
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 24!Rhodes, 63. ! 25!Rhodes, 64.! !
36!
The!third!theme!is!more!rhythmic!and!disjunct!in!nature.!!It!contrasts!the! sustained!sonorities!in!the!beginning!and!has!an!offbeat!feel.!!The!phrasing!is! divided!into!two!rhythmic!subphrases.!!!!
FIG.!27!Theme!#3!â&#x20AC;&#x201C;!rhythmic!and!disjunct,!but!playful.!
!
!
! The!final!main!theme!is!stated!much!like!the!second!theme!â&#x20AC;&#x201C;!chromatic,! flowing,!and!a!bit!angular!in!nature.!!The!angular!moments!take!away!a!bit!from!the! flowing!line,!but!it!exemplifies!the!character!of!a!bridge!like!structure,!where! Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. angular!pieces!are!prominent!anywhere!on!the!structure.!!The!image!below!takes!a! snapshot!of!the!large!form!of!the!piece!(ABCB1A1Coda).!!Overall,!we!have!a!ternary! form,!where!we!are!introduced!to!a!Chordal/Rhythmic!motive,!transition!to!an! intervallic!motive!and!return!to!Rhythmic/Chordal!motive.!
! ! ! ! !
37!
FIG.!28!!Theme!#4!Flowing,!but!angular!
!
Activities Two of the activities in the lesson plan involved students in simple composition projects. Given the concept melody/harmony and its subconcepts of oblique interval expansion (tension crescendo), bitonality, triad of major and minor thirds, major seventh chord, pandiatonic tone cluster, and secundal chord, students were asked to compose short chordal phrases using similar dissonant harmonic structures.Another activity involved the concept of rhythm and its subconcepts of syncopation, augmentation, diminution, disjunct rhythm, and fourfold division of the beat and its variants.From these, students composed short rhythmic duets using similar meters, rhythms, and rhythmic devices. Two experimental exercises were included to involve students in creating their own pandiatonic tone clusters and bitonal sonorities during the warm-up period. Information and ideas for conducting mini-lectures on the following topics were given: melody/harmony, dynamics, rhythm, texture, form, and aesthetics. Two optional activities were suggested: a
field trip, whose objective was to examine the form and structure of a suspension bridge similar to the George Washington Bridge; and the inclusion of slides (photos and drawings of suspension bridges made or collected by band members) with the concert performance. In the final unit exam, given at the end of the lesson plan, students were asked to identify music terms, recognize melodic and harmonic intervals and chords, and, because analysis of
George Washington Bridge revealed
that the composition is predominantly homophonic, students were asked to identify aurally different types of homophonic textures. To accomplish the activities suggested in the teacher's lesson plan, it was necessary to organize a six-week teaching schedule in which all minilectures, class discussions, dictation work, and tests were carefully planned. The class discussion on aesthetics, for example, occurred during the last week of rehearsals. Student projects and assignments were 26 scheduled to coincide with class activities that covered the same concepts or skills.
!
FIG.!29!Form!Chart. !
Testing To determine the effect that the Unit Study Composition would have on student learning, a conceptual knowledge and aural skills pretest and posttest were administered to the band members. In the conceptual knowledge pretest, students were asked to identify basic music terms. Evaluation of these scores revealed that many students were unable to give satisfactory definitions for common music terms, especially those that explain how music should be performed. Toward the end of the six-week instruction period, a posttest of conceptual knowledge and aural skills was administered. The mean scores for the pre- and posttests are given in Figure 5. Although greatest improvement occurred on the conceptual knowledge posttest, much improvement was also noted on the aural skills posttest, particularly in aural discrimination of chords (215 percent increase). The overall improvement of aural discrimination was 102 percent. Clearly,aural dictation work in class had a significant effect on student learning.
!
Figure 4. Abbreviated low chart
The arch represents the relationbetween the composition's external structureand that of the bridge SECTIONC Cantabile Melody:Flowingmotionof the bridge
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Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
RhythmicallyActivated Staccato Chords
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 26!Garofalo, Robert J. Guides to Band Masterworks, 114.! !
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Ib) that has a rhythmic chordal accompaniment. This theme is not reAnalytical notes peated. Section A concludes with a Analysisof the seven structuralelereappearance of Theme Ia,beginning Examples!of!techniques!he!uses!in!George$Washington$Bridge$include! at measure 32. The form of section A ments of George Washington Bridge isI thus ternary (aba). included music examples and a comwork the is B (allegretto, flow chart. Section 4 meter, bepandiatonic!clusters,!tension!crescendo,!secundal!chords,!intervallic!relationships! Overall, plete Figure 5. Mean scores Student study guide Pretest Posttest Increase The student for at measure study guide introduces inConceptual Coda ABCB1A1 arch Knowledge form:(0-43) (see ginningGeorge Washington Bridge42) was orga12.64 +154% 32.10 Theme nized in A with masfive Section historical notes; activated parts: 4). II-rhythmically begins Figure (5th,!4th,!7th ),!chord!duality!and!rhythmic!figures!that!are!sometimes!in!counterpoint! Aural Skills Dictations(0-45) 14.24 +102% 28.75 list of concepts, subconcepts, and obMelodic Interval The fourfold staccato chords. divi8.68 of the 5.18 + 68% Each sive bitonal sonorities. jectives; glossary of music terms; acHarmonic Interval 3.60 7.51 +109% and assignments tivities, resources, variants of the beat and its sion with options; and a statement exare fiveChordal 5.86 +215% repetitions of this1.86idea (Theme with!the!longer!flowing!lines.!!! 6.70 3.60 + 86% student would be plaining how the in to this section acused extensively the composiis varied throughout Ia)Rhythmic evaluated. The first three contion, was discussed.
parts tained information similar to that included in the teacher's lesson 27 plan. In the activities section students were instructed to complete four out-ofclass assignments: listening and score study, home practice, and two short composition projects. One assignment required students to construct at least six dissonant chord structures similar to those used by Schuman in George Washington Bridge. They were then asked to assign a number to each chord on a scale from one (least dissonant) to six (most dissonant). Out of these chord structures students composed tension crescendos. To determine the tension ratingfor each chord, the structures were played at the piano. After the chords had been arranged according to dissonance, the outer
FIG.!30!Pandiatonic!Cluster !
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poser introduces melody (Theme I two varied repetit tition begins at me ond at measure phrase of each st III, Schuman bui scendo through t interval expansio This harmonic d increasingly disso ture that eventu sonant resolution the next section. S interesting harmo companiments to of these are ident b, and c. Section quiet passage (m harmonically rela found in section 183-186 the com tion to build mo section of the com Section B,, beg 187, is a restateme terial; this time, h mically activated s varied and the se By stacking inte Schuman conclud introduces the ne Section A1 begi with the reappear bitonal sonorities To emphasize th this important mu poser marked th than the beginnin the material by in tonal passages b the original idea. The coda begin with a tritonal so the full band minu ments of old m Theme III, reapp varied. The comp dissonant bitona solves to a resona chord. As I was analy tion, I was surpris similarity between the composition a Figure 4). Schum unaware of this time that he wrot ton Bridge.
