MUSIC AND IMAGINATION (1952) Author: AARON COPLAND

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 130

1 00 775

MUSIC AMD
IMAGINATION

By Aaron Copland

HARVARD University
Press
Cambridge

nineteen hundred
fifty-three
and Fellows o] Harvard College
Copyright, 1952, by the President

Second Printing

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 52-9385

Printed in the United States of America


Dedicated to the memory of my brother

RALPH COPLAND
1888-1952
Preface
THE PAGES THAT FOLLOW comprise the Charles Eliot
Norton Lectures delivered at Harvard University during the academic
year 1951-1952. They appear here in substantially the same form in
which they were read to the students and general public at Cambridge.
The six talks were not intended to be closely reasoned arguments
on a single subject, but rather a free improvisation on the general
theme of the role imagination plays in the art of music. The first

half of the book treats of the musical mind at work in its different

capacities as listener, interpreter, or creator. The second half dis-

cusses more specifically recent manifestations of the imaginative


mind in the music of Europe and the Americas.
The lectures were followed in each instance by short concerts
made possible by the generosity of the Elizabeth Spraguc Coolidge
Foundation in the Library of Congress and the Norton Professor-
ship Committee of Harvard University. It is a pleasure to be able
to record here my thanks for their cooperation. I am deeply appre-
ciative also to the many fine artists who took part in these concerts.
Their names will be found listed at the back of this book.
Grateful acknowledgment is due the Norton Professorship Com-
mittee for their cordial reception during my stay in Cambridge, and

especially to its literary and musical representatives, Professors Archi-


bald MacLeish and A. Tillman Merritt, friends of long standing,
who were ready at all times with helpful guidance.
A word of thanks is also due to Miss Eleanor Bates of the edi-

torial staff of the Harvard University Press for her keen and cogent
criticism during the preparation of the manuscript for publication.

A. C
Cambridge, Massachusetts
May 1952
vii
CONTENTS
Introduction i

Part One
MUSIC AND THE IMAGINATIVE MIND
'

1 The Gifted Listener 7

2 The Sonorous Image 21

3 The Creative Mind and the Interpretative Mind 40

Part Two
MUSICAL IMAGINATION AND THE
CONTEMPORARY SCENE
4 Tradition and Innovation in Recent European Music 61

5 Musical Imagination in the Americas j8

6 The Composer in Industrial America 96

Postscript 112

ix
Music and Imagination
Introduction
IT PLEASES ME to think that Charles Eliot Norton might
have approved the appointment, in 1951 for the first time, of a
native-born composer to the Poetry Chair established in his memory

a quarter of a century ago. The thought that it was I myself who


had been entrusted with this high responsibility made me sensibly
less happy. To address the student body at Harvard in the tradition

of the learned scholars and poets and composers who had preceded
me as incumbents of the Norton Chair was not an easy task. For-

tunately, this same tradition sanctioned a free interpretation of my


tide as poetry professor, so that I was able to discuss the one thing
I profess to know something about: the art of music.

Perhaps I had better begin by frankly admitting that when I was


a younger man I used to harbor a secret feeling of commiseration
for poets. To my mind poets were men who were trying to make
music with nothing but words at their command. I suppose there
exist at all times some few men who have that much magic in them,

but words at best will always seem to a composer a poor substitute


for tones if you want to make music, that is. Later on, after I had

had some slight reading acquaintance with the poetry of Hart Crane
and Gerard Manley Hopkins, I came gradually to see that music
and poetry were perhaps closer kin than I had at first realized. I
came gradually to see that beyond the music of both arts there is an
essence that joins them an area where the meanings behind the
notes and the meaning beyond the words spring from some com-
mon source.

If that is true, if poets and composers take flight from a similar

impulse, then perhaps I am more of a poetry professor than I had


thought. He
music of poetry must forever escape me, no doubt,
but the poetry of music is always with me. It signifies that largest

part of our emotive life the part that sings. Purposeful singing
is what concerns most composers most of their lives. Purposeful

singing to me signifies that a composer has come into possession of

musical materials of related orders of experience; given these, the

composer's problem then is to shape them coherently so that they


are intelligible in themselves, and hence, communicable to an audi-
ence. In music the process does not stop there. The musical work
must be reinterpreted, or better still, re-created in the mind of the

performer or group of performers. Finally the message, so to speak,


reaches the ear of the listener, who must then relive in his own mind
the completed revelation of the composer's thought.
This very familiar musical experience suddenly takes
recital of the

on, as I tell it, the aspect of a very hazardous undertaking. It is


hazardous because at so many points it can break down; at no point
can you seize the musical experience and hold it. Unlike that mo-
ment in a film when a still shot suddenly immobilizes a complete
scene, a single musical moment immobilized makes audible only
one chord, which initself is
comparatively meaningless. This never-
ending flow of music forces us to use our imaginations, for music
is in a continual state of becoming.
Wystan Auden, who knows a
great deal about verse and song, recently made this distinction be-
tween the two. "A verbal art like poetry," he wrote, "is reflective; it
stops to think. Music is immediate; it
goes on to become." This elu-
sive quality of music, its
imagined existence in time, is made the
climax of Jean Paul Sartre's treatise on
L'Imaginaire. Sartre, in a
well-known passage on Beethoven's Seventh
Symphony, very nearly
succeeds in convincing us that the Seventh isn't
really there at all.
It'snot on the page, for no music can be said to exist on the silent
and it's not in any one performance, for
page, they are all different
and not one can be said to be the definitive version. The
Seventh,
Sartre says, can only be said to docs in the unreal
live, if it live,
world of our imagination. Whatever one may think of Sartre's
theory, it dramatizes one of the basic facts in music a fact to which
we shall return more than once in these pages.
What I have set down here I have learned from my own experi
ence in the writing of music and in considering the music of other

composers. These reflections, I should add, are not meant to be a


contribution to knowledge: the typical artist cannot be said to func-
tion on the level of knowledge. (I use the word in its usual meaning
of learning and scholarship.) can only hope to speak to you on the
I

plane of intuitional perception the plane of immediate or sensi-


tive knowledge perceptual knowledge, if you like. This is an im-
portant distinction at least for me it is because it makes clear
that those of us who are doers rather than knowers expect others
to deduce knowledge from the testimony we bear. This is not to

say, as sometimes is said, that a composer describing a musical state


of affairs is doing nothing more than describing his own musical
tastes. A composer's apperceptions need not necessarily be so cir-
cumscribed as that. A well-known conductor once confided to me
that he invariably learned something from watching a composer
conduct his own composition, despite possible technical shortcomings
in conducting, for something essential about the nature of the piece
was likely to be revealed. I should like to think that an analogous
situation obtains when
a composer articulates as best he can the
ideas and conceptions that underlie his writing or his listening to
music. If my conductor friend was right, the composer ought to

bring an awareness and insight to the understanding of music that


critics, musicologists, and music historians might put to good use,

thereby enriching the whole field of musical investigations.


Thus it is primarily as a composer a musically observant com-

poser, posing temporarily in the guise of a professor of poetry


that I have chosen to consider the general topic of the relation of the

imaginative mind to different aspects of the art of music.


One
MUSIC AJVD THE
JVLIJVD
CHAPTER ONE

The Gifted Listener


THE MORE i LIVE the life of music the more I am convinced
that it is the freely imaginative mind that is at the core of all vital

music making and music listening. When Coleridge put down his

famous phrase, "the sense of musical delight, with the power of pro-

ducing it, is a gift of the imagination," he was referring, .of course,

to the musical delights of poetry. But it seems to me even more true


when applied to the musical delights of music. An imaginative mind
is essential to the creation of art in any medium, but it is even more
essential in music precisely because music provides the broadest pos-
sible vista for the imagination since it is the freest, the most abstract,
the least fettered of all the arts: no story content, no pictorial repre-

sentation, no regularity of meter, no strict limitation of frame need

hamper the intuitive functioning of the imaginative mind. In say-

ing this I am not forgetting that music has its


disciplines: its strict
forms and regular rhythms, and even in some cases its
program-
matic content Music as mathematics, music as architecture or as

image, music in any static, form has always held


seizable fascination

for the lay mind. But as a musician, what fascinates me is the

thought that by its


very nature music invites imaginative treatment,

and that the facts of music, so called, are only meaningful insofar
as the imagination is given free play. It is for this reason that I wish

to consider especially those facets of music that are open to the crea-

tive influences of the imagination.

7
Imagination in the listener in the gifted listener is what con-
cerns us here. It is so often assumed that music's principal stum-

bling block is the backward listener that it might be instructive to

contemplate for a change the qualities of the sensitive listener.


Listening is a talent, and any other talent or gift, we possess
like

it in varying degrees. I have found among music-lovers a marked

tendency to underestimate and mistrust this talent, rather than to


overestimate it The reason for these feelings of inferiority are dif-
ficult to determine. Since there is no reliable way of measuring the

gift for listening, there is no reliable way of reassuring those who


misjudge themselves. I should say that there are two principal requi-
sites for talented listening: first, the ability to open oneself up to

musical experience; and secondly, the ability to evaluate critically


that experience. Neither of these is
possible without a certain native

gift. Listening implies an inborn talent of some degree, which, again


like any other talent, can be trained and developed. This talent has

a certain "purity" about it. We


exercise it, so to speak, for ourselves

alone; there is nothing to be gained from it in a material sense.


Listening is its own reward; there are no prizes to be won, no con-
tests of creative listening. But I hold that person fortunate who has
the gift, for there are few pleasures in art greater than the secure
sense that one can recognize beauty when one comes upon it.

When I speak of the gifted listener I am thinking of the nonmusi-


cian primarily, of the listener who intends to retain his amateur
status. It is the thought of just such a listener that excites the com-

poser in me. I know, or I think I know, how the professional mu-


sician will react to music. But with the amateur it is different; one
never can be sure how he will react. Nothing really tells him what
he should be hearing, no treatise or chart or
guide can ever suffi-

ciently pull together the various strands of a complex piece of music


only the inrushing floodlight of one's own imagination can do
that.
Recognizing the beautiful in an abstract art like music partakes
8
somewhat of a minor miracle; each time it happens I remain slightly
incredulous.
The situation of the professional musician as listener, especially

of the composer, is rather different. He is an initiate. Like the min-


ister before the altar his contact with the Source gives him an inner

understanding of music's mysteries, and a greater familiarity in


He possesses a dual awareness: on the one hand of
their presence.

the inscrutable mystery that gives certain common tones meaning;


on the other of the human travail that enters into every creation.

It is an awareness that no layman can hope to share. There is a nicety


of balance in the musician's awareness that escapes the musical am-
ateur. The amateur may be either too reverent or too carried away;
too much in love with the separate section or too limited in his
enthusiasm for a single school or composer. Mere professionalism,
however, is not at all a guarantee of intelligent listening. Executant
ability, even of the highest order, no guarantee of instinct in
is

judgment. The sensitive amateur, just because he lacks the preju-


dices and preconceptions of the professional musician, is sometimes
a surer guide to the true quality of a piece of music. The^jdeal, lis-

tener, it seems to me, would combine the preparation of the trained

professional with the innocence of the intuitive amateur.


All musicians, creators and performers alike, think of the gifted
listener as a key figure in the musical universe. I should like, if I

can, to track down the source of this gift, and to consider the type
of musical experience which is most characteristically his.
The ideal listener, above all else, possesses the ability to lend him-
self to the power of music. The power of music to move us is some-

thing quite special as an artistic phenomenon. My


intention is not
to delve into its basis in physics my scientific equipment is much
too rudimentary but rather to concentrate on its emotional over-
tones. Contrary to what you might expect, I do not hold that music
has the power to move us beyond any of the other arts. To me the
theater has this in a more naked form, a power that is almost
power
too great The sense of being overwhelmed by the events that occur

on a stage sometimes brings with it a kind of resentment at the


I feel like
case with which the dramatist plays upon my emotions.

a keyboard on which he can improvise any tune he pleases. There


is no resisting, my emotions have the upper hand, but my mind
do this to me?
keeps protesting: by what right does the playwright
Not infrequently I have been moved to tears in the theater; never
at music. never at music? Because there is something about
Why
music that keeps its distance even at the moment that it engulfs us.
It is at the same time outside and away from us and inside and part

of us. In one sense it dwarfs us, and in anotherwe master it. We


arc led on and on, and yet in some strange way we never lose con-
trol. It is the very nature of music to give us the distillation of senti-

ments, the essence of experience transfused and heightened and ex-


pressed in such fashion that we may contemplate it at the same
instant that we by it When the gifted listener Jejids
are swayed
himself fcQjft^pqwer of the j^yent!L.anxi .the
music,Jie jgets Jbo&M : ?

idealizatiQa.of.tbiP j*event"j,Jie is inside the J^event," jsp jto^speak,


even though die music keeps what Edward rightly jejijis
BjoUough
its
"psychical distance/*
What another layman, Paul Claudel, wrote about the listener
seems to me to have been well observed. "We absorb him into the
concert," Claudel says. "He is no longer anything but expectation
and attention ..." I like that, because expectancy denotes the ability
to fend oneself, to lend oneself eagerly to the
thing heard, while
attention bespeaks an interest in the thing said, a preoccupation with
an understanding of what is
being heard. I've watched the absorbed
listener in the concert hall numerous times, half absorbed myself in
trying to fathom the exact nature of his response. This is an espe-
cially fascinating pastime when the listener happens to be listening
to one's own music. At such times I am concerned not so much with
10
whatever pleasure the music may be giving, but rather with the
question whether I am being understood.
Parenthetically, I should like to call attention to a curious bit of
artistpsychology: the thought that my music might, or might not
give pleasure to a considerable number of music-lovers has never
particularly stirred
me. At times I have been vigorously hissed, at
other times as vigorously applauded; in both circumstances I remain

comparatively unmoved. Why


should that be? Probably because I
feel in some way detached from the end result. The writing of it
gives me pleasure, especially when it seems to come off; but once
out of my hands the work takes on a life of its own. In a similar

way I can imagine a father who no personal credit for the


takes

beauty of a much admired daughter. This must mean that the artist
(or father) considers himself an unwitting instrument whose satis-

faction not to produce beauty, but simply to produce.


is

But to return to my absorbed listener. The interesting question,


then, is not whether he is deriving pleasure, but rather, whether he
isunderstanding the import of the music. And if he has understood,
then I must ask: what has he understood?
As you see, I am warily approaching one of the thorniest problems

in aesthetics, namely, the meaning of music. The semanticist who


investigates the meaning of words, or even the
meaning of meaning,
has an easy time of it by comparison with the hardy soul who ven-
tures forth in quest of music's meaning. A composer might easily
side-step the issue; aesthetics is not his province. His gift is one of

expression, not of theoretic speculation. Still the problem persists,


and the musical practitioner ought to have something to say that
would be of interest to the mind that philosophizes about art

I have seldom read a statement about the meaning of music, if

seriously expressed, that did not seem to me to have some basis in


truth. From this I conclude that music is
many-sided and can be
approached from many different angles. Basically, however, two
II
opposing theories
have been advanced by the aestheticians as to
music's One is that the meaning of music, if there is
significance.
in the music for music has no
any meaning, must be sought itself,

and the other is that music is a language


cxtramusical connotation;
without a dictionary whose symbols are interpreted by the listener
of the emotions. The more
according to some unwritten esperanto
I consider these two theories the more it seems to me
that they are

bound together more than is


generally supposed,
closely
and for this
reason: music as a symbolic language of psychological and expres-
sive value can only be made evident through "music itself," while

music which is said to mean only itself sets up patterns of sound


which inevitably suggest some kind of connotation in the mind of
the listener, even if only to connote the joy of music making for its
own sake. it may be, pure or impure, an object or a
Whichever
language, I cannot get it out of my head that all composers derive
their impulse from a similar drive. I cannot be persuaded that Bach,

when he penned the Orgelbuchlein, thought he was creating an ob-


ject of "just notes," or that Tchaikovsky in composing
Swan La\e
was wallowing in nothing but uncontrolled emotion. Notes can be
manipulated as if they were objects, certainly they can be made
todo exercises, like a dancer. But it is only when these exerciselike
patterns of sound take on meaning that they become music. There
is historical justification for the weighted emphasis sometimes on

one side, sometimes on the other, of this controversy. During pe-


riods when music became too cool and detached, too scholastically
conventionalized, composers were enjoined to remember its origin
as a language of the emotions, and when, during the last century,

it became overly symptomatic of the inner Sturm und Drang of


personalized emotion, composers were cautioned not to forget that
music isa pure art of a self-contained beauty. This perennial dichot-

omy was neatly summarized by Eduard Hanslick, standard bearer


century, when
for the "pure music" defenders of the nineteenth he
wrote that "an inward sipging, and not an inward feeling, prompts
a gifted person to compose a musical piece." But my point is that
this dichotomous situation has no reality to a functioning composer.

