America V: 5 & 6 March 2016
For Americans everywhere. Ye reap what ye have sown....
CB America V
CB America V
Track 1: Fanfare For The New Atlantis, Hovhaness
This is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Rupert Kirkham. Today’s programme of music from the United States was researched and written by Michael Burrows. We’ve just heard Fanfare For The New Atlantis by Alan Hovhaness. Atlantis, a city fabled retrospectively for its advanced civilization, science and philosophy, is said to have disappeared beneath stormy waves of the Mediterranean, to be Invoked by ancient scholars and neo-Platonists of the 17th Century alike, a kind of missing link in the chain of human culture, a void on which any imagination could work wonders of Utopia and hopeful searching for solutions to earthly and heavenly mysteries, its true geographical and historical position or circumstances of loss being not the least of those mysteries.
Hovhaness’ music calls forth this State of story in effortless grandeur of broad paragraphs, fluid but unobscure harmony and rich but clear-lined, trumpet--led orchestration, timeless, sombre, pure, with ancient gravity wrought out of chant and responses of deliberate weight, melody forming the rhythmical patterns, adorned by brass tuckets on one note and, latterly, thrilling scalic rushes in the string-section. Some long-lost marvel rises up before our eyes. An extraordinary vision, this, from 1975.
The United States has developed an enviable variety in self-expression in All genres of Art-music: symphonists of the calibre of Hovhaness, Ives, Copland, Schuman, Sowerby, Harris... and purveyors of morelight-weight music whose productions, though popular, are also to be discussed as an artistic achievement. In light music, Jazz, though in itself an inexhaustibly creative tradition, surely doesn’t have things all its own way. What are we to make, for example, of this spry and sage song written in evident heartfeltness by the immensely vigorous and prolific March-king, John Philip Sousa?
Track 2: You’ll Miss Lots of Fun When You’re Married, Sousa
You’ll Miss Lots of Fun When You’re Married, by Sousa.
Track 3: Taking Leave of A Friend, Avshalamov
One name in our list of great symphonists of the United States may not be well-known to even many Americans. Leo Sowerby, known largely for his church-music and songs, wrote 5 symphonies for orchestra, one for solo-singers, choir and orchestra and two for organ-solo. The Second orchestral Symphony was written in 1927-8, when Sowerby was 32 years old, his career as composer and choir--master and teacher well into its stride, with frequent large-scale commissions from the then conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Frederick Stock to live up to. In three movements, the Symphony in B Minor is a compact, well-argued piece, elliptical and introspective, in which power is derived from limitation of means. The first movement, Sonatina, is formed from two subjects with a bridge-passage between them. The first subject is chant-like, with some jazzy irregularity of rhythm and teasing turns of harmony. The bridge passage brings one to a less busy but somehow restless, questioning lyricism. Development follows, with percussively underlined fragments of the chant in canon and imitation, combined with the second subject, which is as summarily dealt-with. The First Subject and bridge-passage only are recapitulated, the bridge-passage elaborated and, after further squalls, the close gives almost the last word to the bridge-passage, as fresh in high woodwind as at first, but the dying fall belongs to the first subject, smoothed, but defiantly in the minor. This is fascinating, teasing music, recognizably of its time and nation, every bit as effective as the symphonies of Copland, and of similar sources in Americana – perhaps of urban jazz and New England, with a soupcon of the Mid-West.
Track 4: 2nd Symphony in B Minor, Movt 1: Sonatina, Sowerby
Track 5: The Bridge At Remagen, Bernstein
It should be noted that to score a piece for brass wholly con sordino is a fine way to create almost the dullest sound imaginable; only a real or exceptionally self--important composer would set himself such a challenge. Then again, mutes ensure that the clashes in the parts are set up without unintentional resonance. Angels is, as perhaps it should be, a remote, hieratic experience for the listener, immediate and becomingly terse. Angels are not necessarily beings of heat.
Track 6: Angels, Ruggles
A livelier, percussive, section treats Lincoln’s wilder days of youth – Copland utilizing his own gift for ‘American’ Tunes and sonorities - and adding Campdown Races for good measure. At the close of this scherzando section, the music broadens as destiny – or mysterious fatality – takes over.
The third section brings the piece to its climax – the spoken word and – at last, the Gettysburg Address capped with Springfield Mountain, most poignantly given to a Taps - or Last Post-like trumpet. The piece ends in an abiding expression of wonder, love and inspiration. Is this President Lincoln or another New Atlantis that we hear rise before us? The symbol is perhaps greater than any man, but a hint of the ideals that we should serve as citizens as well as individuals. Certainly, no modern politician in his or her right mind should set him- or herself up as speaker in this piece; to do so insults the historic symbol and is bound to let down listeners in their actual hopes; no real politician can be a Lincoln, and no-one should ever clothe him- or herself in words that will certainly dwarf him or her – as kingly robes dwarf Macbeth. Those politicians who try (and some have unaccountably done so), sound absurd or flatly disingenuous.
This is Classical Break on Somer Valley FM, and I’m Rupert Kirkham. Today’s programme of American music was written and researched by Mike Burrows. We hope that you enjoyed it and will tune in again soon.
Goodbye!
Track 7: Lincoln Portrait, Copland
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