39!
mej
harmonically related to the found in section B. In me COMPOSITION 183-186 the composer uses d tion to build motion into th a basis for section of the composition. 29 FIG.!32!Secundal!Chords ! Section B,, beginning at m developing: Figure 3b. Secundal chords 187, is a restatement of Theme terial; this time, however, the mically activated staccato chor ^ (meas. 100-101) m .616AS varied and the section is shor By stacking intervals of a V-1v < Habits '-?~~~~~~~~~ I^ Attitudes Schuman concludes section B introduces the next section. Section A1 begins at measu ~III.SKILLS: r with the reappearance of the m aural dexterous bitonal sonorities of the begi translative I To emphasize the recapitula --1 this important music idea, the j The Rehearsal-A Laboratory Experience in Applied Music Understanding poser marked the tempo " ! than the beginning." He also the material by interspersing n FIG.!33!Tension!Crescendo!(oblique!interval!expansion)30! tonal passages between phra the original idea. Figure 2. Tension crescendo (oblique interval expansion) The coda begins at measu with a tritonal sonority sound 6ths to and 5ths , (added above) melody | open A (meas. 125-129) Figure 3c. Accompaniment (open 5ths) o the full band minus percussion ments of old material, esp (meas. 113-115) Theme III, reappear but are varied. The composition ends J A I dissonant bitonal passage th s 8 solves to a resonantly scored C i P 9 f rp chord. As I was analyzing the. com f tion, I was P P-! surprised to find a s similarity between the arch fo the composition and the bridg Figure 4). Schuman was app 34 mej/april '81 unaware of this relationship time that he wrote George W From!the!late!1940s!through!the!mid@1950s!Schuman!was!his!most!prolific! ton Bridge. VThe performance ~;_IT~'
t
!
9?
17
:
'o
a
i
;
wi
h
1 de 3
.L s d
a
luJ
f
and!produced!his!most!mature!compositions.!!We!see!in!George$Washington$Bridge$ the!heightened!awareness!of!textural!harmony!that!Schuman!had!made!his! signature!as!a!premiere!American!composer.!!Here!was!a!sound!and!voice!that!was! unique!to!the!culture.!!After!listening!to!the!premiere!of!Schuman’s!Sixth!Symphony,! Vincent!Persichetti!said!that!“No!longer!is!one!conscious!of!technique!or!devices.!! Here!is!music!that!gets!under!the!notes!and!in!the!blood!stream.!!It!breathes!lyric! beauty!and!stamps!vivid!impression!upon!the!listener.”!!It!is!evident!that!Schuman! had!implemented!the!best!of!his!technique!from!the!Sixth!Symphony!into!a!quality! piece!of!wind!band!literature.$ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 29!Garofalo, 105. ! 30!Garofalo, 104.! !
40!
mej/april '81
VINCENT PERSICHETTI Modern Traditionalist: Twentieth-Century Harmony
CHAPTER THREE
!
41!
Introduction !
Vincent!Persichetti!was!a!prolific!composer,!educator!and!administrator!of!
his!time,!creating!over!150!works!in!a!plethora!of!genres!and!serving!forty!years!as!a! faculty!member!at!Julliard!as!the!chairman!of!the!Composition!Department.!!An! incredible!pianist!as!well,!he!was!able!to!captivate!audiences!with!his!wit,!talent!and! taught!a!great!deal!of!pianists!during!his!tenure.!!Persichetti’s!childlike!attitude!can! be!heard!in!the!etudes!written!in!the!Little&Piano&Book.&&His!Hymns&and&Responses&for& the&Church&Year!was!indispensable!by!church!choirs,!and!many!composition! students!referred!to!his!text,!Twentieth&Century&Harmony.&Musicians!during!his!time! would!learn!much!about!contemporary!music!through!his!first!four!compositions! for!band:!!Divertimento,&op.&42&(1950),&Psalm&for&band,&op.&53&(1952),&Pageant,&op.&59& (1953),&and!Symphony&for&Band&(Symphony&no.&6),&op.&69&(1956).1& &
We!will!discuss!the!traditionalKmodernist!technique!and!the!treatise!of!
twentiethKcentury!harmony!as!written!by!Vincent!Persichetti.!!His!contributions!to! the!teaching!world!are!unparalleled,!being!one!of!the!most!knowledgeable!in!score! study,!research,!and!rapport!with!students.!!Persichetti!encouraged!healthy,!creative! participation!in!music!at!all!levels!of!proficiency!while!shunning!dogmas!that! advocated!one!compositional!approach!at!the!expense!of!others.! !
This!serious!composition!figure!in!the!early!half!of!the!twentiethKcentury!had!
a!wit!that!was!lacking!in!pomposity.!!At!the!age!of!65!he!stated,!“I’ve!not!decided! what!I’ll!do!with!my!life.!!Perhaps!I!will!concertize!as!pianist,!but,!on!the!other!hand,! shouldn’t!I!bring!audiences!some!of!those!neglected!orchestral!pieces?!!Then!again! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1!Simmons,!174!–!176.! !
42!
I’d!love!to!have!a!larger!herb!farm,!if!it!weren’t!for!my!keen!interest!in!sailing.!!I! know!I’d!like!the!life!of!the!Maine!lobster!fisherman,!but!my!sculpting!would!keep! me!on!solid!ground.!!I’m!too!busy!with!composing!to!consider!what!my!life’s!work! will!be.!!I!suppose,!though,!at!some!point!I!should!decide!to!work!for!a!living.”!
! Early!Childhood! ! !
Vincent!Ludwig!Persichetti!was!born!on!June!6,!1915!K!the!son!of!Vincenzo!
Ruggiero!Persichetti!and!Martha!Buch.!!Vincent!was!a!second!generation!American,! his!father!had!emigrated!from!Italy,!originally!of!the!Abruzzi!region,!at!the!age!of! eleven,!becoming!a!banker!in!the!Philadelphia,!Pennsylvania.!!Vincent’s!showed! signs!of!an!affinity!for!music!at!an!early!age,!always!sitting!affixed!to!the!player! piano.!!At!the!age!of!five!he!was!enrolled!at!the!Combs!Conservatory!to!study!music! and!piano!with!Warren!Stranger.!!! !
At!the!tender!age!of!nine,!Vincent!Persichetti!audited!theory!classes!with!
Russell!King!Miller,!whom!he!would!cite!as!his!most!influential!teacher.!!Miller! would!let!Persichetti!write!“contraband”!music!to!which!he!would!delegate!“bumpy! melodic!lines”!and!“music!that!would!move!along!a!zigzag!path.”!!Always!looking!to! forward!his!music!education,!Persichetti!would!bombard!Miller!with!questions:!
!
“Why!did!Schumann!begin!so!many!pieces!so!far!from!the!tonic?!Did! Beethoven's!title!"Sonatas!for!Piano!and!Violin"!mean!that!he!considered!the! piano!more!important!than,!or!as!important!as,!the!violin?!Why!does!music! have!phrases,!answers,!sections,!and!development?!Can't!it!just!sit!there!like!a! prism!and!be!admired?!Can!an!atonal!work!be!consonant?”2! !
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2!Morris, Donald A. "The Life of Vincent Persichetti, with emphasis on his works for band." ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. N.p.: ProQuest, 1991. Print. 18-21.! !
43!
!