Singing is feeling to a composer, and the more intensely fdt the


singing, the purer the expression.
The precise meaning of music is a question that should never have
been asked, and in any event will never elicit a precise answer. It is

the literary mind that disturbed by this imprecision. No true


is

music-lover is troubled by the symbolic character of musical speech;


on the contrary, it is this very imprecision that intrigues and acti-

vates the imagination. Whatever the semanticists of music may un-


cover, composers will blithely continue to articulate "subtle com-

plexes of feeling that language cannot even name, let alone set forth."
This last phrase I came upon in Susanne Langer's cogent chapter,
"On Significance in Music/' Reviewing the various theories of mu-
sical significance from Plato to Schopenhauer and from Roger Fry

to recent psychoanalytical speculation, Mrs. Langer concludes: "Mu-


sic is our myth of the inner life a young, vital, and meaningful

myth, of recent inspiration and still in its 'vegetative' growth." Mu-


sical myths even more than folk myths are subject to highly

personalized interpretation, and there is no known method of guar-


anteeing that my interpretation will be a truer one than yours. I
can only recommend reliance on one's own instinctive comprehen-
sion of the unverbalized symbolism of musical sounds.
All this is of minor concern to the gifted listener primarily in-
tent, as he should be, on the enjoyment of music. Without theories
and without preconceived notions of what music ought to be, he
lends himself as a sentient human being to the power of music.
What often surprises me is the basically primitive nature of this

relationship. From self-observation and from observing audience


reaction I would be inclined to say that we all listen on an elemen-
tary plane of musical consciousness. I was startled to find this curi-

ous phrase in Santayana concerning music: "the most abstract


of arts," he remarks, "serves the dumbest emotions." Yes, I like

13
and almost brutish
this idea that respond to music from a primal
we
level dumbly, as it were, for on that level we are firmly grounded.
On that level, whatever the music may be, we experience basic re-
release, density and transparency,
actions such as tension and a

smooth or angry surface, the music's swellings and subsidings, its

its length, its speed, its thunders


pushing forward or hanging back,
and whisperings and a thousand other psychologically based re-
flections of our life of movement and gesture, and our
physical
inner, subconscious mental life. That is fundamentally the way we
all hear music gifted and ungifted alike and all the analytical,

historical, textual material on or about the music heard, interesting


and venture to say should not alter
though it may be, cannot I

that fundamental relationship.


I stress this point, not so much
because the layman is likely to

forget it, but because the professional musician tends to lose sight
of This does not signify, by any means, that I do not believe in
it.

the possibility of the refinement of musical taste. Quite the contrary.


I am convinced that the higher forms of music imply a listener

whose musical taste has been cultivated either through listening or

through training or both. On- a more modest level refinement in


musical taste begins with the ability to distinguish subtle nuances of

feeling. Anyone can tell the difference between a sad piece and a
joyous one. The talented listener recognizes not merely the joyous
| quality of the piece, but also the specific shade of joyousness
whether it be troubled joy, delicate joy, carefree joy, hysterical joy,
and so forth. I add "and so forth" advisedly, for it covers an infini-

tude of shadings that cannot be named, as I have named these few,


because of music's incommensurability with language.
An important requirement for subtle listening is a mature under-
standing of the natural differences of musical expression to be antic-
ipated in music of different epochs. An awareness of musical history
should prepare the talented listener to distinguish stylistic differ-
ences, for example, in the expression of joyousness. Ecstatic joy as

14
you find it in the music o Scriabin ought not to be sought for in
the operas of Gluck, or even of Mozart. A
sense of being "at home"
in the world of the late fifteen hundreds makes one aware of what
not to seek in the music of that period; and in like fashion,
being
"at home" in the musical idioms of the late
baroque period will
immediately suggest parallelisms with certain aspects of contempo-
rary music. To approach all music in the vain hope that it will
soothe one in the lush harmonies of the late nineteenth century is a
common error of many present-day music-lovers.
One other gift is needed, this one perhaps the most difficult and

at thesame time the most essential: the gift of being able to see all
around the structural framework of an extended piece of music.
Next to fathoming the meanings of music, I find this point the most
obscure in our understanding of the auditory faculty. Exactly in
what manner we sort out and add up and realize in our own minds
the impressions that can only be gained singly in the separate mo-
ments of the music's flowing past usis surely one of the rarer mani-

festations of consciousness. Here if anywhere the imagination must


take fire. Sometimes it seems to me that I do not at all comprehend
how other people put together a piece in their mind's ear. It is a

any of the arts, especially those that exist in point


difficult feat in

of time, such as the drama or fiction. But there the chronology of


events usually guides the spectator or reader. The structural organi-
zation of the dance is somewhat analogous to that of music, but
here too, despite the fluidity of movement each separate moment

presents a picture, not unlike that of the painter's canvas. But in


music where there isno chronology of events, no momentary pic-
ture, nothing to "hang on to," as it were, it is the imagination and
the imagination alone that has the power of balancing the combined

impressions made by themes, rhythms, tone colors, harmonies, tex-


tures, dynamics, developments, contrasts.
I don't mean to make this more mysterious than it is. To draw

a graph of a particular musical structure is generally possible, and


but we do not usually
may be of some help to the cultivated listener;
laps. And if
wish to listen to music with diagrams in our we did, I
of such an idea, for too great concentration
question the wisdom
on the purely formal outlines of a piece of music might detract from

free association with other elements in the piece.

No, however one turns the problem, we come


back always to the
of
curious gift that permits us to sum up the complex impressions
a piece of absolute music so that the incidents of the harmonic and
melodic and textural flow of the work as it streams past us result

image of the work's essence.


and suc- Our
finally in a unified
total

cess in this venture depends first on the clarity of the composer's

conception, and second, on a delicate balance of heart and brain


be moved at the same instant that
that makes it
possible for us to
we retain the sensation of our emotional response, using it for bal-

anced judgment later in other and different moments of response.

Here, most of all, the listener must fall back upon his own gift;

here, especially, analysis and experience and imagination


must com-
bine to give us the assurance that we have made our own the com-

poser's complex of ideas.

Now, perhaps, is the moment to return to one of my principal


If anything was under-
queries: what has the listener understood?
stood, then it must have been whatever it was the composer tried
to communicate. Were you absorbed? Was your attention held?
That, then, was it; for what you heard were patterns of sounds that

represent the central core of the composer's being or that aspect


of it reflected in the particular work in question. One part of every-

thing tie is. and knows is implicit in each composer's single. work,
and it is that central fact of hisJjeing that he hopes he hasjcpm-
municated.
It occurs to me to wonder: are you a better person for having

heard a great work of art? Are you morally a better person, I mean?
In the largest sense, I suppose you are, but in the more immediate
sense, I doubt it. I doubt it because I have never seen it demon-

16
strated. What happens is that a mastcrwork awakens in us reactions
of a spiritual order that are already in us, only waiting to be aroused.
When Beethoven's music exhorts us to "be noble/' "be compassion-
ate," "be strong," he awakens moral ideas that are already within
us. His music cannot persuade: it makes evident. It does not
shape
conduct: it is itself the exemplification of a particular way of look-

ing at life. A concert is not a sermon. It is a performance a rein-


carnation of a series of ideas implicit in the work of art.
As a composer and a musical citizen I am concerned with one
more problem of the gifted listener: one that is special to our own
period. Despite the attractions of phonograph and radio, which arc
considerable, true music-lovers insist on hearing live performances
of music. An
unusual and disturbing situation has gradually be-
come all-pervasive at public performances of music: the universal

preponderance of old music on concert programs.


TTiisjii^^ old music, tends
to make all music listening safe and unadventurous since it deals

so largely in the works of the accepted masters. Filling our halls

with familiar sounds induces a sense of security in our audiences;


they are gradually losing all need to exercise freely their own musi-
cal judgment. Over and over again the same limited number of
bona fide,guaranteed masterpieces are on display; by inference,
therefore, it is mainly these works that are worth our notice. This
narrows considerably in the minds of a broad public the very con-
ception of how varied musical experience may be, and puts all lesser

works in a false light. It conventionalizes programs, obviously, and


overemphasizes the interpreter's role, for only through seeking out
new "readings" is it possible to repeat the same works year after
pernicious of all, it leaves a bare minimum of
Most wall space
year.
for the showing of the works of new composers, without which the

supply of future writers of masterworks is certain to dry up.


This state of affairs is not merely a local or national one it
per-
vades the musical life of every country that professes love for western

17
music. Nine-tenths of the time a program performed in a concert
hall in Buenos Aires provides an exact replica of what goes on in

a concert hall of London or of Tel-Aviv. Music is no longer merely


an international language, it is an international commodity.
This concentration on masterworks is having a profound influence
on present-day musical life. A
solemn wall of respectability sur-
rounds the haloed masterpieces of music and deadens their impact.
They are written about too often out of a sticky sentiment steeped
in conventionality. It both exhilarating and depressing to think
is

of them: eidiilarating to think that great masses of people are put


in daily contact with them, have the possibility of truly taking sus-
tenance from them; and depressing to watch these same classics
used to snuff out all liveliness, all immediacy from the contempo-

rary musical scene.


Reverence for the classics in our time has been turned into a form
of discrimination against all other music. Professor Edward Dent
spoke his mind on this same subject when he came to the United
States in 1936 to accept an honorary doctorate from Harvard Uni-
versity. Reverence for the classics, in his opinion, was traceable to

the setting up of a "religion of music," intrinsic to the ideas of


Beethoven and promulgated by Richard Wagner. "In the days of
Handel and Mozart," he said, "nobody wanted old music; all au-
diences demanded 'the newest opera or the newest concerto, as we
now naturally demand the newest play and the newest novel. If
in those two branches of imaginative production we habitually de-
mand the newest and the latest, why is it that in music we almost
invariably demand what is old-fashioned and out of date, while the
music of the present day is often received with positive hostility."
"All music, even church music," he added, "was 'utility music,* mu-
sic for the particular moment"

This situation, remarked upon fifteen years ago by Professor Dent,


is now intensified through the role played by commercial interests
in the purveying of music Professor Dent was himself aware of
18
that fact, for he pointed out then that "the religious outlook on
music is an affair of business as well as of devotion." The big public
is now frightened of investing in any music that doesn't have the
label "masterwork" stamped on it. Thus
along with the classics
themselves we are given the "light classics," the "jazz classics," and
even "modern classics." Radio programs, record advertisements,

adult appreciation courses all focus attention on a restricted list

of the musical great in such a way that there appears to be no other


raison d'&re for music. In the same way musical references in books
harp upon the names of a few musical giants. The final irony is
that the people who are persuaded to concern themselves only with
the best in music are the very ones who would have most difficulty
in recognizing a real masterpiece when they heard one.
The simple truth is that our concert halls have been turned into
musical museums auditory museums of a most limited kind. Our
musical era is our composers invalids who
sick in that respect
exist on the fringe of musical society, and our listeners impoverished

through a relentless repetition of the same works signed by a hand-


ful of sanctified names.
Our immediate concern is the effect all this has on the listener of
unusual gifts. A
narrow and limited repertoire in the concert hall
results in a narrow and limited musical experience. No true musical
enthusiast wants to be confined to a few hundred years of musical

history. He naturally seeks out every type of. musical experience;


his intuitive understanding gives him a sense of assurance whether
he isconfronted with the recently deciphered treasures of Gothic
art, or the quick wit of a Chabrier or a Bizet, or the latest importa-
tion of Italian dodecaphonism. A
healthy musical curiosity and a
broad musical experience sharpens the critical faculty of even the
most talented amateur.
All this has bearing on our relation to the classic masters also. To
listen to music in a familiar style and to listen freshly, ignoring
what others have said or written and testing its values for oneself,

19
isa mark of the intelligent listener. The classics themselves must be

reinterpreted in terms of our own period if


we are to hear them
anew and "keep their perennial humanity living and capable of
assimilation." But in order to do that, we must have a balanced

musical diet that permits us to set off our appraisals of the old mas-
ters againstthe varied and different musical manifestations of more
recent times. For it is only in the light of the whole musical experi-
ence that the classics become most meaningful.
The dream of every musician who loves his art is to involye^giftcd
listeners everywhere as an active force in die musical community.
The attitude of rflcfr. individual listener, especiially the gifted listener,,
is the principal resource we have in bringing to fruition the im-
mense musical potentialities of our own time.

20
CHAPTER TWO

The Sonorous Image


ONE OF THE PRIME CONCERNS in the making of music,

cither as creator or as interpreter, is the question how it will sound.

On any level, whether the music is abstruse and absolute or whether


it is intended for the merest diversion, it has got to "sound." The
worst reproach you can make against a composer is to tell him that

what he has written is


"paper music." On the other hand, one of

the quickest ways to recognize talent in the youthful composer is

to note the natural effectiveness as sound of even the most casual


combination of different tone colors. It is a sure sign of inborn mu-
sicality. The way music sounds, or the sonorous image, 35 I call it,

is nothing more than an auditory concept that floats in the mind of

the executant or composer; a prethijiking of the exact napire of the

tones to be produced.

Let meyou of a little incident that illustrates the importance


tell

of "sound" from a musician's standpoint. A few years ago I hap-

pened to be in the NBC Radio City studios on business. On my

way out I passed by Studio 8H, and hearing a distant music, I


realized that a rehearsal of the NBC Symphony was in progress.
partition of the door I was able
By peeking through the glass to

recognize a famous conductor and a famous soloist in the midst


of

rehearsing a concerto. My curiosity got the better of me, and I de-

cided to stop by for a short time and see how things were going.
With the exaggerated care of an uninvited guest I slipped quietly

21
into an orchestra scat at the center rear of the auditorium. As far

as I could tell I was alone; no one had seen me come in. That was

lucky, for otherwise


I might very well have been unceremoniously
Soloist, conductor, and orchestra were
in the thick of it,
ejected.

entirely absorbed with the work in hand. I was there no more than
five minutes before the familiar moment arrived; I mean that mo-
ment in any concerto when the solo performer reaches a high point
and pauses as the orchestral accompaniment sweeps forward in
ever-mounting passion. At that instant, without warning, the soloist

leaped from the platform and headed straight down the center
aisle in my direction. I immediately thought: he doesn't want me
here, spying on his rehearsal in this way. But before I could make
a move he was upon me. Perspiring and out of breath he fairly
shouted at me: "Aaron, how does it sound?" Before I could utter
a word in reply he was gone in order to reach the stage in time for
his next entrance,

Yes, the sonorous image is a preoccupying concern of all musi-


cians. In that phrase we include beauty and roundness of tone; its

warmth, its depth, its "edge," its balanced mixture with other tones,
and its acoustical properties in any given environment. The crea-
tion of a satisfactory aural image is not merely a matter of musical
talent or technical adroitness; imagination plays a large role here.
You cannot produce a beautiful sonority or combination of sonori-
ties without first hearing the imagined sound in the inner ear. Once
this imagined sonority is heard in reality, it impresses itself unfor-

gettably on the mind. To this day I can remember with extreme


vividness the morning in 1925 when I heard sounding for the first

time a work of my own orchestration. For some reason I was late

to the rehearsal so that my music was in progress when I arrived


at the hall. It excited me so that I was afraid I was literally about
to fall over. More than once have gone backstage to speak with
I

the conductor after he has given a first reading to a new orchestral


work of mine in order to discuss changes in balance or interpreta-

22
tion. Often these changes have to do with minute details that de-
pend upon a precise memory of what was heard for only a passing
instant at the rehearsal. Neither the conductor nor myself, nor
any
other composer for that matter, would find this feat unusual. The

impact of sheer sound on the musician's psyche is so familiar an


idea that we tend to take for granted the force it
represents.
Most people's aural remarkably strong; heard sounds
memory is

remain in the mind for long periods of time, and with a sharpness
that is also remarkable. From the early twenties I still retain an

impression of fantastic sonorities after a first contact with Schon-


berg's Pierrot Lunaire, or a little later, the astonishing percussive
imaginings of Edgar Varese, especially in a piece called Arcanes,
heard once but not again. Also from the early twenties I recall
hearing the mysterious sound made by a string ensemble in an ad-

joining hotel room in Salzburg, a sound which was kter identified


as an Alois Haba quarter tone Quartet. For me the important thing
was not the quarter tones, but the sonorous image that was left with
me. I can remember too the particular, acid sound of a Mexican

small-town band playing in the public square on Sunday mornings


in Tlaxcala. Were they playing out of tune, do you think? Perhaps,
but nevertheless they were creating an aural image authentically
their own. So was an English choir of boys and men's voices that

I heard in a London cathedral. They had a hollow, an almost cadav-


erous quality; not pretty, perhaps, but certainly memorable. Most

unforgettable sound of all was that ofa massed orchestra and band

ofjsoroe- 0ae thousand Jligh ^o^^^rfor^crs v in an Atlantic City


convention hall all simultaneously searching for the note A. It is

hopeless to attempt to describe that sound. Jericho's walls must have


,

heard some such unearthly musical noise.


I do not mean to suggest that sounds in themselves, taken out of

context, are ofany use to a composer. Interesting sonorities as such


are scarcely more than icing on the musical cake. But a deliberately
chosen sound image that pervades an entire piece becomes an in-

23
tegral part of the expressive meaning o that piece. One thinks

immediately of the two different versions that Stravinsky tells us he


made of his ballet Lcs Noces before deciding upon a third and final
solution: the unusual combination of four pianos and thirteen per-
cussion players. The rarefied timbres of Anton Webern's little

string quartet pieces would be meaningless if transcribed for any


other medium. In contrast with this are the original effects obtained
from the most ordinary means: for example, the juxtaposition of
a loud and vigorous body of strings against a soft and undulant

pair of harps in Britten's Spring Symphony once heard it cannot


successfully be rethought for any other combination.
The ability to imagine sounds in advance of their being heard in

actuality is one factor that widely separates the professional from


the layman. Professionals themselves are unevenly gifted in tbjg

respect.More than one celebrated composer has struggled to pro-


duce an adequate orchestral scoring of his own music. Certain per-
formers, on the other hand, seem especially gifted in being able to
call forth delicious sonorities from The layman's
their instrument.

capacity for imagining unheard sound images seems, by and large,


to be rather poor. This does not
apply on the lowest plane of sound
apprehension where, of course, there is no difficulty. Laboratory
tests have demonstrated that differences in tone color are the first

differences apparent to the untrained ear.