In!1929,!when!Persichetti!was!fourteen,!he!wrote!his!first!piece!called!Serenade'for'
Ten'Wind'Instruments,'prior!to!his!knowledge!of!Igor!Stravinsky.!!He!would!later!write!the! following!excerpt!in!consideration!of!the!effects!of!living!in!Philadelphia!and!how!his!family! nurtured!his!interest!in!music.! ! VP:$“In$the$then$acoustically$perfect$Academy$of$Music,$Leopold$Stokowski$and$ the$Philadelphia$Orchestra$offered$me$the$riches$of$the$past,$the$present,$and$@I$ believe$@the$future.$I$heard$all$the$great$performers$of$the$day$and,$in$another$great$ hall,$every$opera$the$"Met"$brought$to$town.$In$addition$to$conservatories,$the$city$ had$an$art$academy$that$allowed$me$to$enroll$while$going$to$public$school,$until$I$ could$graduate$from$both.$I$worked$with$paints,$clay,$and$wood,$and$have$been$ sculpting$ever$since,$probably$because$this$is$the$only$way$I$can$caress$sculpture.$I've$ tried$to$embrace$pieces$in$museums@without$success.$However,$the$Philadelphia$Art$ Alliance,$founded$in$the$year$of$my$birth,$let$me$touch$their$sculpture,$and$I$enjoyed$ the$company$of$artists$in$other$mediums.$There$was$the$Matinee$Musical$Club$ Orchestra.$Because$I$could$sight@read,$I$was$invited$to$be$their$pianist$at$eleven.$My$ colleagues$were$first@generation$Americans$who$now$hold$positions$in$major$ orchestras$across$the$country.$And$then$there$was$my$father,$deeply$involved$in$all$ the$early$works.$His$enthusiasm$was$infectious.$I$think$of$my$First$String$Quartet$as$ the$"Turkey$Quartet",$for$the$second$movement$winks$at$my$father,$who$sang$the$ early@morning$young$turkey$calls$he'd$heard$as$a$farm$boy$in$Towanda,$Pennsylvania.$ It$was$first$performed$on$14$March$1943,$at$the$League$of$Composers,$and$I$still$ remember$sitting$with$Elliott$Carter$and$Lukas$Foss$and$Leonard$Bernstein$(who$all$ had$premieres$on$that$concert),$listening$to$the$Stuyvesant$Quartet$play$the$finale$at$ precisely$half$the$correct$tempo.$My$father$wasn't$present,$and$I$am$grateful.”3! ! !
Development$and$Early$Exploration$ !
His!teachers!sparked!Vincent!Persichetti’s!early!interests:!composition!with!
Russell!King!Miller,!conducting!under!Fritz!Reiner,!and!piano!with!Olga!Samaroff.!! He!confesses!that!the!most!important!influences!to!his!mastery!of!composition! include!Joseph!Haydn!and!Schumann.!!He!prides!himself,!much!like!his!childhood! days,!of!being!unique!and!“eclectic”!in!his!writing,!implementing!the!“zigzag”! melodies.!!He!heard!Rachmaninoff!play!every!time!he!came!to!Philadelphia!and! listened!to!a!multitude!of!records!to!satiate!his!appetite!for!music.! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3!Shackelford, Rudy, and Vincent Persichetti. "Conversations with Vincent Persichetti." 105-106.! !
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!!!
“My!inner!ear!imagined!against!what!I!heard!with!my!outer!ear!at!the! performance.!That's!how!I!learned!to!write!for!orchestra.!!In!the!early!'30s,! Prokofiev's!First!Violin!Concerto,!Debussy's!Prelude!al'apresNmidi!d'un!faune,! Stravinsky's!Le!Sacred!u!printemps,!and!the!Fourth!Symphony!of!Sibelius! enriched!my!soul;!while!works!like!Casella's!Italia!rhapsody!and!Copland's! Scherzo!worried!me.”4!
! !
The!music!Persichetti!greatly!admired!could!be!counted!on!one!hand,!
including!Schumann’s!Fantasia,&Op.&17,&Beethoven’s&Op.&111,&Wozzeck,&Otello,&and!the! Gurrelieder.&&In!his!most!formative!teen!years!Persichetti!would!study!scores!by! Casella!and!Malipiero!–!a!gift!from!an!Italian!clerk!in!his!father’s!real!estate!office.!! He!knew!about!these!Italians!before!he!had!heard!and!experienced!Hindemith,! Bartok!or!Ives.5! !
Persichetti!and!Music! Persichetti’s compositional development did not follow a true linear progression. It is important to discern the idea that his compositional techniques were used during his mature compositional years in the 1950s. In 1929, at the age of 14 he had composed Opp. 1 and 2, and the Serenade No.1 for wind dectet and the Serenade No. 2 for piano. All these pieces would be the standard of his later repertoire – using compositional techniques such as polytonal harmony, angular melodies, irregular rhythms, and short sporadic motives. The 1940s were a rather silent time for Persichetti. This was the period he used to study the more conventional composers and experiment with more chromatic and atonal compositions. The more consistent and distinctive Persichetti voice was prominent from !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 4!Shackelford, 107-108. ! 5!Shackelford, 110-15.! !
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the 1950s to the 1960s. The early 1970s to the 1980s saw a phase that we can relate to Aaron Copland’s last compositional years (including Emblems in the 1960s). Persichetti established a voice by amalgamating the techniques he found all around him. He believed that the combination of all the styles of music is what would speak the future language of composition – a renaissance. As he grew older, he believed truly that he had no purpose to try to please the listener. Persichetti also admonished the idea of writing music in the style of serialism, and confidently started each of his pieces with a thematic or dramatic idea. His philosophy was to create sound gestures first, and then manipulation techniques are used later, implying that serialism has helped the composer avoid “disparate melodic, harmonic, and contrapuntal devices and irresponsible changes of textures and patterns.” From my earliest days, there seem to have been strands of grazioso and grit present in my music. Some pieces contain one or the other of the ingredients, while some have both. At eleven, I wrote a very hospitable intermezzo, set politely in an Eflat modal area, alongside a razor-sharp keyless scherzo, whose "major" and "minor" chord structures were whipped into a tonicless batter. So I set the tone right from the start. No, my music doesn't fall into periods. I feel sure that somewhere within me there must be a female gene, but I happen to be strongly male -with no periods or variants. There are some who know only my "graceful" music, and others only my "gritty" music. Then there are those who know my early gracious" works and later "gravelly" ones, and think I am changing -or possibly "progressing”!6 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 6!Shackelford, 112-113.! !
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! ! ! FIG.!34!COMPLETE!BAND!WORKS7!
!
Divertimento,!op.42,!1950! Psalm,!op.53,!1952! Pageant,!op.59,!1953! Symphony!for!Band!(Sym.!no.6),!op.69,!1956! Serenade!no.11,!op.85,!1960! Bagatelles,!op.87,!1961! So!Pure!the!Star,!chorale!prelude,!op.91,!1962! Masquerade,!op.102,!1965! Turn!not!thy!Face,!chorale!prelude,!op.105,!1966! O!Cool!is!the!Valley!(Poem!for!Band),!op.118,!1971! Parable!IX,!op.121,!1972! A!Lincoln!Address,!op.124a,!band,!1973! O!God!Unseen,!chorale!prelude,!op.160,!1984!
!
!
Persichetti!is!best!known!today!for!works!in!the!windKband!medium.!! William!Schuman!admired!Persichetti’s!works!for!band!stating,!“Vincent!was!not!an! original!orchestrator,!except!when!he!wrote!for!band.!I!felt!that!his!band!scoring!is! the!best!scoring!he!did.!!I!liked!it!very!much.”8! !
In!the!performance!of!his!Divertimento,&Persichetti!was!able!to!collaborate!
with!the!great!Edwin!Franko!Goldman!in!June!1950.!!The!two!men!were!able!to! create!a!memorable!piece!that!would!be!etched!into!the!standard!repertoire!of!band.!! This!commission!led!Goldman!to!truly!believe!the!debt!of!gratitude!Persichetti!had! to!influences!such!as!Roy!Harris!and!Aaron!Copland.!!Goldman!states,!“For!all!one! can!say!of!the!composer’s!debt!to!Harris!or!Copland,!the!music!has!a!personality!of! its!own.!!Its!lack!of!pretentiousness!conceals!immense!skill!and!sensual!sensibility.!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 7!Simmons, Walter. The Music of William Schuman, Vincent Persichetti, and Peter Mennin. 265-277.
!
8!Simmons,
!
267-269.!
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Persichetti’s!exploitation!of!band!timbres!and!sonorities!is!highly!imaginative,!and! he!has!not!been!afraid!to!score!lightly!or!to!call!for!unusual!combinations!of! instruments…!Persichetti’s!music!is!gentle,!buoyant,!moving!and!diverting!in! succession…!The!Divertimento&as!a!whole!is!among!the!most!successful!works!that! have!been!added!to!the!band!repertory!in!many!years.”9! !
TwentiethNCentury!Harmony!by!Persichetti! ! !
Vincent!Persichetti!had!written!TwentiethVCentury&Harmony:&Creative&Aspects&
and&Practice!with!the!idea!of!creating!a!twentieth!century!common!practice.!!Of! course,!this!may!seem!absurd!because!Persichetti!advocated!a!nonpartisanship! orientation!when!it!came!to!music!composition!and!its!artistic!purpose.!!Overall,!it! seems!that!it!was!a!bit!at!odds!with!what!he!spoke!about,!but!definitely!reflected!the! practice!of!composition!in!his!own!works.!!Persichetti!was!a!staunch!advocate!of! making!modernist!music!to!be!accessible!to!the!audience,!be!it!absolute!music,! thematic!or!programmatic.10!!! !
Unfortunately,!this!book!was!not!held!in!high!acclaim.!!Many!thought!of!his!
practices!to!be!at!odds!because!he!was!amalgamating!different!styles!of! composition.!!His!book!was!thought!of!giving!devices!rather!than!ideas.!!It!seems! that!his!ideas!of!musical!rhetoric!and!harmonic!texture!is!no!longer!a!common! practice!for!today’s!sounds,!but!is!worth!revisiting!for!another!close!look.!!Other! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 9!Morris, Donald A. "The Life of Vincent Persichetti, with emphasis on his works for band." 184-198.
!
10
Schuman, William. "The Complete Musician: Vincent Persichetti and Twentieth-Century Harmony." 379-381.!
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camps!of!composition!rivaled!its!stance!during!the!time,!most!clearly!the!serialists.!! Yet,!as!duly!stated!by!Arnold!Schoenberg,!Perschetti’s!compositional!ideas!have!ties! to!serialism.!!Persichetti!printed!in!the!introduction!of!his!book,!“Any!tone!can! succeed!any!other!tone,!any!tone!can!sound!simultaneously!with!any!other!tone!or! tones,!and!any!group!of!tones!can!be!followed!by!any!other!group!of!tones,!just!as! any!degree!of!tension!or!nuance!can!occur!in!any!medium!under!any!kind!of!stress! or!duration.”11! !
The!possibility!that!due!to!Persichetti’s!inability!to!clearly!state!his!ideas!of!
harmonic!texture!and!amalgamation!and!differentiate!between!other!camps!did!not! sit!well!with!his!readers.!!Yet,!there!is!no!doubt!that!his!compositions!influenced! music!to!move!forward!and!represent!the!traditional!modernists!of!his!time.!
Key!Compositions:!Pageant' ! ! Edwin!Franko!Goldman,!on!behalf!of!the!American!Bandmasters!Association! (ABA),!commissioned!Pageant&in!1953.12!!It!is!very!reminiscent!of!his!earlier!work! Psalm&for&Band&in!that!they!both!start!with!a!warm!first!section!that!transition!to!an! upKtempo!allegro!section.!!The!opening!3Knote!motif!by!solo!horn!is!much!like!a! sunrise!that!gives!way!to!the!warmth!of!the!clarinet!entrance.!!The!modal! counterpoint!allows!us!to!hear!the!motivic!conversation!of!brass,!woodwinds,!or! combinations!of!both.!!The!festive!2/4!section!is!the!mixture!of!diatonic!melody,!the! polytonal!irregular!rhythm!in!the!accompaniment!and!the!close!tie!to!the!3Knote! motive!at!the!beginning!of!the!piece.!!! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 11!Schuman,!382K383.! !
! !
12!Morris,
184-196.
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!
Written!to!be!accessible,!the!piece!is!perfect!for!younger!musicians!to!be!
exposed!to!the!modernistic!style!of!composers!in!his!era.!!The!premiere!of!the!work! took!place!in!Miami,!Florida!where!in!March!1953;!the!American!Bandmasters! Association!convention!took!place.!!After!a!few!performances!following!its!premiere,! the!work!itself!was!not!fully!revisited!until!it!was!recorded!in!1977!by!the! Northwestern!University!Symphonic!band!under!the!direction!of!John!Paynter.!!! !
Though!Persichetti!did!not!care!much!about!entertaining!his!audience,!
Pageant!is!accessible!due!to!its!warmth,!simple!directness,!formal!sophistication!and! expressive!content!â&#x20AC;&#x201C;!all!mixed!with!the!modernistic!techniques!of!dissonance,! polytonality,!and!irregular!rhythms.!!!
Analysis!of!Pageant:'Increasing!the!Band!Repertoire! ! !
Pageant&is!a!composition!that!reflects!Persichettiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s!idea!of!amalgamating!
techniques!of!old!and!new.!!The!opening!section!gives!us!a!look!to!the!modal! counterpoint!of!old!renaissance!music.!!The!second!section!is!a!more!joyous!parade! that!uses!some!of!the!motives!in!the!first!part!of!the!piece,!especially!the!beautiful! horn!opening!of!a!perfect!fourth.!!Though!this!is!not!one!of!Persichettiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s!most! revered!wind!band!works,!its!serene!melodic!opening!shows!us!that!his!modernist! techniques!do!not!diminish!the!musical!quality!of!his!compositions,!but!rather! announces!the!coming!of!the!new.!!He!states!his!philosophy!quite!clearly!that!the! amalgamation!of!techniques,!the!old!with!the!new,!is!the!true!wave!of!the!future.! !
The!piece!contains!stylistic!beauty!in!that!motives!are!shared!between!the!
two!sections.!!It!has!a!structural!sophistication!that!blend!old!and!new! compositional!techniques,!and!creates!layers!that!can!be!best!described!as!lyricalK
!
50!
cubism.!!Persichetti!uses!motivic!integration!to!directly!tie!and!create!flow,! especially!in!the!second!movement!of!the!work.!!Finally,!he!shows!his!cycles!of! motives!and!how!they!relate!to!certain!sections!in!the!piece,!all!the!while!using! unique!combinations!or!call!and!response!sections!between!textures!of!instruments.!! The!timbral!qualites!are!unique!and!can!represent!sounds!that!were!new!to!the!ear,! yet!clear!enough!for!the!listener!to!understand!what!is!happening!with! accompaniment,!polytonality,!irregular!rhythms,!and!angular!lines.! ! FIG. 35 Section I: An Essay in Modal Counterpoint13 1–3 Germinal motive, quartal (pentatonic) in solo horn, based on B@. Note: the horn C must be held across the barline, into the first sound of the clarinets. (See Apendice I) 3–18 “A,” 3-part modal counterpoint (or 2 parts, with lower voice enriched by parallel thirds), loosely periodic. 19–27 “B,” or “Chorale.” Roughly, 4 antecedent measures in trombones & basses answered by 5 consequent (but non-conclusive) measures in woodwinds and euphonium with subtle bass drum enhancements. The tonal center is E@, the counterpoint is still modal but now first-species, and the section ends on the dominant. A dolce treatment is called for, in mezzo forte. (See Apendice I) 43–58 Second full statement of “A,” begun almost identically to the first, but with a flute obligato countermelody marked sereno. (See Apendice I) 59–66 Third statement of “B,” now in C major (earlier observations still apply). The orchestration is more like that of the first statement than that of the second. The ending is even less conclusive than before; in fact, it cannot be definitively fixed at measure 66. (See Apendice I) 66–72 Concluding statement of Movement I, with the third Chorale statement trailing off into references to “A” and a restatement of the opening horn motto. The final sounds are those of the clarinets’ three-part modal counterpoint, and the final chord is tonic. (See Apendice I) !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 13!Goza, David. Coming to Terms With Persichetti's Pageant. 1-2. ! !