Any child is capable of
distinguishing the sound of a human voice from the sound of a
violin. The contrast between a voice and its echo is
apparent to
everyone. But It
bespeaks a fair degree of musical sophistication to
be able to distinguish the sound of an oboe from that of an
English
horn, and a marked degree to imagine a whole group of wood
winds sounding together. If you have ever had occasion, as I have,
to perform an orchestral score on the
piano to a group of nonpro-
fessionals, you will have soon realized how little sense they have
of how this music
might be expected to sound in an orchestra.
It is
surprising to note how little
investigation has been devoted

24
to this whole sphere of music. There are no textbooks solely designed
to examine the sound stuff of music the history of its past by

comparison with its future; or its potential. Even


present; or its

so-called orchestration texts, written


ostensibly to describe the sci-
ence of combining orchestral instruments, are generally found to
steershy of their subject, concentrating instead on instrumentation,
that is, on the examination of the technical and tonal possibilities
of the individual instrument. The
sonorous image appears to be a
kind of aural mirage, not easily immobilized and analyzed. The
case of the individual sound is rather different since it is more com-

parable to that of the primary colors in painting. It is the full spec-


trum of the musician's "color" palette that seems to lend itself much
less well to discussion and consideration than that of the painter.
There are many diverse and interesting questions concerning the
role of tone color, or sound image, in musical thinking. My conten-

tion that tonal image and expressive meaning are inter-connected


in the composer's mind is more true today than it was in the past,
if I read my history books correctly. In the eighteenth century mu-
sic was meant tobe played that was the first consideration. What
instruments it was played by seems often to have been dictated by
the requirements of a particular occasion. Bach's arrangements of
other men's works, and Mozart's alterations in a Handel score are

paralleled, in the following century, by Liszt's piano versions of

Schubert's songs. Nowadays we tend to look upon transcriptions


with suspicion because we consider the composer's expressive idea
to be reflected in a precise way by its tonal investiture. We go even
further: we assume that the choice of the sound medium itself will

almost certainly influence the nature of the composer's thought, as


witness some of the examples I have already mentioned.
Thought and sound can interact one upon the other only insofar
as the composer or executant is sensitive to the medium adopted.

The remarkable affinity of certain composers for certain sound


media has been pointed out many times, but not the corresponding

25
limitation that sometimes accompanies this affinity. The most fa-

mous example, is, of course, Chopin's extraordinary felicity in writ-

ing for the piano. Suppose he had been born into a world before
the invention of the piano, what would have happened to his com-
posing talent in that case? I frankly don't
know. I do know that
his friends tried over and over again to persuade him to broaden
his tonal range, without success. His reply, as we have it in a letter,
was as follows: "I know my limitations, and I know Fd make a
fool of myself if I tried to climb too high without having the ability

to do it. They plague me to death urging


symphonies me to write

and operas, and they want me to be everything in one, a Polish


Rossini and a Mozart and a Beethoven. But I just laugh under my
breath and think to myself that one must start from small things.
I'm only a pianist, and if I'm worth anything this is good too ...
I tMnfe it's better to do only a little but to do that as well as possible,
rather than try to things and do them poorly."
do all

We thinlc of the
younger Scarlatti as an analogous case because
of his genius for the harpsichord; and history shows many other
examples of the sympathy of certain composers for specific media:
Hugo Wolf! for the solo voice, Ravel for the harp, and Brahms for
the small chamber music ensemble. And what of the masters of
the nineteenth century orchestra Berlioz, Wagner, and Richard
is it mere chance that they have no
Strauss piano music to speak
of? Or thatDebussy composed but seldom for unaccompanied
chorus and Faure seldom for the orchestra?
From^ these few _g-
amples it would appear that cs^rc&sive purpose is closely allied to
die case of different com-
quite different in ..........
..... """ "

To
a considerable degree, of course, sound images are imposed

upon us from without. We


are born to certain inherited sounds and
tend to take them for granted. Other peoples, however, have an

absorbing interest in quite different kinds of auditory materials.


The Orient, for instance, leaves us far behind in sensitivity to the
26
subtle variety of percussive sounds. Dr. Curt Sachs, in writing on
oriental music, mentions the "dizzying mass o wooden, bamboo,

stone, glass, porcelain, and metal implements, to be pounded, shaken,


rubbed or struck." Our own
poverty-stricken percussive imaginings
are put to shame by comparison with the richness and diversity and
delicacy of the oriental mind in this connection. One wonders what
the comparatively undifferentiated sonority of a string quartet might
communicate to a Balinese musician, brought up on the clangor-
ously varied sonorities of a gamelan. On the other hand the complex
harmonic textures obtainable from our keyboard instruments are a
closed book to the Eastern musician. Dr. Sachs tells us that an Arab,

given a piano, plays in "empty octaves" and the Hindus, "in single,
sustained notes on the harmonium."

ftji^de^,jh^ tfae.West are both


restrictedby birth
Jto comparatively Limited gauxuit of, inherited
sound materials. Perhaps this is just as well; otherwise we might be
overwhelmed by the too numerous attractions of tonal color pos-
Western musical history is characterized, moreover, by the
sibilities.

identification of specific sound media with certain periods, to the

practical exclusion of other possible sound media, and it was because


of this exclusive interest that the medium chosen could be developed
so highly. The cultivation of music for voices, especially choral

music, up a prime example. Virgil Thomson


to about the year 1600 is

once told me ruefully that he thought composers of that time were


so wonderfully adept at exploiting the possibilities of the human
voice in choral combination that they had left practically nothing
really new for us to do in that medium as far as exceptional effects

are concerned. The exhaustion of any medium forces composers in

other directions; this undoubtedly was partly the reason for the

development of interest in purely instrumental writing during the


period that followed the choral age. A
further enrichment in the way

of tonal combinations came with the joining of the large choral mass
with orchestra, as in the oratorios of Handel. The nineteenth cen-

27
tury, less fascinated by the choral medium, concentrated on the new
sounds of the quickly developing, self-sufficient symphony orchestra.
We are still occupied with that task. But in addition, our own period

has shown a preoccupation with sonorities that do not depend upon

string tone as its principal ingredient. A


new emphasis on wood
wind and brass sonorities, with their drier, less sentimental con-

notations, is characteristic of our time. I mention this in passing as


merely one instance of choice being exercised in respect to felicitous
sound materials.
Thus far I have tried to suggest the musician's concern with the
sonorous image; the endless variety of possible sound combinations;
the changing situation with regard to sound media; and the limited
use by composers of different sonorous potentials, either through lack
of imagination or through inherited conceptions of desirable sound.
Now let us look a little more closely at the sonorous means at the

disposal of the composer in terms of the single instrument. Here


again the composer is far from being a free agent; he is hedged about
with limitations limitations in the manufacture of the performing
machine (for that is what an instrument is), and limitations in the
technical proficiency of the performer who uses the machine. Some-
times in moments of impatience such as every creator must have,
I have imagined the sweeping away overnight of all our known
instruments through the invention of new electronic devices that
would end the constraints within which we work by providing us
with instruments that would present no problem of pitch, duration,

intensity, or speed. As it is, we must always keep in mind that every


string, every wood wind and brass can play only so high and so low,
only so fast and so slow, only so loud and so soft; not forgetting
the famous matter of 'treadi-control" for the wind
players that is
defied at one's peril. No wonder Beethoven is reported to have said,
when he heard Schuppanzigh was complain-
that his violinist friend

ing about the unplayability of his part: "That he should think of


his miserable fiddle, when the
spirit is speaking in me!"

28
Yes, composers struggle with their instruments and not infre-
with their instrumentalists. Yet despite restrictions imposed
quently
by necessity, they do not view this entirely as a hardship. In fact, in
certain circumstances the discipline enforced by the limitations of an

instrument or a performer acts as a spur to the composer's imagina-


tion. Once, during a visit to Bahia in Brazil, it occurred to me that

I wouldn't at all mind composing for one of their native instruments


called the berimbau. The berimbau
has but one string, on which the

player produces only two tones, a whole tone apart. It isn't pkycd
with a bow, it is struck by a small wooden stick. The trick that gives
it fascination is a wooden shell, open at one end, which is held
against the string and reflects the sound in the manner of an echo
chamber. At the same time, the hand that wields the stick jiggles a
kind of rattle. When several berimbau players are heard together

they set up a sweetly jangled tinkle which I found completely ab-


sorbing. I felt confident that if I had to, I could compose something
for the berimbau that would hold the the
listener's attention despite

very limited tonal range it affords. This confidence in the handling


of instruments and this natural accommodation to the limitations
of any instrument the composer's stock in trade.
is

'I^ejgm^a][jQp^cern of thej:pmoserji$ tp seek pukthc. expressive


nature of any particular instrument .and write, with. thatia nun4-
There is that music which belongs in the flute and only in the flute.
A certain objective lyricism, a kind of ethereal fluidity we connect
with the Composers of imagination have broadened our con-
flute.

ceptions of what was possible on a particular instrument, but beyond


a certain point, defined by the nature of the instrument itself, even
the most gifted composer cannot go.
Think of what Liszt did for the piano. No other composer before
him not even Chopin better understood how to manipulate the

keyboard of the piano so as to produce the most satisfying sound


textures rangingfrom the comparative simplicity of a beautifully
spaced accompanimental figure to the shimmering of a delicate cas-

29
cade of chords.One might argue that this emphasis upon the sound-
appeal of music weakens its spiritual and ethical qualities. But
even so, one cannot deny the role of pioneer to Liszt in this regard,
for without his sensuously contrived pieces we would not have had
the loveliness of Debussy's or Ravel's textures, and certainly not the

languorous piano poems of Alexandre Scriabin. Liszt quite simply

transformed the piano, bringing out not only its own inherent qual-
ities, but its evocative nature as well: the piano
as orchestra, the
as brass
piano as harp, the piano as cembalum, the piano as organ,
choir, even the percussive piano as we know it may be traced to

Liszt'sincomparable handling of the instrument. His pieces were


born in the piano, so to speak; they could never have been written
at a table.

Combinations of a few instruments in chamber music ensembles


have tended toward conventional groupings over the years. The most
usual groups combine instruments of the same family thus we have
:

string trios, quartets, quintets, sextets, and so forth; and wood-wind


groupings of an analogous kind. The piano, because of its very dif-
ferent sound, has always been a problem when added to any of these

groups but not an insuperable one when carefully handled and,


one should add, expertly played.
Our own period has tried to break the monotony of the usual
groupings by combining instruments in a fresh way. I might choose,
at random examples of imaginary groupings such as viola, saxophone,

and harp, or two violins, flute, and vibraphone; or quote actual


combinations from Bartok such as the music for two pianos and two

percussionists, or the Contrasts for violin, clarinet, and piano. Mu-


sical literature would supply numerous other examples. Perhaps the
early jazz band had some part in this stimulation of interest in un-
usual ensembles. At any rate, the first arrival in Europe, around
1918,
of American jazz was followed by a wave of interest in chamber
orchestra and chamber opera, with emphasis on new tonal
experi-
ments. Stravinsky's Histoirc du Soldat was such a work and so was

30
Milhaud's La Creation du Monde. Manuel de Falla's Harpsichord
Concetto dates from the same period, and in its modest contrast of
two and three wood winds against the newly revived harpsi-
strings
chord tone, we get an offshoot of the new sonorous vitality and a
new tonal landscape.
The apex of sonorous imaginativeness in our period is generally
conceded to be the ability to compose for the many-voiced concord
of the symphony orchestra the "grand" orchestra, it used to be
called. There is a natural curiosity on the part of the layman to want
to know how precise a composer's orchestral imagination is. "Can
you tell in advance exactly how your orchestration will sound" is a

question I am often asked. The answer is that it partly depends on


how adventurous you are. If the composer is satisfied with a sure-
fire kind of orchestration limited to tested effects, then certainly a
can be predicted. It's the calculated risk of an
fairly precise result
unusual combination that makes orchestral results uncertain at times.
But a truly brilliant orchestrator, it would seem to me, must take
chances. Musical history recounts many instances of composers mak-
ing adjustments in their scores after having heard how they sound,
in order to approximate more closely the imagined effect; and these
instances concern even those whom we know to be masters of the

orchestra.Arnold Schonberg reported that Richard Strauss showed


him several cases where changes had to be made, and- he added: "I
know that Gustav Mahler had to change his orchestration very much
for the sake of transparency."
One
of the principal reasons for this uncertainty in the mixing of
tones comes from the fact that each individual tone that we hear is

accompanied by a series of partials or overtones. These partials, un-


heard by most of us, nevertheless do affect the way in which tones
combine. That too makes the acoustical engineer's job a precarious
one. In spite of his careful measurements of decibels and frequencies
there is still no guarantee that he can design the perfect concert-
hall. The mixing of sonant vibrations is by definition a hazardous

31
undertaking. For the composer there are additional hazards in the
size and acoustical
variety of tone produced by different players, the

properties of the auditorium, and the talent of the conductor who


supposedly controls the relative dynamic balance of the combined
instrumental body.
Nevertheless, and despite these difficulties, it is quite possible to
describe the basic requirements of a good orchestrator. It is axiomatic
that no one can satisfactorily orchestrate music which was not con-
ceived in orchestral terms in the first place. The music must, by its

nature, belong to the orchestra, so to speak, even before one can tell

in exactly what kind of orchestral dress it will appear. Assuming


that one does have orchestratable music, what governs the choice of
instruments? Nothing but the composer's expressive purpose. And
how does one give expressive purpose through orchestral color?

Through the choice of those timbres, or combination of timbres, that


have closest emotional connotation with one's expressive idea.
The modern orchestra has at its command an enormous wealth
of color combinations. It is this embarras de richesses that has proved
the undoing of the typical commercial radio or movie orchestrator.
Where there is no true expressive purpose anything goes; in fact,
everything goes, and it all goes into the same piece. The so-called
Hollywood orchestration is a composite of all the known tricks in
the orchestrator's bag. Stephen Spender points out a like situation
with regard to poets "who allow their imaginations to lead them
into a pleasant garden of poetic phrases" and contrasts them with
"those who use language as an instrument to hew a
replica of their
experience into words." The situation is similar in music; composers
must not allow their imagination to lead them into a pleasant garden
of orchestral effects; it is the
expressive idea that dictates to the
composer the nature of his orchestral sound, and supplies a discipline
against the nouveau riche temptations of the modern orchestra.
But even when the composer's expressive purpose is clearly before
him there appear to be two different approaches to the problem of

32
orchestration: one is to "think in color" at the
very moment of com-
position, the other is to "choose color" after a sketch of the work is
at hand. Most composers of my acquaintance make a virtue of the
first system; that is, they claim to think
coloristically. feat is, of A
course, implied. If, at the instant the composer conceives a melody,
he at the same instant knows what its orchestral dress will be, he

has performed two operations simultaneously. Some few composers


have told me that they prepare no sketch; they compose directly into
score, thinking the timbre and the notes together. I^seems to me,

however^ that there arc ddjjgjtc .advan rages to.be gained from sep-
.

arating these two functions. The method of choosing colors only at


the moment that one begins deliberately to orchestrate makes it
pos-
sible to plan out an entire score in terms of its over-all effect. It
counteracts the tendency to orchestrate page by page which is certain
to lead to poor results, for the decisions made on any single page

are valid only in relation to what has gone before and what is to
follow. Since balance and contrast of instrumental effect are prime
factors in good orchestration, it follows that any decision as to

timbre, too quickly arrived at, is itself a limitation, since it prevents


freedom of action on other pages. This greater freedom of choice, it
would appear, is possible only if the composer deliberately prevents
himself from thinking in color until the moment comes for apply-

ing himself solely to that purpose. This isn't always possible, for
there are times when a phrase or a section suggests its orchestral

form so forcibly as not to be ignored. These moments, when they


really impose themselves, act as a catalytic in the general orchestral
scheme. But in general I belong to the category of instrumentator
whose orchestral framework and detail is carefully planned so as to
carry out more faithfully the expressive purpose inherent in the

entirely completed ground plan of the work. If I stress this unduly


it is only to counteract what is generally supposed to be normal
procedure in orchestration.
Thus far I have been discussing general principles of orchestral
33
technique. Now I should like to examine orchestral ideals as we find
them exemplified in the works of different composers at different
periods of musical history. The story of the orchestra as we think
of it (and apart from its early connection with opera) begins com-
paratively late, after 1750 certainly, when composers began to mark
their scores so as to indicate precisely what instruments were to

play what notes. Until that happened, sounds were more or less

improvised according to the players available, which naturally varied


considerably in different times and places. Because the composer was
so frequently involved in the performance himself as instrumentalist,
we can conclude that the orchestral sounds that were made fully
mirrored his wishes, but since these were not indicated in printed
scores it leaves us with only a hazy notion of the sonorities, produced.