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FIG. 36 Section II, A Street Parade14 73–121 First large section, “Exposition” 73–80 First half of Theme A, with a 4-bar antecedent played by the snare drum over a bitonal structure and a 4-bar mostly pentatonic consequent in high woodwinds, (See Apendice J) 101–09 First statement of “B,” beginning in C and moving to D. The theme is eight measures long (4 + 4), but a phrase elision at 108 sets up a 2-bar extension, resulting in an “extra” measure. (See Apendice J) “Second Developmental Section” 190–209 Two statements of Theme B, structurally similar to 101–21. (See Appendice K)
!
“The Final Stretch” 244–51 A simultaneous reprise of Themes A & B in B@ & E@ respectively, against a steadily rising “oom-pah” accompaniment in middle voices. (See Appendice K) 288–95 An 8-bar coda with a very rich final chord. (See Appendice L)
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 14!Goza,!2.! !
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AARON COPLAND A New Perspective
CHAPTER FOUR
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53!
Introduction Aaron Copland is an iconic American composer whose humble background is deeply rooted in his family’s Lithuanian Jewish Descent. Born on November 14, 1900 Copland was born the youngest of five children. Copland’s father Anglicized their last name ‘Kaplan’ to Copland before he had emigrated from Russia. Copland’s father, Harris, was not very musical, but his mother, Sarah, played the piano and allowed young Copland to take music lessons. The Copland family owned a department store in Brooklyn, New York. Copland’s early piano lessons would be with his sister, Laurine, but soon would advance to study with Leopold Wofsohn, with additional harmony and counterpoint with Rubin Goldmark. Having a high affinity for music, Copland would graduate Boys’ High School in 1918 and would soon have aspirations to study in France. During the three years prior to his departure, he would earn a living playing the piano. He would later state, “I had read in the magazine Musical America of a plan by the French government to establish a summer school for American musicians in the Palace of Fontainbleau, a short distance from Paris… I was in such a rush to enroll that I was the first student to sign up and be accepted. Actually, I was one out of nine awarded scholarships. My parents were less than enthusiastic, but it was known that any well-educated musician had to have the European experience. In the past, that had meant Germany, but since the war, the focus for the arts had shifted to France.”1 The trip to France would be the fountain of much of Aaron Copland’s works throughout his career. Influenced by the art scene, jazz music, and the social climate of !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1! Aaron Copland and Vivian Perlis. Copland 1900 Through 1942. New York: St. Martin's, 1984, 35.!
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the decades to come, his most important lessons in composition would be learned through his master teacher, Nadia Boulanger. He would study with her from 1921 through 1924. The decades that would follow would show the progression of Copland’s works in relation to the political climate, his leftist political stance, and his search for creating an American voice. We would see in the 1930s Copland’s efforts to reach to the masses and allow his music to be populist and relate to the masses. Billy the Kid (1939) would use American folk elements and became extremely popular. In the 1940s, the Americana voice in Copland would be most prominent. A series of works written during this period would slate his name as an enduring voice in American music. Still, his music would resound the influences of Nadia Boulanger, Igor Stravinsky and jazz. Prime examples of works from the forties include A Lincoln Portrait (1942), into which Copland incorporated American folk tunes, his ballet Rodeo (1943), his Fanfare for the Common Man (1943), and his modern dance work for Martha Graham, Appalachian Spring (1944). The 1950s were stricken with turmoil, especially after President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s inaguration in 1953, for which Copland’s A Lincoln Portrait was performed. He was questioned before congress about his perceived far-leftist political stance, but Copland would prove not be a traitor to his own friends. A Lincoln Portrait was singled out as evidence of his socialist leanings by certain members of congress. The 1960s and 1970s were important decades in Copland’s experimental stage. He would dabble in serialist-like techniques and revisit some of the cubist and jazz influences from his earlier days. These two decades late in his career would be a period to which he would abandon his populist views and switch into a modern-nationalist composer.
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Copland would write about his piece Emblems between 1963 and 1964, “An Emblem stands for something – it is a symbol. I called the work Emblems because it seemed to me to suggest musical states of being: noble or inspirational feelings. The exact nature of these emblematic sounds must be determined for himself by each listener.”2
Influence of Nadia Boulanger Nadia Boulanger would inspire, challenge and grow Copland’s compositional technique. She would also show Copland that the best way to learn is to experience music as much as he could in live performances. Copland’s time at Fontainbleau and at Boulanger’s home in France – 36 rue Ballu – would introduce him to the leading artists in Europe and Copland would become Boulanger’s first American student. “I no longer recall what Mademoiselle Boulanger was doing that day, harmonically speaking, that was so striking, although I remember that the subject was Boris Godunov. Her sense of involvement in the whole subject of harmony made it more lively that I ever thought it could be. She created a kind of excitement about the subject, emphasizing how it was, after all, the fundamental basis of our music, when one really thought about it. I suspected that first day that I had found my composition teacher.”3
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 2!Copland,
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3
Aaron. Emblems. New York: Boosey and Hawkes, 1965.
Aaron Copland and Vivian Perlis. Copland 1900 Through 1942. New York: St. Martin's, 1984, 35.!
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Boulanger was keen in introducing contemporary compositional techniques in music, something with which many most American teachers had little experience. She would teach Copland everything from pre-Bach to postStravinsky and the very structure of composition: harmonic transposition, figured bass, score reading, organ registration, instrumental techniques, structural analyses, the school fugue, the free fugue, and the Greek modes and Gregorian chant.4 Copland was nurtured by Boulanger’s support and air of confidence in the young composer. Boulanger’s influence would also cause Copland to delve into the deep study of what she termed Stravinsky’s “non-string” works, including the neoclassical Octet and Symphony for Winds. The Octet really showed Stravinsky’s linear concept and rhythmic structure, also influenced by the jazz idiom.
“In this work Stravinsky establishes himself as a master of geometric
construction; his thought is translated into precise lines – simple, classic – and the authority of his creative writing reveals by its leanness and its concision, an unquestionable power.”5 When Copland struggled to find his own compositional voice, he would rely on the support of Boulanger and the compositions of Stravinsky. Copland would analyze more and more of Stravinsky’s work and learned more of the musical elements from his works.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 4!Aaron!Copland,!Copland(on(Music,(New!York:!W.W.!Norton!&!Company,!1963,!87.!
! 5Teresa!Walters,!“Nadia!Boulanger,!Musician!and!Teacher:!!Her!Life,!Concepts!and!Influences!
(Volume!I),”!(DMA!diss.,!Peabody!Institute!of!the!Johns!Hopkins!University,!1981),!92.!
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“There was also much to learn from Stravinsky’s bold use of dissonance and his unusual instrumental combinations that projected sharply defined colors so differently from the luminous soft lines of French impressionism. I was particularly struck by the strong Russian element in his music. He borrowed freely from folk materials, and I have no doubt that this strongly influenced me to try to find a way to a distinctly American music. It was easy to see a parallel between Stravinsky’s powerful Slavic rhythmic drive and our American sense of rhythmic ingenuity. The most important thing for me, though, was that Stravinsky proved it was possible for a twentieth-century composer to create his own tradition.”6 Copland and Jazz Copland was thoroughly influenced by jazz in the 1920s. Composers of the time were using the term jazz and ragtime almost interchangeably. In Copland’s terms, he used jazz rhythms predominantly by writing tied syncopation.
FIG. 37 Tied Syncopation
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Copland, Aaron, and Vivian Perlis. Copland 1900 Through 1942. New York: St. Martin's, 1984. 35-99.!
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This very rhythm can be seen repeated numerously in Emblems, especially in his use of rhythmic displacement. We will discuss this closely in the analysis of Emblems. We also find Copland practicing the use of the lowered third as an indicator of the blues idiom and chromaticism.
Cubism Influencing Copland Cubism is an avant-garde art form that was revolutionized by Pablo Picasso. Its characteristics include objects that are broken into pieces, like shattered glass, re-assembled and created into an abstracted form. This motive of broken motives would appear in Emblems. During the first two decades of the twentieth-century, cubism inspired architects, writers, and musicians – including composer Aaron Copland. Copland was first introduced to the art form when he studied in Paris and Fontainebleau, France in 1921. During his time in France, he heard radical modern music by Ives and Ravel and mingled with French intellectuals, including theater critic Harold Clurman, cubist painter Marcel Duchamp, conductor Serge Koussevitzky, and fellow composer Roger Sessions. With Copland’s exposure to cubism, he would embark on a journey where his technique would include fragments of motives, or variations on a motive that would be pieced together much like a cubist work. Two works are most prominent in this theory, including Copland’s early work, Piano Variations (1930) and the CBDNA commission, Emblems.
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FIG. 38 Nude Descending a Staircase (1912), Marcel Duchamp.
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Key Compositions: Piano Variations 1930 The Piano Variations (1930) was one of the first to show Coplandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s interest in serialist music. Much like Emblems, Copland shows early intentions in his Piano Variations of composing absolute music. Incredibly, this was the exact same time when Copland had been writing much of the music he had deemed reachable by the masses. His Piano Variations really only drew acclaim from close musical circles that understood what he had created. Similarly, Emblems had a lukewarm reception from its audiences due to its jaunty, off beat, dissonant, and uncharacteristic harmonies that were coming from the master of Americana music. When one looks at this excerpt from the Piano Variations, that the influence of jazz rhythm, the placement of uncomfortable rhythm, and the pitch class that seems to tie Coplandâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s music loosely to the practice of serialism is evident.
FIG. 39 Rhythmic Displacement Piano Variations, Vivace, mm. 151-158.
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FIG. 40 Rhythmic Displacement/Signs of Serialism Piano Variations, mm. 17-38.
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The CBDNA 1964 Commission: Limitless Boundaries Keith Wilson outlined the boundaries of the (Emblems) commissioning project in 1963. In May 1963, Wilson wrote: “The purpose of this commission is to enrich the band repertory with music that is representative of the composer’s best work, and not one written with all sorts of technical or practical limitations.” Wilson’s statement would become the basis of Emblems and should be considered when assessing the difficulty of the piece. It might be easy to speculate, that Copland did not take Emblems seriously, and thus the parts do not lay well technically. Yet, when we keep in mind that limitations were boundless for Copland, that Wilson gave him the permission to write advanced quality literature, was the grounds for the outcome of the piece. When Copland accepted the commission, Keith Wilson also suggested to Copland a number of already familiar works to reference in orchestration and form: Hindemith’s Symphony in B flat, Creston’s Celebration Overture and Prelude and Dance, William Schuman’s George Washington Bridge and Chester Overture, and Piston’s Tunbridge Fair. Similarly, it is almost uncanny the relation between the ternary form and columns of sound that we hear from both George Washington Bridge and Emblems. The technical difficulty of the work lies in the following line that Wilson sent to Copland on July 4, 1963, reiterating the level of music the commission required:
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“We want you to feel free to write whatever you think would be effective for this large group of wind instruments, and not what the average high school band can play. We have some excellent bands whose members have technical proficiency equal to that of professional musicians. Please do not feel restricted in any way.”7
Analysis of Emblems: A New Perspective Emblems was a stage of experimentation for Copland’s compositional development. In the 1930s and 1940s, Copland’s works were very accessible to its audiences, but he created a new voice in implementing folk music and the use of dissonance and serial techniques. FORM The basic form of Emblems can be summed up as ternary. It has the basic outline of A-B-A’-Coda. Emblems resemblance to George Washington Bridge is most evident in its form and towering chords at the beginning and end of each piece. One must look back to Copland’s thoughts on cubism to really understand the subsections of this piece. It has the picture of fragmentary motives that were put back together to create larger sections. Take note of the multiple subsections and its role in creating such an intricate pattern within the work.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 7Carnochan,
Robert M. "Aaron Copland's "Emblems"." Pro Quest Dissertations and Theses. N.p.: ProQuest, 1999, 15-16. !
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FIG. 41 Simple Form â&#x20AC;&#x201C; Ternary8
FIG. 42 Full Form9
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 8!Ibid,!55.!
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9Ibid,!56.!
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FIG. 43 Subsections of B.10
FIG. 44 Subsections of returning A.11
HARMONY There is balance and contrast within Emblems, showcasing strong dissonance in the outer sections and a more consonant melody with Amazing Grace. His use of consonant 4th and 5th harmonic intervals to accompany Amazing Grace is closely related to pieces found in Southern Harmony choral books. Copland makes use of multiple techniques of modern and traditional practice. He uses sequential writing (mm. 130-137) with ascending/descending motives (minor 3rds in mm. 4-7) and contrary chromatic motion in measures 1314 in 2nd and 3rd trombone. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 10Ibid,!60.! !! 11Ibid,!63.!! !
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FIG. 45 Section B mm. 130-137 (Sequential Writing).12
FIG. 46 Ascending/Descending Motives (m3) mm. 4-7.13
FIG 47. Contrary Chromatic Motion in trombones, mm. 13-15.14
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 12Ibid,!69.!!
! 13Ibid,!69.
!!
14
McCallum, Wendy M. "Pedagogical Style and Influence of Nadia Boulanger on Music for Wind Symphony, an Analysis of Three Works by her Students: Copland, Bassett, and Grantham." University of North Texas. N.p.: University of North Texas, 2004.!
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An abundance of tonal clusters (mm. 18-19) and bitonality (mm. 212-214) can be identified, but is also complimented by the use of a traditional hymn tune whose harmonic movement was written by Copland long before he considered using the melody. The principal tonal centers in the major sections of the work are from C (A) to G (B) with the return to C (A).15 RHYTHM It is evident that jazz had a large role in many of the syncopated lines in Emblems. It is piece where we find that rhythm plays an equal importance to the melodic line. It at times can be playful. It is most evident that Copland intended rhythm to be held as important as melody when he introduces syncopation as the introduction to the B section.
FIG. 48 Section B snare drum motive, mm. 108-110.
Space (rests), rhythmic pacing, and the forward movement at the beginning and end of larger sections also indicate the importance of rhythm. The â&#x20AC;&#x153;tied syncopationâ&#x20AC;? creates a dance-like feel, while slower sections establish the importance of silence on the beat and emphasizes the offbeat pattern. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 15!Ibid,!45.!
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FIG. 49 Jazz influence in cl., pn, and crnt.: syncopation mm. 142-152.
FIG. 50 Coda Fanfare, mm. 353-356.
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MOTIVES/MELODIC LINES Copland used a contrast of conjunct and disjunct melodic lines, much like Persichetti’s “zig-zag” melodies. It can be seen in the examples below from the cornet lines. This contrast makes for the towering gesture at the beginning, with more disjunct lines, followed by flowing conjunct melodic lines that makes use of the song Amazing Grace. It sets up a stark contrast that juxtaposes the large intervallic leaps.