By the latter part of the eighteenth century the basis for what was
later tobe developed into our modern orchestras was established.
The constitution of the orchestra at that time was the body of strings,
with plain juxtapositions of a few wood winds and some brass. These
latter instruments, especially, were limited in the part they could
play by deficiencies in manufacture and the technical limitations of
the players. Therefore,no great problem of orchestral effect was in
question. Each instrument was used frankly for its own sound, so
that an oboe sounded like an oboe and a bassoon like a bassoon. A
more imaginative application of the same principles may be observed
in the scores of Haydn and Mozart. Here a delightful clarity of
texture was obtained by showing off in their most
grateful registers
the natural characteristics of each instrument. This was the
age of
innocence in orchestration.
With Beethoven some of the problems of modern orchestration
were faced for the first time. He had a and more complex
larger
body of instruments at his command and produced a rugged and
honest sound, a sound without much finesse or subtlety of effect,
from our vantage point, perhaps, but one that somehow adequately
34
clothes the music of the symphonies and overtures. Still he left much
to be done in that field.

It is generally agreed that it was the orchestral genius of Hector

Berlioz that was responsible for the invention of the modern orches-
tra aswe think of it. Up to his time composers used instruments in
order to make them sound like themselves; the mixing of colors so
as to produce a new result was his achievement. Berlioz took ad-

vantage of the ambiguity of timbre that each instrument has in


varying degrees, and thereby introduced the element of orchestral
magic as a contemporary composer would understand it. The bril-

liance of his orchestration comes partly by way of this ability to

blend instruments not merely to keep them out of one another's

way. His writing for the individual instruments disclosed


skillful

the unsuspected characteristics of their different registers. The par-


ticular registers chosen for each group of instruments enhances the

sheen and sparkle of the combined texture. Add to this his incredible

daring in forcing instrumentalists to play better than they knew they


could play. He paid the price, no doubt, in hearing his music inade-
in one's
quately performed. But imagine the excitement of hearing
inner ear sonorities that had never before been set down by any
other man. It is the subtle calculation of these masterly scores that

convinces me that Berlioz was more, much more, than the starry-

eyed romantic of the history books.


It would be easy to point to specific examples of Berlioz* orches-

tral daring. The use of the double basses in four-part pizzicati at

the beginning of the March to the Scaffold from the Symphonic


also in chordal style, at
Fantastique, the writing for four tympani,
the conclusion of the movement the use of
that precedes the March;
and devilish
English horn and piccolo clarinet to typify pastoral
sentiments, respectively; the gossamer texture of Queen
Mab with
its Debussian harps and high antique cymbals; the sensitive mix-

tures of low flutes with string tone at die beginning of the Love

35
Scene from Romeo these and numerous other examples prove
that Berlioz brought to music an uncanny instinct for orchestral

wizardry.
The lessons to be learned from Berlioz were incorporated into the
later scores of Wagner and Strauss. Wagner's orchestration was
always effective and sometimes startlingly original, but nevertheless
a heavy German sauce seems to have covered what was once a
Gallic base. The primary colors used by earlier and later orches-

trators are comparatively little in evidence, and instead a continual


doubling of one instrument with another produces an overall neu-
tral fatness of sound which has lost all differentiation and dis-

tinction. Strauss,who had edited the well-known Berlioz treatise


on instrumentation, continued the Wagnerian orchestral tradition,
adding a special brilliance of his own. The scoring of his symphonic
poems composed around the beginning of the century left our elders
breathless. They remain breath-taking in one sense, that is, if one

examines them on the printed page and appreciates the mental in-
genuity and musical knowledge they represent. But as sheer sound
they have lost much of the compelling force they once had, for they
seem over-elaborate and unnecessarily cluttered with a hundred in-

genious details that are not heard as such in performance, and pro-
duce in the cud an orchestral sonority not so very different from
that of a bloated Wagnerism. Reservations should be made, however,
for Strauss's finest orchestral pages, such as those in Salome or
Electra, which are prophetic of what was to follow.
It was the Russian school of composers especially Tchaikovsky
and Rimsky-Korsakoff who were most directly influenced by the
Berlioz scores. Rimsky wrote the textbook on orchestration that was
the "bible" of our student days.
Although the advice he gave was
solid enough, it turned out to be of
only limited application, for it
assumed that the elements of harmony, melody, and
figuration
would retain the same relative positions of importance that they
have in a Rimsky-Korsakoff score. But our scores are
likely to be

36
more contrapuntally coaceived than Rimsky-KorsakofFs; therefore
his good advice a bit too schematic in the first place has be-
come less and less serviceable.
Moreover, a completely new conception of delicacy and magic in
had been introduced in France during the early
orchestral coloring
twentieth century. The scores of Debussy and Ravel not only looked
different on the page, they sounded different in the orchestra. What
a pity that Ravel never wrote a treatise on orchestration! The first

precept would have been: no doubling allowed, except in the full


orchestral tutti. In other words, discover again the purity of the in-
dividual hue. And when you mix your pure colors be sure to mix
them with exactitude, for only in that way can you hope to obtain
the optimum of delicate or dazzling timbres. An instinctual knowl-

edge of the potentiality of each instrument plus a balanced calcula-


tion of their combined effect helps to explain, in part, the orchestral

delights of the later Ravel scores. Debussy, by comparison,


was less
precise in his orchestral workmanship, depending on his personal
sensitivityfor subtle balances, and as a consequence his
obtaining
scores need careful adjustment on the part of orchestra and con-
ductor.
Musical impressionism was superseded by the arrival in Paris in
1910 of a new master of the orchestra: Igor Stravinsky.
The Fire
Bird showed what he could do under the influence of the Rimsky-
Ravel color scheme. But in the two ballets that followed, Stravinsky

Petrouchfy had no rivals for brilliance and


hit his stride: exhilara-

tion of orchestral effect; and Le Sucre du Printemfs remains, after


orchestral achievement of the
forty years, the most astonishing
twentieth century. We must not underestimate the importance of

new rhythms and the creation of this


the polytonal harmonies in
amazing orchestral sound. But for the most part it depends upon an
the marshaling of orchestral
unprecedented degree of virtuosity in
forces. Thepitting of energized strings
and piercing wood winds
of brass, the whole underlined by an
against the sharp cutting edge

37
explosive percussive wallop, typifies Le Sacrc, and inaugurates a new
era in orchestral practice.
Ten years later it was an entirely different sound-ideal that held
Stravinsky's interest. In place of brilliance, the neoclassic works em-
phasized the dry sonorities o wind ensembles without the string
tone added the grays and browns of a new and more sober color
scheme. Later, in the ballets of Apollo and Orpheus, Stravinsky
evinced renewed interest in the strings and gave them a texture all
his own; especially the string tone of Orpheus glows with a rich,
dark hue. No other composer has ever shown greater awareness of
the natural correlation of tonal image with expressive content.
In briefly reviewing the picture of modern orchestration one ought
not fail to mention the influence of that remarkable conductor-

composer Gustav Mahler. The orchestral trouvailles of his nine sym-


phonies were highly suggestive to composers like Schonberg and
Alban Berg, as well as to the later generation of Honegger, Shosta-
kovitch, and Benjamin Britten. Mahler, despite the deeply romantic
substance of his music, composed in long and independent melodic
lines, not unrelated to the baroque contrapuntal textures of eight-

eenth-century composers. Scoring these for an orchestra that had no


need for "filling in" harmonies of the nineteenth century, and avoid-
ing as far as posisble all use of orchestral "pedaling" effects, Mahler
achieved an instrumental clarity that had no model in his time. The
dear contrapuntal lines, and the sharp juxtapositions of one orches-
tral section
against another strings against brass, for instance
as we find it in the scores of Hindemith or Roy Harris are traceable
to Mahler's influence.
Schonberg was especially insistent about his
debt to Mahler. The use of the orchestra as if it were a large en-
semble of chamber music players, with the notion of
giving each
tone in the harmonic complex its solo color was a
Schonberg deriva-
tion by way of Mahler. These are but a few of the results Mahler's
orchestral mastery has had on the composers of our own time.
The sonorous image-ideal o the future even the immediate

38
future seems highly conjectural. In a supersonic age the material
of sound become less ethereal and ephemeral, more
itself is likely to

solidly tangible. Carlos Chavez once envisaged a collaboration of


musicians and engineers that would produce, as he put it, "a mate-
rial appropriate and practical for huge electric musical perform-

ances." He
goes on to imagine a perfect gradation of coloring
through an incredible variety of timbres; and increased perspective
of sound through more subtle intensities. The possibilities are end-

less; the probabilities are that something radical is in the making.


The sound-wave instruments of Theremin and Martenot, the
electronic organ, the ability to write music directly on film, the ex-

perimentations with noise as a musical ingredient in sound films and


in the scores of the French composers of the new musique concrete
all these and other similar manifestations seern to point to wide

horizons of new sound


images. But just as in the past, it is perhaps
comforting to remember, we, the composers, are the ones who must
give meaning to whatever sonorous images the engineers can invent.

39
CHAPTER THREE

The Creative Mind


and the Interpretative Mind
IN THE ART OF MUSIC, creation and interpretation arc

indissolubly linked, more so than in any of the other arts, with the

possible exception of dancing. Both these activities creation and

interpretation demand an imaginative mind that is self-evident.

Both bring into play creative energies that are sometimes alike, some-
times dissimilar. By coupling them together it
may be possible to
illuminate their relationship and their interaction, one upon the
other.

Like most creative artists, I have from time to time cogitated on


the mysterious nature of creativity. Is there
anything new to be said
about the creative act anything really new, I mean? I rather doubt
it. The idea of creative man goes back so far in time, so many cogent
things have been written and said acute observations, poetic reflec-

tions, and philosophic pondcrings, that one despairs of bringing


to the subject
anything more than a private view of an immense
terrain.

Still, the serious composer who thinks about his art will sooner or
later have occasion to ask himself: why is it so important to my own
psyche that I
compose music? What makes it seem so absolutely
necessary, so that every other daily activity, by comparison, is of
lesser
significance? And why is the creative impulse never satisfied;

40
why must one always begin anew? To the first question the need
to create the answer is always the same self-expression; the basic
need to make evident one's deepest feelings about life. But why is

the job never done? Why must one always begin again? The reason
for thejrpmpulsion to renewed
creativity, it seems to me, is that
each added work brings with, an element of self-discovery. I must
it

create in order to know myself, and since self-knowledge is a never-


ending search, each new work is only a part-answer to the question
"Who am I?" and brings with it the need to go on to other and dif-
ferent part-answers. Because of this, each artist's work is supremely

important at least to himself. But why does the artist presume to


think, and why do other men encourage him to think, that the
creation of one more work of art is of more than merely private
import? That is because each new and significant work of art is
a unique formulation of experience; an experience that would be

utterly lost if it were not captured and set down by the artist No
other artist will ever make that particular formulation in exactly
that way. -&.nd just J*3j3l-- iudividna.1

through his rreflt-jnn 3 JQufjy wnrLljaf Ifl.rgp; Jcjnro Jtself f

artists, discovers the very namrc^j^jtsjkingjt^

Jacques Maritain has summarized this idea of the necessity and


uniqueness of the work of art in these terms: it is the artist's condi-
tion, he says, "to seize ofc&ur^y 1^ GWJ^
that will not come to anytfein^.^ave^iinbeiag -creari.yc^ .and which
will not be conceptualised save in a work made, by ii&jaTOt Jiaads."
Thus the creator finds himself in a precarious position because, first,
the involuntary nature of creation makes the moment of engender-

ing an art work uncertain, and then, once conceived, there comes the
fear that the conception may not be brought to fruition. This gives
a dramatic aspect to the composer's situation. On the one hand the
need for self-expression is ever-present, but on the other hand, he
cannot, by an act of will, produce the work of art. It must either be

41
entirely spontaneous, or if not spontaneous, then cajoled, induced,

gradually perceived so that each day's work may spell failure or

triumph. No wonder many creative artists have been reputed to have


had unstable characters.
Up to this point, the situation of the musical interpreter is not so
very different from that of the creator. He is simply the mterniediary
that brjing& the composer's work ,to life a kin3 of midwife to jhe

composition He partakes of the same dedication of purpose, the


same sense of self-discovery through each performance, the same
conviction that something unique is lost, possibly, when his own

understanding of a work of art is lost. He even partakes of the in-


voluntary nature of creation, for we know that he cannot at will turn
on the wellsprings of his creativity so that each performance may be
of equal value. Quite the contrary, each time he steps out upon the
concert platform we wish him luck, for he shares something of the
creator's uncertain powers of projection. Thus we see that interpreta-
tion, even though it
may rightfully be thought of as an auxiliary
art, does share elements of creativity with the mind that forms the
work of art.
But now let us consider the essential way in which creation and
interpretation are radically different. Tfre interprctativc^mind ^an
exerase jrtsejf itself
,

f^^s^y^j^^^^p^ffi r
supply tfaaxob^cct.
The making of something out of nothing the special province of
is

the creative mind. The composer is a kind of magician; out of the


recesses of his thought he produces, or finds himself in possession
of, the generative idea. Although I say "the recesses of his
thought,"
in actuality the source of the
germinal idea is the one phase in crea-
tion that resists rational we know is that the mo-
explanation. All
ment of possession moment of inspiration; or to use Coleridge's
is the

phrase, the moment when the creator is in "a more than usual state
of emotion." Whence it comes, or in what manner it
comes, or how
duration one can never foretell.
its
long Inspiration may be a form
of superconsciousness, or of subconsciousness I wouldn't
perhaps

42
know; but I am sure that it is the antithesis of self-consciousness.
The inspired moment may sometimes be described as a kind of

hallucinatory state of mind: one half of the personality emotes and


dictates while the other half listens and notates. The half that
listens had better look the other way, had better simulate a half
attention only, for the half that dictatesis easily
disgruntled and
avenges too
itself forclose inspection by fading entirely away.
That describes, of course, only one kind of inspiration. Another
kind involves the personality as a whole, or rather, loses sight of it

completely, in a spontaneous expression of emotional release. By that


I mean the creative impulse takes possession in a way that blots out

in greater or lesser degree consciousness of the familiar sort. Both


these types of inspiration if one can call them types are gen-

erally of brief duration and of exhausting effect. They are the rarer

kind, the kind we wait for every day. The less divine afflatus that
makes it possible for us to compose each day to induce inspiration,
as it were is a
species of creative intuition in which the critical

faculty is much more involved. But I shall come to that in a mo-


ment. Long works need intuitiveness of that sort, for it is generally
the shorter ones that are entirely the result of spontaneous creativity.
Mere length in music is central to the composer's problem. To
write a three-minute piece is not difficult; a main section, a con-

trasting section, and a return to the first part is the usual solution.
But anything that lasts beyond three minutes may cause trouble.

In treating so amorphous a material as music the composer is con-


fronted with this principal problem: how to extend successfully the
seminal ideas and how to shape the adds up to a
whole so that it

rounded experience. Here, too, inspiration of a kind is needed. No


textbook rules can be applied, for the simple reason that these gen-
erative ideas are themselves live things and demand their individual

treatment. I have sometimes wondered whether this problem of the


successful shaping of musical form was not connected in some way
with the strange fact that musical history names no women in its

43
roster of great composers. There have been great women musical
interpreters, but thus far I emphasize, thus jar no examples of
women composers of the first rank. This is a touchy subject, no
doubt, but leaving aside the obscure and various reasons for the
it appears to indicate that the conception and shaping
historical fact,

of abstract ideas in extended forms marks a


clear boundary between

the creative mind and the interpretative mind.


In all that I have been saying about creative thinking there is

implied the strongly imaginative quality of the artist's mentality. I


now because there has been a tendency in recent times to
stress this

put the emphasis rather on the artist as craftsman, with much talk

of the composer's technique. The artist-craftsman of the past is held

up to us as the model to be emulated, there is a possible source of


confusion here: amidst all the talk of the craftsmanlike approach we
must always remember that a work of art is not a pair of. shoes. It
may very well be useful like a pair of shoes, but it takes its source
from a quite different sphere of mental activity. Roger Sessions

understood this when he wrote recently: "The composer's technique


is, on the lowest level, his mastery of the musical language . . .

On a somewhat higher level ... it becomes identical with his mu-


sical thought, and it is problematical in terms of substance rather

than merely of execution. On this level it is no longer accurate to

speak of craftsmanship. The composer is no longer simply a crafts-


man; he has become a musical thinker, a creator of values values
which are primarily aesthetic, hence psychological, but hence, as an
inevitable consequence, ultimately of the deepest human impor-
tance."
It is curious that this concern with craftsmanship should have
affected an developed no successful large-scale primitive
art that has

practitioners, in the sense that there are accepted primitive painters.


Music boasts no Henri Rousseau, no Grandma Moses. Naivete
doesn't work in music. To write any sort of a usable piece presumes
a rrnmrrmm kind of professionalism. Mussorgsky and Satie are the

44
closest we have come in recent times to a primitive composer, and
the mere mention of their names makes the idea rather absurd.