FIG. 51 Conjunct Melody in the Cornet, mm. 7-9.16
FIG. 52 Disjunct Melody in the Cornet, mm. 298-301.
FIG. 53 Conjunct Melodic Line Amazing Grace, flute, mm. 84-92.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 16!Ibid,!42.!!
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ORCHESTRATION When deciding the orchestration for the piece, Copland used help from Keith Wilson, who recommended a few wind band pieces for reference. Yet, Copland also took liberty to use unusual instruments not commonly seen in the wind band medium, including bongos and celeste. The bongos were a touch of Cuban jazz, and the celeste was transferred from his experience in orchestral compositions. Copland also uses a string bass to help supplement the low end of the ensemble. In Emblems, Copland stays consistent with his cubist views, making sure that he explores different combinations of instruments and also contrasting the melodic line by allowing entire sections to take part in “piecing” phrases together. “As a composer I get great pleasure from cooking up tonal combinations… Orchestral know-how consists in keeping the instruments out of each other’s way, so spacing them that they avoid repeating what some other instrument is already doing, at least in the same register, thereby exploiting to the fulles extent the specific color value contributed by each separate instrument or grouped instrumental family.”17
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 17Copland,!Perlis,!87.!!
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CONCLUSION Though many thought that Copland did not take Emblems seriously, it is obvious, through careful analysis that the full gamut of his compositional language is used in this one piece. The influences of cubism, Boulanger, Stravinsky, jazz, serialism, and the works of Schuman and Persichetti deeply impacted Copland in his choices of techniques incorporated into this work. The amalgamation of compositional styles can also be related to Persichetti’s Harmonic Treatise, where multiple compositional techniques could be used to compose a piece. The amalgamation of compositional styles may be the “enigma” that many listeners ponder when they hear Emblems. Figuratively, within the piece, we find the vast web of social acceptance within a nation whose patchwork of cultures and races is interwoven within Emblems.
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Bibliography, , Arvey, Verna. Studies of Contemporary American Composers: William Grant Still. New York: J. Fischer & Brother, 1939. Bernard, Jonathan W. The Music of Edgar Varese. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1987. Bessom, Malcolm E., and Aaron Copland. "Conversation with Copland." Music Educators Journal. March ed. Vol. 59. N.p.: Sage Publications Inc, 1973. 4049. Print. Broder, Nathan. "The Music of William Schuman." The Musical Quarterly. January ed. Vol. 31. N.p.: n.p., 1945. 17-28. Print. Carnochan, Robert M. "Aaron Copland's "Emblems"." Pro Quest Dissertations and Theses. N.p.: ProQuest, 1999. Print. Clayson, Alan. Edgar Varese. London: Sanctuary Publishing Limited, 2002. Copland, Aaron, Copland on Music, New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1963, 87. Copland, Aaron. Emblems. New York: Boosey and Hawkes, 1965. Copland, Aaron, and Vivian Perlis. Copland 1900 Through 1942. New York: St. Martin's, 1984. 35-99. Print. Copland, Aaron, and Vivian Perlis. Copland Since 1942. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1989. 1-325. Print. Crist, Elizabeth B., and Wayne Shirley, eds. The Selected Correspondence of Aaron Copland. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006. 1-191. Print. Dickinson, Peter. "Copland at 75." The Musical Times. November ed. Vol. 116. N.p.: Musical Times Publication Ltd., 1975. 967-70. Print. Dickson, Peter, ed. Copland Connotations Studies and Interviews. New York: The Boydell Press, 2002. 66-74. Print. Douglass, Fannie H. "A Tribute to William Grant Still." The Black Perspective in Music 2, no. 1 (1974): 51-53. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1214149 . Evett, Robert. "Psalm for Band by Vincent Persichetti." Notes. December ed. Vol. 13. N.p.: Music Library Association, 1955. 147-48. Print.
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Morris, Donald A. "The Life of Vincent Persichetti, with emphasis on his works for band." ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. N.p.: ProQuest, 1991. Print. Northcott, Bayan. "Notes on Copland." The Musical Times. November ed. Vol. 12. N.p.: Musical Times Publications Ltd., 1953. 686-89. Print. Oja, Carol J. Black Music Research Journal. Vol. 12. Chicago: Center for Black Music Research - Columbia College, 1992. Oja, Carol J., and Judith Tick. Aaron Copland and his World. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005. 81-255. Print. Persichetti, Vincent, and Flora R. Schreiber. Schuman. New York: G. Schirmer Inc., 1954. 49-84. Print. Polisi, Joseph W. American Muse. New York: Amadeus Press, 2008. 1-363. Print. Pye, Richard. "Asking about the Inside: Schoenberg's Idea in the Music of Roy Harris and William Schuman." Music Analysis. March ed. Vol. 19. N.p.: n.p., 2000. 69-98. Print. Pye, Richard C. "The Construction and Interpretation of Bespoke Pitch-Class Set Genera as Models of HarmonicDuality in William Schuman's Sixth Symphony." Music Theory Spectrum. Fall ed. Vol. 25. N.p.: University of California Press, 2003. 243-74. Print. Rau, William. "To Replicate or Not to Replicate: Is That Schuman's Question?." Sociology of Education. January ed. Vol. 74. N.p.: American Sociological Association, 2001. 75-77. Print. Rhodes, Stephen. "A comparative analysis of the band compositions of William Schuman." ProQuest Dissertations and Theses. N.p.: ProQuest, 1987. N. pag. Print. Schaefer, William. "Original Music for Band." Music Educators Journal. June ed. Vol. 52. N.p.: Sage Publications, 1966. 84-85. Print. Schreiber, Flora R., and Vincent Persichetti. William Schuman. Jan. 1955 ed. Vol. 36. New York: Oxford University Press, 1955. 76-78. Print. Schreiber, Flora R., and Vincent Persichetti. "William Schuman." Notes. September ed. Vol. 11. N.p.: n.p., 1954. 560-61. Print.
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Schuman, William. "The Responsibility of Music Education to Music." Music Educators Journal. June ed. Vol. 42. N.p.: Sage Publications, 1956. 17-19. Print. Schuman, William. "On Teaching the Literature and Materials of Music." The Musical Quarterly. April ed. Vol. 34. N.p.: n.p., 1948. 155-68. Print. Schuman, William. "The Complete Musician: Vincent Persichetti and TwentiethCentury Harmony." The Musical Quarterly. July ed. Vol. 47. N.p.: Oxford University Press, 1961. 379-85. Print. Schuman, William. "Aaron Copland." Perspectives of New Music. Autumn ed. Vol. 19. N.p.: Perspectives in New Music, 1980. 52-53. Print. Shackelford, Rudy, and Vincent Persichetti. "Conversations with Vincent Persichetti." Perspectives of New Music. Autumn ed. Vol. 20. N.p.: Perspectives of New Music, 1981. 104-33. Print. Simmons, Walter. The Music of William Schuman, Vincent Persichetti, and Peter Mennin. Lanham: Scarecrow Pres Inc., 2011. 23-319. Print. Simms, Bryan R. "Serialism in the Early Music of Aaron Copland." Musical Quarterly. February ed. N.p.: Music Library Association, 2007. 176-96. Print. Simpson, Ralph R. “William Grant Still – the Man and His Music.” Michigan State University, 1964. United States – Michigan: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses (PQDT); ProQuest Dissertations & Theses A&I. Web. 9 Mar. 2012. Smith, Catherine P. American Music. Vol. 3. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1997. Spencer, Jon M. "William Grant Still, "Lenox Avenue" 1937." Lenox Avenue: A Journal of Interarts Inquiry 2 (1996): ii-vi. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4177049. Soll, Beverly, ed. William Grant Still: Arias, Duets and Scenes from the Operas. Vol. 1. Flagstaff, Ariz.: The Master Player Library, 1998. Soll, Beverly, ed. William Grant Still: Arias, Duets and Scenes from the Operas. Vol. 2. Flagstaff, Ariz.: The Master Player Library, 1998. Soll, Beverly, ed. William Grant Still: Arias, Duets and Scenes from the Operas. Vol. 3. Flagstaff, Ariz.: The Master Player Library, 1998. Still, Judith A., and Dominique-Rene de Lerma, eds. William Grant Still An Oral History. Flagstaff, Ariz.: The Master Player Library, 1998.
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APPENDICES APPENDICE A: Errata for George Washington Bridge 1. (m.114) Baritone Saxophone â&#x20AC;&#x201C; the second half note in this measure should be G#, not G (score and parts). 2. (m. 258) Add sharps to the notes C and F in the bass clef of the condensed score only.
APPENDICE B: Performance Notes for George Washington Bridge
! ! ! APPENDICE!C! !
APPENDICE D:
Performance Notes for Emblems
PICCOLO •
Rehearsal #9, Beat 2: To facilitate the response of the soft high E, lift the right-hand pinky, or lift the right-hand pinky and slightly vent the 2nd trill key
•
Rehearsal #11, from the eighth-note pickup until four measures after #11: Increase the volume of the soli line
•
Rehearsal #5, #17, #42, and pickup to #48: The Piccolo is doubled with Eb Clarinet in the upper register, making intonation a special challenge, especially on high F#s and Gs; if a less-experienced player has difficulty with these notes, drop down one octave
CLARINET •
1st Clarinet, Rehearsal #15-16: Use only one player on the top notes
ALTO CLARINET •
One measure before Rehearsal #2: The dotted eight-note in the part should be an Eb
•
One measure before Rehearsal #4: The high D can be played "open"
•
Four measures after Rehearsal #43: This note is normally sharp when played with the standard Gb fingering; try the Gb with the forked fingering
BASSOON •
Rehearsal #2-3: This is an awkward passage; take time to carefully work out the fingerings
•
Rehearsal #9-13 and #43-47: Be careful to blend and balance the divided parts
TRUMPET •
Rehearsal #42-47 and 4 measures before end: It is essential to have two players on 1st Cornet to facilitate mute changes and split solo parts
•
Rehearsal #45-47: Solo lines on Amazing Grace must match flute; consider using a C Trumpet for better intonation
HORN •
Watch Copland's markings for stopped horn; see general notes on Copland performance
•
Be careful to match the length of notes and articulations with the trombones
TROMBONE •
Be sure to make an obvious difference between accented notes and unaccented, and between forte vs. fortissimo
•
Rehearsal #12-13: This is the line of melodic interest; play out and watch intonation
•
2 measures before Rehearsal #17: Watch for rhythmic accuracy; the rests on both sides of these notes are important
•
Rehearsal #34: 1st and 2nd Trombone soli is in octaves; pay strict attention to the placement of accents
•
Back off of long fortissimo notes; listen to other instruments to avoid covering the melody
•
Rehearsal #6-10 and #15-16: If the trombone section is large enough, have one person per part play the muted sections, so that the quick mute changes are more practical
EUPHONIUM •
From quarter-note pickup to Rehearsal #44 until #45: Use a mute to match the timbre of other muted brass
TUBA •
Never use more than two players on the 1st Tuba part; in sections of four players or less, one on 1st is sufficient
•
Pay attention to breath marks throughout the work
•
Never peak too early on a fermata crescendo; leave a player or two out until the ultimate chord; this adds an extraforte to the sforzando fortissimo
•
Measures 4-7: Play very sustained at the first entrance to match other instruments
•
4 measures before Rehearsal #1 and at #5, #8, and 1 measure before #48: Place emphasis on the second sixteenth-note of rhythms marked "broader"
•
Rehearsal #6: Release figures on beat 3
•
1st Tuba, 3 measures after Rehearsal #8: Beat 2 should be a quarter-note Ab, not Gb (the same intervals as in next measure)
•
1st Tuba, 4 measures after Rehearsal #13: Play marcato e sostenuto while using a good blending dynamic;fortissimo is not necessary in this range (2nd Tuba can stay at printed dynamics)
•
1st Tuba, 5 measures after Rehearsal #16: Same as Rehearsal #13 above
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1st Tuba, 6 measures after Rehearsal #25: Beat two should be a B-natural
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Rehearsal #30: Have one or more of the 2nd Tubas play D-natural octava basso
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Rehearsal #32: It is difficult for a section of tubas to play lightly at forte as indicated; lower the dynamic to conform to the style
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6 measures after Rehearsal #34: Crescendo through the quarter-notes to the next downbeat
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1st Tuba, 7 and 8 measures after Rehearsal #34: Play the Eb 8vb with the 2nd Tuba
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1st Tuba, pickup to Rehearsal #42: Mark dynamic mezzo forte
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4 measures after Rehearsal #42: Breathe with the rest of the ensemble between beats two and three
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1 measure before Rehearsal #48: Do not overdo the fortissimo
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1st Tuba, 3 measures after Rehearsal #48: Play subito mezzo piano with a ridiculous crescendo tofortissississimo on the downbeat of the fourth measure; then
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both parts can play written dynamics to the end
E.
Errata for Pagaent 1. Clarinet 3 – last measure, tie to E-natural.
F.
Performance Notes: Pagaent (by David Goza)
Introduction, with a Refresher Course in Quartality and Pentatonicism Vincent Persichetti’s third work for wind band, published by Carl Fischer in 1954 as the composer’s Opus 59, is a large-scale two-movement essay informed by two radically different compositional strategies and unified by a single germinal motive. The work was written a year before its publication and was premiered on 7 March 1953 with the composer conducting. To launch an analysis of Pageant, it might be wise to begin with a refresher course on how pentatonicism relates to quartality and how those relationships are expressed in set-theoretical terms. This is no place for a dissertation on set theory; my remarks are intended for clarification only and will by no means exhaust the topic. The work’s opening motive, played by solo horn, already suggests a quartal vocabulary: this is easily enough seen by the fact that the three pitch classes used (B@, F & C) can be spelled as a stack of perfect fourths. That this motive could easily be transposed to the black keys of the piano (e.g. D@–A@–E@) means that the motive is also based on a subset of the pentatonic scale. And in fact the black keys of the piano – which constitute a pentatonic scale – can be respelled as a stack of perfect fourths: B@, E@, A@, D@, G@ (the order of flat signs in key signatures). The close relationship,then, between quartality and pentatonicism is surely obvious. The intervallic structure of the pentatonic scale – which, as we have just seen, is also a quartal collection – may in set-theoretical terms be spelled from G@ as (02479) or, if one starts on D@, (02579). (You will find only the first of these listed in a comprehensive set-theory catalog, as it is in “best normal order” – i.e. with the smallest intervals clustered toward the beginning of the list; nevertheless, it is useful to list both spellings for reasons that should become clear shortly.) These two spellings of the pentatonic scale exhaust the possibilities so far as easy identification of subsets is concerned. We can thus see that the three-note sets (024) and (025) are both pentatonic – i.e. quartal – sets but (036) is not. And as we look carefully at Persichetti’s Pageant and discover how often we encounter sets (025) and (027), the usefulness of the foregoing refresher course will become readily apparent
G.
Errata for Scherzo for Band NONE
H.
Performance Notes: Scherzo for Band 1. Use slight swing style. 2. Make sure to treat woodwinds, especially clarinets like the string voice. 3. Slight poco a poco accelerando 16 measures from the end.
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