No, I suspect that the stress the composer as crafts-


placed upon
man, especially in teacher-pupil relationships, comes from a basic
mistrust of making private aesthetic judgments. There is the fear
of being wrong, plus the insecurity of not being able to prove that
one is right, even to oneself. As a result an attitude is encouraged
of avoiding the whole messy business of aesthetic evaluation, put-

ting one's attention on workmanship and craft instead, for there


we deal in solid values. But that attitude, to my mind, side-steps
the whole question of the composer's OWA ueecLfor .critical aware-
ness and for making aesthetic judgments at the, moment of creation.
As I see it, this ability is part of his craft, and the lack of it has
weakened, when it hasn't entirely eliminated, many potentially fine
works.
The creative mind, in its day-to-day functioning, must be a critical
mind. The ideal would be not merely to be aware, but to be "aware
of our awareness," as Professor I. A. Richards has put it. In music
this self-critical appraisal of the composer's own mind guiding the
composition to its inevitable termination is particularly difficult of

application, for music is an emotional and comparatively intangible


substance. Composers, especially young composers, are not always
clear as to the role criticism plays at the instant of creation. They
don't seem to be fully aware that each time one note is followed

by another note, or one chord by another chord, a decision has


been made. They seem even less aware of the psychological and
emotional connotations of their music. Instead they appear to be

mainly concerned with the purely formal Tightness of a general


scheme, with a particular care for the note-for-note logic of thematic
relationships. In other words, they are partially aware, but not fully
aware, and not sufficiently cognizant of those factors which have a
controlling influence on the success or failure of the composition as
a whole. A full_and equal appraisal of every smallest contributing

45
the controlling and most .essential
factor, withanjindcrstanding of
elements in d^^giece, without allowingHhis to cramp one's freedom
oFcreative inventiveaess*isr.bdag, as^it w^^TSsiHe and outside the
u

work at the same time; that is how I envisage the "awareness of


one's awareness.? Beethoven's genius was once attributed by Schu-
bert to what he termed his "superb coolness under the fire of crea-
tive fantasy." What a wonderful way to describe the creative mind
functioning at its highest potential!
It is one of the critical creative mind that al-
curiosities of the

though much
it is
very alive to the component parts of the finished
work, it cannot know everything that the work may mean to others.
parr jp cachjffiork an element that Andre
Gide called la part de Dieu. I have often felt familiar, and yet again
unfamiliar, with a new work of mine as it was being rehearsed for
the first time as if both the players and I myself had to accustom
ourselves to its strangeness. The late Paul Rosenfeld once wrote that
he saw the steel frames of skyscrapers in my Piano Variations. I

like to t-hinfc that the characterization was apt, but I must confess
that the notion of skyscrapers was not at all in my mind when I

was composing the Variations. In similar fashion an English critic,


Wilfrid Mellers, has found in the final movement of my Piano
Sonata "a quintessential musical expression of the idea' of immo-
bility." "The music runs down like a clock,** Mellers writes, "and
dissolves away into eternity." That is probably a very apt descrip-
tion also, although I would hardly have thought of it myself. Com-
posers often tell you that they don't read criticisms of their works.
As you j^JLj^-aj^exj^tioa, JL admit to a curiosity about the
slightest cue as to^jtiie meaningpf a piece of mine a meaning,
other than
that is-j
throne I. know. I have put there.
Quite apart from my own curiosity, there is always the question
of how successfully one is communicating with an audience. A

composer who cannot in advance calculate to some extent the effect


of his piece on the listening public is in for some rude awakenings.
Whether or not he ought to take this effect upon an audience into
account at the time o composing is another matter. Here again

composers vary widely in their attitude. But whatever they tell you,
I think it is safe to assume that although a conscious desire for

communication nnf fre in the forefront of their


may r mjfi<js evegy
move toward logicjanrt robrrencfi-in composing js in fact; a move
toward communication. only a slight step when a composer
It is

tries for coherence in terms of a particular audience. This idea of


music directed to a particular public is usually a bit shocking to the
music-lover. It doesn't matter how many times we tell the familiar

story of Bach writing each week for the honest burghers of Leipzig,

or Mozart's relations with the courtly musical patrons of his day;


audiences still prefer to think of the musical creator as a man closeted
with his idea, unsullied by the rough and tumble of the world
around him. Whether or not contemporary composers think about
this matter of communication with their audience, they haven't
been signally successful at it. The reasons for this are explored in

greater detail in a later chapter.


The subject ofcommunication with an audience brings us quite
naturally to a consideration of the performer's role, and the inter-
action of the creative and the interpretative mind which is crucial

to the whole musical experience. These two functions creation

and interpretation were usually performed, in pre-Beethoven days,


by a single individual. The composer was his own interpreter; or,
as frequently happened, interpreters wrote music for their own in-

strument. But nowadays, as we all know, these functions are more

usually separated, and the composer is in the position of a man who


has lost his power of speech and consigns his thoughts by letter to
an audience that cannot read words. Consequently they both have
need of a middleman, a talented reader who can arouse response in
an audience by the public reading of the composer's message.
A prime question immediately presents itself: what does the com-
poser expect of his reader, or interpreter? I think I know what one

47
of the main preoccupations of the interpreter is: elocutionary elo-

quence, or, to put it in musical terms, the making of beautiful


sounds. All his long he has trained himself to overcome all
life

technical hurdles and to produce the most admirable tone obtainable

on his instrument. But there's the rub; the composer is


thinking
about something quite different. He is concerned not so much with
technical adequacy or quality of tonal perfection as with the char-
acter and specific expressive nature of the interpretation. Whatever
elsehappens he doesn't want his basic conception to be falsified. At
any moment he is ready to sacrifice beauty of tone for the sake of a
more meaningful reading. Every performing artist has something
of the elocutionist in him; he wants the words to shine, and the
sound of them to be full and right. Every composer, on the other
hand, has something of a playwright in him; he wants above all to
have his "actors" intent upon the significance of a scene, on its im-

port within a particular context, for if that is lost, all elocutionary


eloquence becomes meaningless irritating even, since It "hinders"
mind from getting across
the creative to the auditor the whole point
and purpose of the work of art.
Further analogies with playacting exist. The notion of the actress
who has been hopelessly miscast in a play is familiar to all of us.
But musical actors, so to speak, often miscast themselves, and with
less justification. The woman who
has the robust, healthy
violinist

tone of a washerwoman will never successfully invoke from her


instrument the sweet innocence of a jeune file. The singer who is a
nice person, and who possesses an excellent voice, may have no
inner comprehension for the tragic sense of life, and hence will
never successfully communicate that sentiment. One might almost
maintain that musical interpretation demands of the performer an
even wider range than that of the actor, because the musician must

play every role in the piece.


At this point I can hear the querulous performer asking: But is
there only one way of reading a piece of music? Aren't divergent

48
readings of the same music possible? Most certainly they are. As a
composer I should like to think that any one of my works is capa-
ble of being read in several ways. Otherwise a work might be said
to lack richness of meaning. But each different reading must in it-
selfbe convincing, musically and psychologically it must be within

the limits of one of the possible ways of interpreting the work. It


must have stylistic truth, which is to say it must be read within the
frame of reference that is true for the composer's period and in-

dividual personality.
This question of the proper style in playing or singing is one of
the thornier problems of music. There have been instances when I
have listened to performances of my work and thought: this is all
very fine, but I don't think I recognize myself. It may be that the

performer misses the folklike simplicity I had intended, or that he


underplays the monumental tone at the conclusion of a piece, or that
he overemphasizes the grotesque element in a scherzo section. Per-
sonally I have always found the finest interpreters most ready to
accept a composer's suggestions. And similarly, it is from the finest
interpreters that the composer can learn most about the character of
his work; aspects of it that he did not realize were there, tempi that
are slower or faster than he had himself imagined were the correct
ones, phrasings that better express the natural curve of a melody.
Here is where the interaction of composer and interpreter can be
most fruitful.
All questions of interpretation sooner or kter resolve themselves
into a discussion of how faithful the performer ought to be to the
notes themselves. No sooner do we
ask this than a counterquestion

suggests itself: how faithful are composers to the notes they them-
selves put down? Some performers take an almost religious attitude
to the printed page: every comma, every slurred staccato, every
metronomic marking taken as sacrosanct. I always hesitate, -at
is

least inwardly, before breaking down that fond illusion. I wish our

Dotation and our indications of tempi and dynamics were that exact,

49
but honesty compels me to admit that the written page is only an
approximation; it's
only an indication of how composer was
close the

able to come in transcribing his exact thoughts on paper. Beyond

that point the interpreter is on his own. I know that there are some

contemporary composers who have been exasperated by the extreme


liberties taken with the notes by romantic artists. As a result they

have gone to the other extreme and said: "Stop concerning your-
selves with interpretation, just play the notes/' That attitude blithely

ignores the insufficiencies of musical notation, and thus refuses to


take into account the realities of the situation. The only sensible
advice one can give a performing artist is to ask that a happy balance
be found between slavish adherence to inadequate signs and a too
liberal straying from the clear intentions of the composer.

In order to get insight into the interpreter's mentality it is nec-

essary to be able to bring judgment to bear on the performance.


The interpretation itself must be interpreted if we are to evaluate
what the executant is contributing to a performance. This is not

easy for the layman. Observation has convinced me that even the

truly musical layman often has difficulty in making subtle distinc-


tions in the judging of musical performance. He seems to lack the
criteria necessary for such critical judgment. The difficulty arises
from the fact that the listener, in order to exercise such criteria, is

expected to know in advance what the performance ought to sound


like before he hears what it does sound like. In other words, he
must have an performance in his mind's ear alongside which
ideal

he can place the actual performance heard for purposes of com-

parison. To do this he must understand, first, the style appropriate


to the historical period of the composition and to the composer's

development up to that time; and secondly, he must be able to


describe precisely the nature of the given execution so that he can

particularize the qualities special to that performer and none other.


To do this well presupposes wide historical knowledge, a great deal

50
o experience in listening, with the admixture ot an instinctive
musicality of one's own.
In interpreting the interpretation, as I put it, we must never lose
sight of the preponderant role of the individual personality of the

performer- I like to think that if I were to hear successively three


unidentified pianists behind a screen I could give you a brief
per-
sonality sketch of each one of them, and come somewhere near the
truth. This may of course be merely an illusion of mine, but no
it indicates what I mean
matter; by the thought that a performance
is both an exposition of the piece and an exposition of the person-

ality traits of the performer. This is particularly true for singers.


Like actors on the stage, they must be impressive in themselves,
even before they utter a sound. Singers are really "on the spot";
unlike the conductor they cannot turn their backs to us; they face

us, and the song and the personality are inextricably mixed. You
can't get at the one except through the other. The same is true of

instrumentalists, except that in their case our sight of the instrument


and their busy fingers makes less obvious the role played by per-
sonality. But it is there nonetheless. When
a performer lacks person-
ality we call the performance dull; when he has too much personality
we complain that he obscures the piece from view. A just apprecia-
tion of the exact part played by the performer's personality in any
given execution is therefore essential for precise judgment.
Now let us get down to cases. Let us observe the interpreter in
purpose of describing certain basic psychological types
action, for the
that are met with most frequently.
Great interpretation, as the **big" public understands it, is gen-
erally of the fiery and romantic type. Since so much of the music
we hear publicly performed comes from the romantic period, many

performers are forced to adopt the manner, even though they may
not be born to it. But the true romantic the interpreter who creates

an impression of giving himself in an uninhibited way has great

51
power over audiences everywhere. I am now thinking in terms of
the real thing, not merely of the unfortunate individual making a

public spectacle of himself. By only a slim margin a tasteless ex-


hibitionism is separated from an experience that can be deeply mov-

ing. When this kind of performance doesn't come off, we want to

laugh if we are charitably inclined; in less charitable moments


itcan be infuriating, for the simulation of strong feelings on the

part of an interpreter who is really feeling nothing at all strikes us


as a public lie; up and denounce it. On the other
we want to rise

hand, the performer deeply moved, and who without a


who is

shadow of embarrassment can openly appeal to what is warmest


and most human in man's psyche, and who in a sense exhibits him-
vibrant sympathy before the glazed stare of a
self in this state of

large and heterogeneous crowd that is the performer who really


communicates with an audience and who usually wins the loudest
plaudits.
Another of the truly potent ways of engendering legitimate excite-
ment in an audience is for the player or singer to give the impres-
sion that chances are being taken. To create this kind of excitement
there must really be a precarious element present. There must be

danger: danger that the performance will get out of hand; that the
performer, no matter how phenomenal his natural gift may be, has
set himself a task that is possibly beyond even his capability of
it.
realizing
Nothing is so boring as a merely well-rehearsed performance,
well-rehearsed in the sense that nothing can be expected to happen
except what was studiously prepared in advance. This has vitiated
more than one tasteful and careful performance. It is as if the mu-
sician, during the execution, had stopped listening to himself, and
was simply performing a duty rather than a piece. It is axiomatic
that unless the hearing of the music first stirs the executant it is

unlikely to move an audience. A live performance should be just


that live to all the incidents that happen along the way, colored

52
by the subtle nuances of momentary emotion, inspired by the sud-
den insights of public communication. Wonderful performances can
be of different kinds, but the virtuoso
many performance that is
breathlessly exciting, to my
mind, always implies this almost-but-
not-quite out-of-control quality, the antithesis of the well-rehearse^
execution.
another type of performer, whose sphere of action is some-
Still

where in the neighborhood of the romantic, is the musician who


gives a personalized reading of a work. Every performance that has
been logically conceived represents a reading in some sense, but in
this case the reading is more particularized and personalized, so
that the composition not just the composition, but the composi-
is

tion as our performer on that one occasion understands its meaning


and tries to communicate it. In the case of a conductor of this type,
thoughts of elegance of style, perfection of ensemble, delicacy of in-
strumental balance are secondary; instead he is "singing" his
all

way through the composition with a kind of concentration that


does not allow for distractions of mere technical details. Such a

reading, to be successful, must impose itself must break down the


resistance that may come from the thought that you or I might
read the work differently. There can be no question of "aesthetic
contemplation" here, either for the conductor or his listener. What
he strives for is our involvement in a wholeness of experience the
sense that he and his listeners have lived through something im-
portant. This is the kind of performer who sometimes takes a mere-
tricious piece and makes it sound better than it really is. The power

of conviction behind such a performance tends to blot out critical


reservations. We
lend ourselves, and smile about it later. It was a

good show, we got


our money's worth, and no one was really fooled.
But when the work merits it, and the reading is truly convincing,
we are left with the impression that whether or not what we have
heard is the only possible interpretation, we have at least heard one
of the essential ways in which that music is to be understood,

53
I should like to invoke now another category of performer whose
mind seems concentrated on a quite different artistic end; the per-
former whose approach to interpretation is more impersonal, more
classic perhaps. Here the objective is an absolute clarity of texture,

a euphonious ensemble, an infallible sense of timing, and above all,

prime concern with continuity and flow the sense of directional


movement forward which is intrinsic to the nature and character
of all music. Here
not the musical measure being heard that is
it is

important but the musical measure to come. It is this concern with


forward motion that carries a piece in one long trajectory from its

beginning to its end and gives an interpretation inevitability.


The interpreter whose attention is focused on the road ahead is

better able than others to give us the long line and sculptural shape
of a composition. It is useless to explain this need for directional
movement forward to performers who have no instinct for it.
They
may, and often do have clarity, but
clarity taken by itself can easily
decline in interest to that of a schoolroom demonstration a labora-
tory taking-apart of the mechanics of a piece of music. We see how
it minutest part. For some reason, however, unless an
ticks in its

inner fervor is generated, the performer becomes a schoolmaster


who makes the composition dear for us but neglects somehow to
turn it into music.
Thereis another attribute of the classic
approach to the re-crea-
tion of music that should be mentioned: the species of deep satis-
faction to be derived from a performance that has ease and relaxa-
tion. Effortless is one of the
singing or playing major joys of music
listening: it indicates a
measure of mental confidence and a degree
of physical assurance in the of the instrument, whatever it
handling
may be, that is not often found in combination in one human being.
There are few qualities more grateful in execution than this sense
of ease, the sense of powers
completely adequate to the expressive
purpose, but few things are more difficult to achieve for the per-

54
former. This is not at all a matter of the intellect, for certain per-

formers in the field of popular music also have this kind of ease
in fact, they are more likely to possess it than are concert artists. I

doubt whether it can be tricked. It must reflect a true inner relaxa-

tion, difficult to come by in view of the condition of public perform-


ance, which in itself makes for tension. But the master interpreters
have it.

I have the question of national characteristics in


left until last

musical interpretation. Is there such a thing? Is there an American

way of performing Schubert as distinguished from an Austrian way?


It seems to me that there most definitely is. The quickest way of

gauging this is to compare present-day American and European


orchestral performance. Our orchestras, by comparison with those
abroad, are energized and glamorized: they play with a golden
sheen that reflects their material well-being. The European organ-
ization approaches orchestral performance in a more straightforward
and natural way. There is less sense of strain, less need to make each
execution the "world's greatest." In Europe it gives one a feeling of
refreshment to corrie upon the frankly unglamorous playing of a

solidly trained orchestra. I once heard such an orchestra in America,


about fifteen years ago. It came out of the Middle West and played
under a conductor of European origin in such a way that one felt
the whole organization had just stepped out of the nineteenth cen-

tury. Nowadays, when that approach is attempted, it generally re-


sults in a businesslike, shipshape rendition, without much artistic

conviction behind it. More typical is the glorified tonal approach,


the steely brass per-
although our orchestras still have not reached
fection of a jazz combination's attack. But something of the same
compulsion to "wow" an audience through the sheer power of tonal
Our symphonic be-
magnificence is present. organizations, as they
come known in Europe, are admired for their live sound and their

vitality in performance. It is only right that they should


be. My
55
object is not to bclitdc the outstanding qualities of our orchestras
but merely to stress one factor in their playing which seems to me
indicative of national flavor.

National characteristics are most clearly present in interpretation,


I suppose, when it can be said that the execution is "in the true
tradition." This comes about when the performer is either a con-
temporary of the composer and has received the correct style of rendi-
tion through association with the composer himself, or when, by birth
and background, the performer is identified in our minds with the
country and culture sometimes even the city of the composer in

question, I realize that the phrase "in the true tradition" is at best
a shaky one. For there is no positive proof that my conception of the
"true tradition" is the really true one. Still, we are all mostly ready
to concede that the conductor from Vienna has a special insight into
the way in which Schubert should be played. Serge Koussevitzky
once made an observation to me that I shall always remember. He
said that our audiences would never entirely understand American
orchestral compositions until they heard them conducted by Ameri-

can-born conductors. It seems clear, then, that if we can speak of


national traits of character, inevitably those traits will form the

interpreter's character as a human being and shine through the


interpretation.
In sketching thus briefly various basic types of interpreter I have

naturally been forced to oversimplification. The finest artists cannot


be so neatly pigeonholed, as I am afraid I may have suggested. The
reason we remain so alive to their qualities is just because in each
case we and adjust subtle gradations of inter-
are forced to balance

pretative power. Every new artist, and for that matter every new
composer, is a problem child a composite of virtues and defects
that challenges the keenness of mind of the listener.
have mentioned what the composer expects from his interpreter.
I

I should now logically state what the


interpreter expects from the
composer. Too often, however, the truth is that interpreters are not

56
thinking about the composer at all I mean the live composer. In
the past it was different. There are numerous instances of a work

being written simply because some outstanding instrumentalist in-


spired it.
Paganini commissioning Berlioz, Joachim helping Brahms
instances such as these become more legendary as the years pass.
Of course isolated examples still occur, but for the most part a re-

grettable gulf separates the interpreter and composer in present-day


musical They are not interacting enough! A healthy musical
life.

would include increased opportunities for interpreters


state of affairs

and composers to meet and exchange ideas. This should begin at


the school level, as often happened abroad. If I were an interpreter I
think I should like to have the sense that I had been a part of the
fullmusical experience of my time, which inevitably means an active

part in the development of the composers of my time. Is this too


Utopian? I hope not, because the indissoluble link between inter-

preter and composer makes their interaction one of the conditions of


a healthily functioning musical community.

57
Part Two

MUSICAL IMAGINATION IN
THE CONTEMPORARY SCENE
CHAPTER FOUR

Tradition and Innovation


in Recent European Music
"MUSIC. MOflf, T
WAvr A<KTV "-"T iglv^n qndertfre
AitTj

law nf tradition." That sentence,* from an article by


in
j
the French
____ i

critic, Frederick Goldbeck, occurred to me as I was being shown


about the venerable palazzo that houses the Benedetto Marcello
3

musical conservatory in Venice. "The composer's chords,* Goldbeck


had written, "are every dead or living composer's chords, never his

own. His paper is never a blank; there are so many staves on it,
"
five prison bars in each, History and Tradition being the jail
..

These phrases echoed in my mind as the conservatory's director,


Francesco Malipiero, led me down the ancient corridors and dusted
off for me
examine precious musical manuscripts inherited from
to

other centuries. Suddenly it struck me, in a way it never had before,

to what an extent the European musician is forced into the position


of acting as caretaker and preserver of other men's music, whether

he moment, seemed to sym-


likes it or no. Malipiero himself, at that

bolize the essential dilemma of the European musician, for he has


been both the editor of Monteverdi's complete works and, at the
same time, one of the leading composers in Italy's twentieth-century

musical renaissance,

ThcpuJLof tradition as against the attraction of innovation are the

two polar forces that constitute die basic drama gf today's European
... . ---
..... ~ *4. _
. i.v ... M

61
music. Not so long ago, especially under the impact o the neo-
classic movement in contemporary music, the impression gained

currency that the "revolutionary" era in music was over, and that
the turmoil created by the extensions in harmonic language and
the change in aesthetic ideals had gradually subsided, leaving us with
a musical idiom that held no surprises for any o us. But is this still
a true picture of the state of affairs at present? Or is it now time to
reexamine the situation? It seems to me that once again the Euro-

pean composer is music under the sign of crisis; and in


writing his
order to examine the nature of that crisis it will be necessary to look

closely at those trends in contemporary music that stress traditional

values and those that constitute a threat to such values.


It is quite evident that there is no further revolution
possible in
the harmonic sphere, none, at any rate, so long as we confine our-
selves to the tempered scale and its normal division by half tones.

There is no such thing any longer as an inadmissible chord, or


melody, or rhythm given the proper context, of course. Contempo-
rary practice has firmly established that fact. As I see it, the "threat**
to tradition, if it is a "threat," lies elsewhere, and is of two kinds.
The has to do with the assumptions that underlie our ideas
first

concerning the structure and organization of musical coherence.


Arnold Schonberg was the composer whose work produced the
crisis in that sphere. The second has to do with the social
import and
basic purpose of musical creation today,and it is a question which
continues to hound us was given formal declaration by the
all. It

publication of a manifesto signed by a group of composers from


various countries meeting in Prague in 1948. Both these
problems
are foremost in the minds of many of
Europe's best musical creators
today.
I shall launch
boldly into a consideration of the breakdown in
the formal organization of music, in an
attempt to find out how such
a breakdown came about and, if
possible, what it's implications may
be.

62
Music is.
by nature, the most amorphous of the arts: it is continu-

in n* ort The
ally dftngrr 6H*""g *r 7
Stoj f composition might be
told in terms o the devices employed, always tentatively at first,
and then finally in full flower, which produced formal patterns
that give some semblance of cohesion to music. The forms of one

age are not necessarily those of another, the surprising thing being
that they last as long as they do. At the present time we are the
inheritors ^ * gffl^ r^n r *"*
far * ****
chaconne, the fugue, the
sonata, to name a few
which have served composers for some
two hundred years or more. These and other forms provide the
composer with an outward mould into which he may pour his
ideas with some assurance that they will coalesce and make sense
to the listener. I hasten to add, however, that composers have a

special relationship to the set form which is not always clear to the

layman. A composer does not simply "pack his materials" into "pre-
existing moulds." A set form nothing more than a "generalization,**
is

as Donald Tovey calls it. As he points out, we must generalize


from a detailed experience of the behavior of individual works, and
must not try to explain that behavior by the generalization. In
other words, each separate composition is a law unto itself, and only
bears a general resemblance to the external shape of whatever form
is adopted. This explains, in large measure, the reason for the

longevity of these forms. It also explains why textbooks


on structure
in music are of only limited usefulness to the music student. For
the more closely he adheres to their abstract form-types the further he
will be from the truly creative act, which gives to the particular
material at hand the shape and cohesion that only it may have.

question then suggests itself: to what


The extent are these set

forms a necessity? Without them would music be chaotic? Or are


certain time-honored forms a hindrance rather than a help, and

merely a sentimental attachment on the part of composers


is it that

the report of a conversation


keeps them alive? In this connection,
that Ferruccio Busoni is said to have had with a pupil of his in 1922

63
is
pertinent. Busoni, by the time he was a mature musician, had
completely lost patience with the conventionality of "official" Ger-
man music, the Kapellmei$Urmusi\ o the end of the nineteenth
century. In 1907 he published a slim volume in which he envisaged
a day when music would be free, that is, free of any formal plan
that might be characterized as "architectonic," or "symmetric," or
"sectional." "Music," he said, "was born free; and to win freedom

is its destiny." He thought that composers had come closest to un-

covering the true nature of music in "preparatory and intermediary


passages (preludes and transitions) where they felt at liberty to

disregard symmetrical proportions and unconsciously drew free


breath." In 1922 he was still laboring the point, and this time the

fugue was his target. This is how he put it: "The fugue is a form,
and as such is bound to its time. It was Bach who found its
principle
and its essential
Today, also, one can write fugues, and
realization.
I would even recommend it; one can even compose them with the
most contemporary means . . . But even in such a form, the fugue
isno less archaic; it always has the effect of archaizing the music,
and it cannot pretend to give it its expression and its actual meaning."
What are we to conclude? Have fugues and other old forms
become Are they so many strait jackets
hopelessly old-fashioned?
which have finally outlived their usefulness? Whether we answer
yes or no, it seems to me that as long as basically tonal music is
written certain fundamental
controlling factors will be present.
Roger Sessions once summarized theseas: fast, thcjense of progres-
sion or cumulation; second, the association for oi
repetition
ideas; third, the feeling for contrast. Given these requisites, a piece
of music be constructed without reference to any established
may
set form and yet have a tight, precise, and logical shape. In any
essentially tonal piece this would be accomplished through the
rational progression of the
underlying harmonies, through the rela-

tionships of melodies or melodic fragments, through rhythmic unity,


and through a general sense of dramatic and truth.
psychological
My point is that the working out of these requirements will
pro-
duce a composition whose governing principles will be the same, in
essence, whether or not the design is free or well known. It is pre-

cisely this possibility of endless variety in applying basic principles of


formal coherence that has made it possible for composers in the past,
and seems likely to make it possible for them in the future, to con-
tinue the writing of passacaglia, scherzo, theme and variations, and
so forth without fear of exhausting the value of the generalized

mould.
This tendency toward the conservation of old forms and their

reinterpretation in modern terms is representative of the pull


toward tradition in Europe's music. It was accentuated by the return
to eighteenth-century ideals that characterized the neoclassical move-
ment in the middle twenties. Neoclassicism, at the time Stravinsky

originated it, acted as a brake on the chaotic postwar period. It


also served as an antidote to the vaguenesses of impressionism, for
it is interesting to note that some of the composers most intrigued
by neoclassic forms Alfredo Casella, Manuel de Falla, Albert
Roussel had all previously written music in the post-Debussy man-
ner.Sooner than anyone thought possible, the Russian whose name
had been a symbol of upheaval in music became the stimulus for a
more conservative attitude. But, as always, Stravinsky himself knew
how to remain vitally alive within the confines of any self-imposed
restriction. By now, the neoclassic tendency, insofar as it exists as a

general movement in present-day music, appears to be definitely on


the wane. It seems to have run its natural course and exhausted
its usefulness. The classicalizing principles involved retain their

validity, no doubt, but the specific references to eighteenth-century


mannerisms and turns of phrase have lost whatever interest they
once had.
The composer who has been most outspoken and most consistent
in his attitude toward the conservation of firmly grounded principles

is, of course, Paul Hindemith. As a young man he was beguiled by

65
several of the shibboleths of the twenties, but by the time he was
thirty-five he had reacted violently. His writings have made per-
fectly clear the doctrines that he applies to his own compositions; and
in his finest pieces it is a marvel to behold these same doctrines
out with inspired music. The Hindemithian theories will al-
filled

ways have most appeal to those minds that feel comfortable only
with a closely reasoned and systematic approach to any problem.
My own mind feels more at home with the unsystematic approach
of writers like Montaigne and Goethe, let us say; and especially in
the field of music to me important that we keep.jopen what
itjecrns
William James calls the . through, .which
"jgatfona] doorways
.

.
^the wildness andjJie pang of life" may be glimpsed. The sys-
tematic and the irrational arelmutually exclusive; and that is why
Hindemith's tenets, clarified and truthful as far as they go, are
inherently limited and cannot hope to encompass the oftentimes

instinctual drives of the 'creative mechanism.


-
It is to England that one must turn in order to find a whole school
of significant composers who put their faith in tradition. It isn't that

England has no dodecaphonic composers, but the men who have


made the strongest impression Ralph Vaughan Williams, William
Walton, Benjamin Britten, Michael Tippett are all solid musical

citizens, upholders of traditional values. Despite this conformist


outlook, each one of them has his individual musical style. All are,
in greater or less degree, masters of the rhetorical musical gesture,

especially Britten, the youngest among them. His music, and es-

pecially his operas, are an excellent


example
of how^by working
within clearly planned forms and by haying a brilliant technical

equipment for the carrying out of any possible plan, one can achieve
breadth^ rariety^ richness with a familiar idiom^This greatly gifted
Britisher, not yet forty, has every known compositional resource at
his command, which perhaps explains his unconcerned acceptance
of traditional methods and ideals. His work, diatonic and stylized
as it is, has placed English music, after a hiatus of more than two
66
hundred years, in the mainstream of present-day European musical
history.
Michael Tipped: is another member of the new generation of
British composers with strong sympathy for the traditional approach.

Tippett, unlike Britten whose models are drawn from more eclectic
sources, has been attracted by certain procedures of the Elizabethan

composers of the late sixteenth century. Tippett himself describes


the opening movement of his Second String Quartet as "partly
derived from madrigal technique where each part may have its own

rhythm and the music is propelled by the differing accents, which


tend to thrust each other forward." This fondness for cross-rhythms
to American music.
gives his music at times a certain relationship
(There are certain melodic sections in Vaughan Williams* Sixth
Symphony which seem to me strikingly American also.) Tippett
lacks the sureness of touch that characterizes the music of Britten
or Walton, but his music exemplifies better than theirs the attempt
to contain within conservative limits a naturally effusive tempera-
ment. In Sir William Walton we have a child of the hectic twenties
who has been turned into a pillar of British musical society. All
adventuresomeness has completely gone out of his work. are We
leftwith "solid values," but with little else. (I refer to the recent
works.) In Walton's case we must go back to the Viola
Concerto of
the late twenties in order to find an excellent example of the re-
in compo-
thinking in contemporary language of familiar techniques
sition.

The roster of traditionally-minded composers might be greatly


in
extended Honegger in France, Petrassi in Italy, Boris Blacher
because the between-the-wars was mainly one of
Germany period
of un-
consolidating the gains of the preceding quarter of a century
rest. Shortly after the end of the last war, however, it became clear

that a considerable number of composers in various countries had be-

gun to write a music that constituted a threat to this


newly gained
and threatened the structural organization of
stability, especially
music as it had been formerly understood. It is interesting to remem-
ber that in its
origination this threat came from exactly that quarter
where one would least expect it: Vienna, the fount of classical tradi-

tions; and from one man, Arnold Schonberg, who, ironically enough,

professed a passionate regard for these same classics. Schonberg used


to refer to himself as a victim, as a man who had reluctantly taken

upon himself the Promethean role of destroying the tonal system, a


system which had required hundreds of years to develop. It was
serious
enough to have undermined the tonal system, for in so doing,

Schonberg condemned himself to writing a music that was certain to


9
sound, so to speak, "wrong* to its first listeners. But the man who
undermined tonal harmony, was ifso facto undermining the funda-
mental structure of musical form, for that also is premised on the
ordered progression of related tonalities. Schonberg was fully aware
of the enormity of his act, as is proved by the fact that for a long
time he composed nothing in the larger forms (his first post-tonal

pieces had all been short), after which there followed a silence that
lasted for eight years.

Schonberg was not a man hankering after freedom, like Busoni.


Far from it; he was seeking a newjdiscjpline to substitute for the one
he had made obsolete by the abandonment of tonality. After the
long silence, during which time he was occupied with tentative
probings toward a solution of his problem, he emerged with a new
modus ogerandi, the "method of composing with the twelve tones,"
as he preferred to name it. As finally perfected by Schonberg, the
method guaranteed the control of every tone in the musical fabric,
since, melodically and harmonically, it was based on a perpetual use

through variation of a chosen arrangement or series of the twelve


chromatic tones. Note well that his premise was not a melody; it was
an arrangement of tones that could be manipulated in a great num-
ber of ways, and yet had the added advantage of being under
rigorous control at every instant. Even the most radical step, it ap-
68
pears,must be accompanied, in the mind of the German-trained
musician, by logic and control.
There is no doubt that Schonberg and his followers derived great
stimulus from this new method. Without the evidence of the music
itself one might imagine that all ties with tonal music had been
broken. But strangely enough, the classicist in Schonberg was not
to be so easily downed, and so we _find him writing string quartets

in the customary four movements, each separate movement par-


taking somewhat of the usual expressive content, and the general
outlines recognizably those of a first-movement allegro, a minuet,

a slow movement, and a rondo. Alban Berg, even before his adoption
of the twelve-tone method, had written his opera WozzecJ^ in such
a way that each of the fifteen scenes is based on some normal set
form a passacaglia, a military march, a series of inventions, and
so forth. Anton Webern, in many of his works, wrote canons and
variations. Other twelve-tone composers followed suit. An extraordi-

narily paradoxical situation developed: despite the rigorous organiza-


tion of the twelve tones according to the dictates of the series and
itsmutations, and, despite the adoption at times of the outward
semblance of traditional shapes, the effect the music makes in ac-
tual performance is often one of near-chaos.
We are faced, then, with two seemingly opposite facts: on the
one hand the music is carefully plotted in its every detail; and on
the other it
undeniably creates an anarchic impression. On the one
hand the musical journals of every country are filled with articles
explaining the note-for-note logic of Schonbergian music, accom-
panied by appropriate graphs, abstracts, and schematized reductions,
enormous ingenuity being expended on the tracking down of every
last refinement in an unbelievably complex texture. (One gains the

impression that it is not the music before which the commentators are
lost in admiration so much as the way in which it lends itself to

detailed analysis.) But on the other hand, when we return to the


concert hall and listen once again to these same compositions we
leave with the disturbing memory of a music that borders on chaos.
What are we to conclude? Quite simply that these innovators are

more revolutionary than they themselves know or are willing to


admit. While appearing to have engineered merely a harmonic
revolution, and set up a^n^aLgcthocjgf^composing in its place, they
have in actuality done away ...with ..all previous ^sor&gRtions of the
normal flow of music.
having taken so long to arrive at a point that the reader
I regret

might have been willing to concede at the outset. But it is important


to my argument to establish the fact itself the loss of the normal
fl
hrrmrrr of the implications with
~
Qg of nrir it carries it.

These implications are most clearly discernible in the music of


Schonberg's pupil Anton Webern. More and more the postwar
twelve-tone developments point to Webern as the key man in the
situation the man who carried Schonberg's ideas to their furthest
limits. The music that Webern
himself wrote, and the influence it
has exerted on younger minds is possibly the most singular phenome-
non of our times. It is a singular experience also to attempt to read
Webern's music at the piano. It has a curious
way of rebuffing you;
it so to speak defies you to read has a disconcerting look on
it. It

the page: it seems wayward and unpredictable, with a rrnm'trmm


number of notes and a maximum number of rests between the
notes. On the face of it the music seems arbitrary and planless,
but as a matter of demonstrable fact, it can be shown that this is the
most implacably controlled music Europe has ever known. The look
of it may be incoherent, but the sound of it I think is fascinating,

although the music's scope and breadth of expression are matters


that have not yet been fully tested.
Putting aside the question of expression, there are two features in
Webern's music which in effect circumvent all tonal practice and

suggest unexplored possibilities for the future. First, there is the


matter of melody. When modern music was a term to frighten

70
people with, an often-heard reproach used to be: the stuff lacks
melody. Carefully, we used to explain that it was simply a question
of extending one's idea of what a melody might be, and in that

case, assuming you could unravel it from the unfamiliar harmonic


texture, it would be found that modern music had as much melodic

content as older music. But in Webern's work the composer starts

not with a theme, but with a predetermined arrangement of the


twelve tones of the chromatic scale, from which an immense number
of possible melodies might be subsumed. The thing to remember is
that although each melody or melodic fragment relates back to the
skeletal series, no one of them need bear any recognizable relation
to any other, at least so far as the ear is concerned. As a result no
one melody is given predominance; therefore there are no themes
as such, and all possibility of even a single repetition of a theme is

canceled out. (For purposes of simplification I am ignoring the


literal repetition of entire sections.) We
are faced therefore with a
music which is at every instant new. Thus, the old familiar land-
marks of "normal" music are gone such as thematic relationships
and developments and the phrase "to recognize a theme" be-
comes absolutely meaningless. We have arrived at a musical art
which is constructed on unfamiliar principles: theworlcLof athcmatic
music.
^^^econd field in which Webern's music has had unusual sug-
gestive value is that of rhythm. This, the most primitive element in

music, has always remained comparatively free of constraint.

Rhythm was considered to need no justification; it was judged by


its naturalness of movement and limited by no laws other than

those of unity and variety. A close examination of Webern's later


music will show that his passion for logic and control applies also
to the rhythmic factor, for it follows that when melodic phrases are
subjected to strict manipulation and an almost continual canonic
treatment, inevitably the underlying rhythmic structure will be
under strict control also. In Webern's last works one gets the im-

71
pression that no single instant of the rhythmic play is left to chance,
so that becomes possible to envisage a music whose sole structural
it

principle will be that of rhythmic control. Wcbcrn's rhythms prQdqce


an effect of calculated digcQfltiflyfo that has no precedent in other
men's music.
New interest in purely rhythmic experimentation must have
been in the air, for we find a similar attitude
expounded in the
theoretical works and exemplified in the music of the French com-
poser Olivier Messiaen. This Catholic organist-composer has freely
acknowledged his debt to a variety of sources, and especially to the
rhythmic flexibilities of Hindu ragas and tolas as a source of rhythmic
inspiration. Messiaen's researches led him to subject rhythms to the
same type of contrapuntal treatment that had usually been applied
solely to melodic material, most of these familiar since Bach's day.
Thus we get rhythmic canons, rhythmic organ points, or we may
read a rhythm backwards as we used to revert a theme. Above all,
in the imitation of rhythms in different parts, we may use not merely
the usual augmentation or diminution of time values, but these
may
be inexactly imitated by the addition or subtraction of tiny metrical
units, thereby guaranteeing an unusual rhythmic conformation.

_ These suggestive ideas were further developed by Messiaen's


pupil, Pierre Boulez, who took as his point of departure the stylistic

peculiarities of Webern and the rhythmic formulas of his teacher.


The few Boulez scores that I have examined are of a truly formidable

complexity. Questioned complex a texture,


as to the necessity of so

the composer maintained that, given the enormous


variety of pro-
cedures open to the dodecaphonic composer, he was
seeking for a
corresponding "atonality" of the rhythmic frame. Boulez has a keen
mind, an almost scientific one, I might say, and his investigations
into new possibilities of formal organization through rhythmic con-
trol have already caused a considerable stir in avant-garde musical
circles in
Europe.

72
Boulcz, for a certain time, came under the guidance of the French

composer-critic Rene Leibowitz, the most indefatigable promulgator


of the Schonbergian viewpoint in recent years. Leibowitz has had

occasion, from time to time, to deplore the tendency of certain

Schonberg followers to backslide: that is, to reintroduce basically


tonal concepts into works that make use of the tone row in serial
fashion. Schonberg himself, and certainly Alban Berg in his Violin

Concerto, was guilty of injecting traces of tonality in an otherwise


"pure" work. The man who is generally considered to be the leader
in this more conservative wing of the dodecaphonic school is the
Italian composer, Luigi Dallapiccola. There is no reason, Dallapiccola
thinks, for limiting twelve-tone composers to the scholastic dictates
of a Leibowitz. Now that the three pioneer leaders of the school have
died it seems likely that new and unexpected derivations from the
original system will appear. This possibility of freely applying the
twelve-tone method, without necessarily accepting its atonal har-
monic implications, seems to me to prove the power rather than the
weakness of Schonberg's initial idea.

What, then, does add up to? Are we any nearer to the


all this

realization of Busoni's dream of a "free" music? "Creative power,"


Busoni wrote, "may be the more readily recognized, the more it
shakes itself loose from tradition." By that touchstone the innovatorsj
in Europe have certainly succeeded in prying us loose from several

age-old assumptions. That, seems to me, is their prime importance.


it

Whether we like or dislike any one example of their music or con-


demn their works in toto, the fact remains that they have put into

question the basic assumptions on which were founded all former


ideas about the flow and organization of European music. That in
itself is no small achievement.
began this chapter by saying that Europe's composers today are
I

working under a sign of crisis. Now I wish to discuss the second


part of that supposition: namely, the deep sense of
concern about

73
the purpose and objective of composing today. Surprisingly, this

subject is not as unrelated to twelve-tone composition and the prob-


lems it
presents as might first appear.
Professor Edward Dent, who has for a good many years been an
acute observer of the contemporary composer's activities, dates this

phase of the "crisis" from Beethoven's day the day when the
creator of modern times was thrown back on his own resources,

gaining indubitably in personal independence, but losing at the


same time the assurance of an appointed place in society and the
economic security that goes with it.new independence left
This
the composer uncertain for whom, exactly, he was writing his music.
Professor Dent puts it this way :f 'The choice before the composer

mayjtppear to be a financial one, fait th? 1


"
;
T ""rfltpH* ""nptH to
the moral choice involved. Is he to write for himself only,, to. express
his own individuality and then throw Jtjn the face of the world
with a 'take it or leave it/ or is he to regard his genius as something
he holds in trust for the betterment of bis fejlow-creatures? That of
course has always been
thOundajnenta^robjein^of all composers
- the
sjjKsJBcethoven relation^ of the artist to the.xmtside^world."

Asljgejt, there are really two questions involved heredirsk that of


thc^^rtist and his conscience out of what *np^ r rnnv irjfcl!,fo he -

Composing; and secnnrT, the


jartjflt-
anH ki& ^nTpymiQJgation
what
Ee use in ordcr_tQ r^ark whatffggi audience
may potentially be his?
These matters were, not so long ago, subjects for polite discussion,
Nowadays they have taken on an air of grim reality. For the first
time since Beethoven's day composers in certain countries are
being
told by those in a position of authority and with the
ability to pro-
vide economic support exactly to whom their music
ought to be
directed, and in general terms what musical idiom and what forms
best suit the purposes of communication. These recommendations
were embodied in a declaration made by an international
group of
composers and musicologists meeting at Prague in 1948. It was the

74
first time that composers from Great Britain, France, Holland,

Switzerland, and other countries had allied themselves with com-


posers from communist states in order to enunciate the so-called

"progressive" point of view. If I read the declaration correctly, it


simply states:we are entering a new era of human culture; there-
fore, works are wanted that are concrete in their message, particularly
works that employ words operas, oratorios, cantatas, songs, cho-
ruses, written in an understandable style using folk material, in
order to counteract "cosmopolitan'* tendencies. Dissonant contem-

porary music is out, or as they phrased it: "tendencies of extreme


subjectivism" should be renounced.
All this is quite familiar by now, especially in view of the world-
wide publicity afforded each fiat of Soviet musical policy. But the
point is that from the perspective of the composer in noncommunist
Europe it remains a vital issue. The lines are sharply drawn, and the
battle is being fought out in the literary and musical journals of
the various countries. The
twelve-tone composer, especially, knows
he is under fire; he is no longer writing music to satisfy himself :
whether he likes it or not, he is writing it against a vocal and mili-
tant
opposition^The composer of communist persuasion is no less
concerned, for he has good reason to think that it may not be so
easy to find the proper style that will appeal to the popular imagina-
tion and satisfy at the same time whatever artistic pretensions he
himself may have. Thus, to put it
flatly^
the twelve-toners have a

of.jre^ii^^ajv^lar^audience; and the


little
program, byt frope
propresfit/ijtef ,hflYS
andienceT but no guarantee that they
fl
pntenria^
can_invent a fresh musical manner appropriate to its needs. In be-
tween there are large numbers of practicing composers who live in
a state of flux and semiconfusion, trying to avoid the brickbats from
both parties. Circumstances, as never before, are forcing every serious,

European artist to face his conscience and attempt to find an answerJ


to the questions of why and for whom his music is being written J

Every artist, whatever his convictions, must sooner or later


75
the problem of communication with an audience. The composer
who is free to do as he pleases would do well to consider the advice
of Professor I. A. Richards, penned some years ago. In substance he
wrote that the artist need not consciously be aware of this problem,

for even without knowing it he is deeply concerned with the matter


of communication. If an artist occupies himself exclusively with get-
it will communi-
ting a work "right" "right" for himself, that is
cate,because communication is part of its lightness. But, one must
add, Professor Richards' artist enjoys the luxury of being right for
himself alone; he is the free artist.

The artist who


not free has a great need for being consciously
is

concerned with the matter of communication, for it is crucial to his


situation. That situation has taken away from him one of the artist's

most important rights, namely, the immemorial right of the artist


to be wrong. A creator often learns as much from his miscalculations
as he does from his successes. The need to be right every time must
weigh heavily under communist supervision. My own
on the artist

guess is that the Soviet regime can hope for 'the kind of music they
demand from their composers only if they develop a new species of
artist who has never had any contact whatever with modern

European music. For the artist who has once heard Milhaud or
c<
Hindemith, the apple of evil has been tasted and the harm," from
their standpoint, has been done. No composer who is even partially

cognizant of our contemporary musical idiom will ever be able to


fully eradicate its traces from his work. Therein lies the dilemma of
the present-day Soviet composer, and especially of its leaders like
Prokofieffand Shostakovich.
The musical situation as it exists abroad at the present time sug-
gests no easy summary. In 1951 I spent six months in Europe, and
when I think back and try to summarize my observations of the
creative musical scene I must reluctantly admit that there are many
disturbing factors in a situation that is anything but clarified. But
how could it be otherwise? The only possible alternative would be
for the composer to remove himself from all contact with the life

about him, and that would be worse. No, we must expect Europe's
music to reflect the many different tensions that characterize its

political
and spiritual life, for that is the only healthy way for it to

exist. The surprising thing not the variegated and rather confused
is

divisions create, but the fact that so much that


picture that its many
is good and vital continues to be accomplished.

77
CHAPTER FIVE

Musical Imagination
in the Americas
AN ASTUTE FELLOW MUSICIAN was responsible for sug-

gesting tome the difficult subject of imagination in the music of the


Americas. He put the question to me in this way: The art of music
has been practiced for a good many years now in the Western Hemi-

sphereboth north and south; can it be said that we have exercised


our own imagination as musicians and not merely^reflected what we
have absorbed from Europe? And if we have succeeded in bringing

a certain inventiveness and imaginativeness of our own to the world


of music, what precisely has our contribution been? I protested

that to answer such a question satisfactorily was an almost im-

possible assignment; that perhaps


was in any event too early to
it

ask it; and, moreover, that I myself might be a poor judge of the

present situation, because of


an overanxiety to find favorable answers.
But my musical friend persisted. He pointed out that everyone

agrees that the two Americas are more grown-up musically than they
were two generations ago; and besides, he added, you have visited
South America and Mexico and Cuba and Canada, and have
watched the musical movement in our own country develop for
more than thirty years. Aren't you in a better position than most
observers to arrive at some conclusion as to how far we have come
in making our own special contribution td the world's music? In the

78
end I found myself puzzling over this question- No matter how
wrong-headed my reactions may be, it seemed likely that some musi-
cologist fifty years hence might very well be intrigued to discover
what answers suggested themselves to a composer in mid-twentieth
century America.
If the experience of the Americas proves anything, it indicates that
music is a sophisticated art an art that develops slowly. It is about
four hundred years since the first book containing musical notation
was published in this hemisphere. That notable event took place in
Mexico in the year 1556. In the United States the burgeoning period
covers some three hundred years, which is also a considerable time

span for the development of an art. Actually it seems to me that in


order to create an indigenous music of universal significance three
conditions are imperative. First, the composer must be part of a
nation that has a profile of its own that is the most important;

second, the composer must have in his background some sense of


musical culture and, a basis in folk or popular art; and
if possible,

third, a superstructure of organized musical activities must exist


that is, to some extent, at least at the service of the native com-

poser.
In both North and South America it was only natural that from
the beginning the musical pattern followed lines which are normal
for lands that are colonized by Europeans. In both Americas there
was first the wilderness and the struggle merely to keep alive- Our
Latin American cousins were more fortunate than we in their
musical beginnings. Some of the Catholic missionaries from Spain
were cultivated musicians intent upon teaching the rudiments of
music to their charges. Pedro de Gante, a Franciscan padre, is
credited with having started the first music school in the New

World around 1524. He taught the natives to sing hymns and to

write musical notation. The Puritan Fathers, on the other hand, were
reported as downright unfriendly to the musical muse, although
this harsh judgment has been somewhat tempered in recent years.

79
Nevertheless, it is safe to assume that apart from the singing of
psalms there exist few if any signs that music as an art was en-
couraged.
It was during the later years of the colonial period of both North

and South America that the first native, primitive composers raised
their voices. These were mostly men who wrote their music in their

spare time, as an avocation rather than as a profession. They, in


turn, were soon aided by the initial influx of a certain number of

professional musiciansfrom abroad. In our own country many of


these immigrants came at first from England. As Otto Kinkeldey
has pointed out, in those days practically all our music came by

way of England: Handel, Haydn, Mozart were known to the


United States because they were known in England. A
later wave

came to our shores from Central Europe, especially Germany; and


as a result our musical thinking was dominated for a great many

years by Teutonic ideals. In Latin America the immigrant musician

came principally from the Iberian Peninsula, as might be expected,


while a later wave brought a large number of musical recruits from
Italy.
Is there anything imaginative about the music composed in the

Americas during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries? So far as


we can tell from the preserved records, very little. few hardyA
primitives from the Revolutionary War period, like William Billings,
have survived. Billings was a tanner by trade who ended up as a

composer of hymn tunes and short patriotic pieces that only recently
have been rediscovered and republished. They break harmonic rules
occasionally and are sometimes a bit stiff in their contrapuntal joints,
but despite that they have a rough honesty about them that keeps
them alive for present-day listeners. Mention ought to be made of
two other composers of the middle nineteenth century: Louis Moreau
Gottschalk of New Orleans and Carlos Gomes of Rio de Janeiro.
Both of them achieved fame abroad. Gottschalk led the life of a

traveling piano virtuoso in the Lisztian manner. His importance


80
historically comes from the fact that he is the earliest composer we
know of who based his compositions on what are loosely called Latin
American rhythms. It is only the exceptional piece of Gottschalk's
that is of original quality; others are too
obviously designed to
dazzle the paying public. Nevertheless, he represents the first North
American composer who made us aware of the rich source material
to be derived from music of Hispanic origins. Carlos Gomes was a
very successful opera composer, whose best works were performed at
La Scala in Milan. His libretti were based on native Brazilian subject
matter, but the musical style in which they were treated was indis-
tinguishable from the Italian models on which they were based.
Gomes was, however, the first of his kind and remains to this day
a national hero in his own
country.
We have our national hero in Stephen Foster. He was a
own
song writer rather than a composer, but he had a naturalness and
sweetness of sentiment that transformed his melodies into the

equivalent of folk song. His simplicity and sincerity are not easily
imitated, but it is that same simplicity and naturalness that has in-

spired certain types of our own music in the twentieth century. Bill-

ings and Foster have no exact counterparts in the music of the


southern hemisphere. The closest parallel will be found in the work
of two Latin Americans who were active toward the end of the
last century Julian Aguirrc in Argentina and Ignacio Cervantes
in Cuba. They both composed a type of sensitive, almost Chopin-
esque, piano piece with a Creole flavor, that was to be followed by
so many others in the same manner in Latin America. Aguirre and
Cervantes give us the little piece in its pristine state, with a kind
of disingenuous charm, before it was cheapened by the sentimentali-
ties of numerous lesser composers.

as pickings are slim in the field of composed


see, the
music
If, you
of serious pretensions during the eighteenth and nineteenth cen-
a compensatory richness of invention when we turn
turies, there is
to the popular forms of music making. It is not surprising that

81
this should be so. Popular music crystallizes long in advance of
composed concert music. After all, it reflects an unpremeditated
and spontaneous welling up of musical emotion that requires no
training and no musical superstructure. The human voice, with

perhaps a drum or a simple folk instrument as accompaniment, is


all that is needed to express a wide gamut of feelings. Folk music in

the Western Hemisphere awaits some master investigator who can

survey what is an immense terrain, and sort out and collate similari-
ties and differences in such a way as to illuminate this whole field for

us. I myself am
from being expert in this area, but I do retain
far
vivid impressions of an unbelievably rich and comparatively little
known territory of folk expression in Latin America.
I should like, parenthetically, to briefly a few examples
mention
that comemind- The Cuban guajira is one of these. It is a form
to

of country music of the Cuban farmer. Over the strumming of a


few simple guitar chords the singer tells a tale in a singular style of
melodious recitative that is drenched in individuality. It seems to
me it could be listened to for hours on end. The same holds true for
the deeply nostalgic music of the Peruvian Indian, played on ancient

flutes,sometimes in pairs and with a curious heterophony of an


indescribable sadness. The exhilarating rhythm of the bambuco as it

is danced in Colombia epitomizes the many popular dance patterns


that alternate six-eight and three-quarter metrics with delightful
effect. And I cannot mention dancing without remembering the
incredible frevo as I saw it "performed" in the streets of Pernam-
buco. Musically the jrev o demonstrates what occurs when the naive
musical mind seizes upon a well-known form in this case the
ordinary street march and transforms it into a completely Afro-
Brazilian manifestation. A similar transformation is worked upon the
figurations of a
Czerny piano exercise when a Cuban composer of
popular music writes a danzon. Here pseudo elegance is the key-
notean "elegance" of high life in the Havana of 1905. As a final
example I must mention the urban tango as one hears it in Argea-

82
tina, played in a hard-as-nails manner by several accordions and a
few assorted strings.This instrumental combination produces a
sonority of knife-edge sharpness, so that even the would-be senti-
mental sections are played without a glimmer of sentimentality.
These different forms of folk and popular music briefly listed
here must stand for many others. Diverting and interesting as they
are, however, they are not what my musician friend was referring to
when he inquired after signs of imaginativeness in the music of the
Western world. Confining ourselves to serious music, there seems
to me no doubt that if we are to lay claim to thinking inventively
in the music of the Americas our principal stake must be a rhythmic
one.
For some years now rhythm has been thought to be a special
province of the music of both Americas. Roy Harris pointed this
out a long time ago when he wrote: "Our rhythmic sense is less sym-
metrical than the European rhythmic sense. European musicians are
trained to think of rhythm in its largest common denominator, while
we are born with a feeling for its smallest units .. .do not We
employ unconventional rhythms as a sophistical gesture; we cannot
avoid them . . ." Let us see if it is possible to make more precise
these remarks of Harris* whether it is possible to track
down
the source and nature of these so-called American rhythms.
Most commentators are agreed that the source of our rhythmic
habits of mind are partly African and partly Spanish.
Since the

Iberian peninsula was itself a melting pot of many races, with a


strong admixture of Arab culture from Africa, the Iberian and
African influences are most certainly interrelated. In certain coun-
tries the aboriginal Indians have contributed something through
their own traditional rhythmic patterns, although this remains rather
conjectural. As time goes on, it
becomes more and more difficult to

disengage the African from the


Iberian influence. We speak of
in an attempt
Afro-Cuban, Afro-Brazilian, Afro-American rhythms
to circumvent this difficulty. Since Spain and Portugal have, by

83
themselves, produced nothing like the rhythmic developments of
the Western countries, it is only natural to conclude that we owe the
vitality and interest of our rhythms in large measure to the Negro in
his new environment. It is impossible to imagine what American
music would have been like if the slave trade had never been in-

stituted in North and South America. The slave ships brought a

precious cargo of wonderfully gifted musicians, with an instinctive

feeling for the most complex rhythmic pulsations. The strength of


that musical impulse is by the fact that it is just as alive
attested to

Rio de Janeiro or Havana or New Orleans


today in the back streets of
as it was two hundred years ago. Recent recordings of musical rites
among certain African tribes of today make perfectly apparent the
direct musical line that connects the Nanigos of today's Cuba or
Brazil with their forefathers of the African forest.
What
is the nature of this gift? First, a conception of rhythm not

as mental exercise but as something basic to the body's rhythmic

impulse. This basic impulse is exteriorized with an insistence that


knows no measure, ranging from a self-hypnotic monotony to a

riotous frenzy of subconsciously controlled poundings. Second, an


unparalleled ingenuity in the spinning out of unequal metrical units
in the unadorned rhythmic line. And lastly, and most significant, a

polyrhythmic structure arrived at through the combining of strongly


independent blocks of sound. No European music I ever heard has
even approached the rhythmic intensities obtained by five different
drummers, each separately hammering out his own pattern of sound,
so that they enmesh one with another to produce a most* complex
metrical design. Oriental musics contain subtle cross-rhythms of

polyrhythmic implication, but we of the Americas learned our


rhythmic lessons largely from the Negro. Put thus baldly it may be
said, with some justice perhaps, that I am oversimplifying. But even
if I overstate the case the fact remains that the rhythmic life in the
scores of Roy Harris, William Schuman, Marc Blitzstein, and a host
of other representative American composers is indubitably linked to
Negroid sources of rhythm.
A very different idea of the polymetric organization of pulsations
is familiar in European music. How could it be otherwise? Any
music which is contrapuntally conceived is likely to have melodic
lines that imply different rhythms, and these would naturally be

heard simultaneously. But the point here is one of emphasis and


degree. Few musicians would argue that the classical composers
wrote music that was polyrhythmically arranged, in the sense in which
I am
using the term here. Mozart and Brahms were far from being
constrained by the bar line, as is made clear by certain remarkable
sections ofrhythmic ingenuity in their scores, and yet their normal
procedure with rhythm implies a regularity and evenness of metrical
design that we think of as typical of Western
music.

Other examples of Western music, especially in choral literature,


demonstrate an unconventional rhythmic organization. But for the
I have in mind it will suffice to confine ourselves to two
purpose
kinds of music, before the twentieth century, which appear to me to

be exceptional in this respect, that is, in their concentration on

polyrhythmic texture: the recently deciphered scores of French


and Italian
composers at the end of the thirteen hundreds; and the
as these
English madrigals of Shakespeare's day. Exceptional are,

I hope to show that American rhvthms_ar jpaniafid JiBPflU

different type ofjaJprf fr * r<L *


rnnrppt-inn
.tTifte is~aowhe*e

duplicated.
The composers of the late fourteenth century some of whose
music has recently been made available through a publication of the
Mediaeval Academy of America exhibit in their ballades and

virelaisa most astonishing intricacy of rhythmic play. The editor of


the volume in question, Willi Apel, suggests that these rhythms may
not have been "felt" by their composers, but were perhaps
entirely
1
their
the result of "notational speculation.* It is quite possible that

85
system of notation provided these composers with a new toy by
means of which they were enabled to experiment with all manner
of unprecedented rhythmic combinations. But even as mere paper

rhythms and it is certainly doubtful whether they are only that


they hold great fascination for the present-day musician.
The rhythmic complexities of the Elizabethan madrigalists, on the
other hand, were firmly grounded in English speech rhythms. By re-

taining these independently in each vocal part a delightful freedom


of cross-rhythmic irregularities resulted. And since English is a

strongly accented language with qualitative rather than quantita-


tive values a rich and supple variety of rhythm was obtained that
no other European school of that time could match. Curiously

enough, it is only in the twentieth century that the rhythmic skill of


the Elizabethans has come to be understood and appreciated. For-
merly the very freedom of their metrical designs was thought to be
a fault rather than a virtue. Wilfrid Mellers sums this up when he
writes: ". . . the sixteenth century, which nineteenth century com-
mentators considered rhythmically Vague,' actually developed
rhythm to the highest point it has reached in European history."
And he adds: "Perhaps it is no accident that in England this su-
preme development of musical rhythm coincides with the develop-
ment of mature Shakespearean blank verse, which achieves its
effect from a delicate tension between speech rhythm and metrical

accent."

It isimportant to point out that the polyrhythmic structures of


the Elizabethan composers are different in kind from those that

typify American music. They were concerned with the creation of


a supple and fluid pulse in which no single strong beat dominated

the over-all rhythmic flow. Our polyrhythms are more characteristi-

cally the deliberate setting, one against the other, of a steady pulse
with a free pulse. Its most familiar manifestation is in the small

jazz band combination, where the so-called rhythm section provides


the ground metrics around which the melody instruments can freely

86
invent rhythms of their own. Added to this influence from popular
sources was the general concentration on rhythmic intensities for
which our century is notable. The interest in national musics of
different kinds Russian, Hungarian, Scandinavian with their
unconventional, rhythms acted as further stimulus in the breaking
down of the tyranny of the bar line. Rhythmic factors became one
of the preponderant concerns of serious music in most European
countries.
In the Americas, however, the typical feature of our own rhythms
was this juxtaposition of steadiness, either implied or actually heard,

as against freedom of rhythmic invention. Take, for example, the


stylistic device of "swinging" a tune. This simply means that over a

singer or instrumentalists toy with


steady ground rhythm the the

beat, never being exactly on it, but either anticipating it or lagging


behind it in gradations of metrical units so subtle that our notational
system has no way of indicating it. Of course you cannot stay off the
beat unless you know where that beat is. Here again freedom is

interesting only in relation to regularity. On the other hand, when


our better jazz bands wish to be rhythmically exact they come down
on the beat with a trip-hammer precision that puts our symphonic
musicians to shame. Thus afl awtbiar^cc o^ playing fast ,and .loose

wjth jhi. rhythm mpmfflged which has tended to separate more


is

and ^ tb^ AtTlQ1 r^-^^ of lOT^^l pulse.


The European is taught to think of rhythm as applying always to
a phrase of music as the articulation of that phrase. We, on the

contrary, are not averse to thinking of rhythm as disembodied, so

to speak, as if it were a frame to which certain tones might be added


as an afterthought This is, of course, not meant to be taken as

true, but merely indicates a tendency on


our part to think
literally
of rhythms as separately pulsating quarter or eighth or sixteenth
notes what Roy Harris means when he says we feel at case with

rhythm's "smallest units." Small units, when combined, arc likely


to add up to musically unconventional totals of five, seven, or

87
eleven by contrast with the more two plus
familiar combinations of

two, or of three plus three. Our European


colleagues may protest and
claim: "But we too write our music nowadays with the freedom of

unequal divisions of the bar lines." Of course they do; but nonethe-
only necessary to hear a well-trained European musician
less it is

performing American rhythms to perceive the difference in rhythmic


conceptions.
Winthrop Sargeant was making a similar point in terms of the
jazz player when he wrote: "The jazz musician has a remarkable
sense of subdivided and subordinate accents in what he is playing,
even though it be the slowest sort of jazz. This awareness of minute

component metrical units shows itself in all sorts of syncopative


subtleties that are quite foreign to European music. It is, I think,**

he adds, "the lack of this awareness in most European 'classical'

musicians that explains their well-known inability to play jazz in a

convincing manner,"
The special concern with rhythm that is characteristic of Ameri-
can music has had, as an offshoot, a rather more than usual interest
in percussive sounds, as such. Orchestras, as constituted in the
nineteenth century had only a comparatively few elementary noise-
making instruments to draw upon. In recent times the native musics
of Cuba, Brazil, and Mexico have greatly enriched our percussive

gamut through the addition of an entire battery of noise-making


instruments peculiar to those countries. Some of these are slowly

finding their way into our more conventional musical organizations.


New and distinctive sounds and noises have been added to what was
formerly the most neglected department in the symphony orchestra.
A departure from routine thinking occurred when contemporary
composers began to write for groups of percussion instruments alone.
Edgar Varese was a pioneer in that field in the twenties and his
example encouraged other composers to experiment along similar
lines. I suppose we may consider Bela Bartok's Sonata for two

pianos and two percussion players and Stravinsky's orchestration of


his choral ballet Les Noces for four pianos and thirteen
percussion
players as further proof that an interest in unusual sonorities is typi-
cal of our times. But it is the musicians of North and Latin America
who come by this interest most naturally, and from whom we may
expect a continuing inventiveness and curiosity as to the percussive
sound, Villa-Lobos once aroused my envy by me hisshowing per-
sonal collection of native Brazilian percussion instruments. After a
visit like that, one asks oneself: how did we ever
manage to get along
for so long a time with the bare boom of the bass drum and the
obvious crash of the cymbals?
Before leaving the subject of rhythm-inspired music
something
should be said of a specialty of the jazz musician that has been greatly
admired, particularly by the European enthusiast. I refer, of course,
to the improvisatory powers of the popular performer. If one looks
up the word "improvisation*' in the music dictionaries, reference will
be made the ability of composers, at certain periods of musical
to

history, to improvise entire compositions in contrapuntal style. The


art of improvising an accompaniment from a figured bass line was
an ordinary accomplishment for the well-trained keyboard instru-

mentalist during the baroque period. But the idea of group improvi-
sation was reserved for the jazz age. What gives it more than passing
interest is the phonograph, for it is the phonograph that makes it

possible to preserve and thereby savor the fine flavor of what is

necessarily a lucky chance result. It is especially this phase of our


popular music that has caused the French aficionado to become
lyrical about le jazz hot.
When you improvise it is axiomatic that you take risks and can't
foretell results. When five or six musicians improvise simultaneously
the result is even more fortuitous. That is its charm. The improvising
performer the very antithesis of that tendency in contemporary
is

composition that demands absolute exactitude in the execution of the


printed page. Perhaps Mr. Stravinsky and those who support his
view of rigorous control for the performer have been trying to sit
on the lid too hard. Perhaps the performer should be given more
elbow room and a greater freedom of improvisatory choice. young A
composer recently conceived the novel idea of writing a "composi-
tion" on graph paper which indicated where a chord was to be
placed in space and when in time, but left to the performer freedom
to choose whatever chords happened to strike his fancy at the
moment Most jazz improvisers are not entirely free
of execution.
because of the conventionality of jazz harmonic for-
cither, partly

mulas, and partly because of over-used melodic formulas. Recent


*examples of group improvisations by Lennie Tristano and some few
other jazz men are remarkable precisely because they avoid both
these pitfalls. When American musicians improvise thus freely, and
we are able to rehear their work through recordings, the Euro-
pean musician is the first to agree that something has been developed
here that has no duplication abroad.
If Negro and Iberian source materials have exerted a strong hold
on the imagination of musicians in the Americas, the influence of
the musical culture of the aboriginal Indians seems to have been

slight. Tragically little has survived from the music of pre-Colum-


bian civilizations, and what there is comes to us in the form of a few
instruments, and the scales that may be deduced from some of them.
The Indians of today, when
they sing and dance, produce a music
that is difficult to authenticate. How much of what
they do is the
result of oral tradition and how much from the circum-
acquired
stances of their post-Conquest environment is difficult to say. Their
influence on music has been strongest in those countries
serious
where Indian culture was most highly developed and has been best
preserved, such as Mexico and Peru. In our own country, where the
Indian had not reached the cultural level of the Incas or Aztecs,
only
a few composers were hopeful of finding stimulus in the thematic
materials available to them. Despite the efforts of Arthur Farwell and
his group of composer friends, and Ed-
despite the Indian Suite of

90
ward MacDowell, nothing really fructifying resulted It is under-
standable that the first Americans would have a sentimental attrac-

tion for our composers, especially at a time when the American

composer himself was searching for some indigenous musical ex-


pression. But our composers were obviously incapable of identify-
ing 'themselves sufficiently with such primitive source materials as
to make these convincing when heard out of context.
The contemporary Chilean composer, Carlos Isamitt, was more
successful in a somewhat analogous situation. The Araucanian In-
dians of southern Chile are not a highly developed people like the
Incas of Peru, and yet Isamitt, by living among them and immersing
himself in their culture, was able to draw something of their inde-

pendent spirit into his own symphonic settings of their songs and
dances.
But the principal imprint of the Indian personality its deepest
reflection in themusic of our hemisphere is to be found in the

in the work
present-day school of Mexican composers, and especially
of Carlos Chavez and Silvestre Revueltas. With them it is not so
much a question of themes as it is of character. Even without pre-
vious knowledge of the Amerindian man, his essential, nature may
be inferred from their scores. The music of Chavez isstrong and
deliberate, at times almost fatalistic in tone; it bespeaks the sober
and stolid and Ethic Amerindian. It is music of persistence relent-

lessand uncompromising; there is nothing of the humble Mexican


peon here. It is music that knows its own mind stark and clear

and, if one may say so, earthy in an abstract way. There are no frills,
nothing extraneous; it is like the bare wall of an adobe hut, which
can be so expressive by virtue of its inexpressivity. Chavez* music
is, above all, profoundly non-European.
To me it possesses an Indian
quality that is at the same time curiously contemporary in spirit.

me truly contemporary music


Sometimes it strikes as the most I

know, not in the but in the sense that it comes


superficial sense,

91
closest to expressing the fundamental reality of modern man after he
has been stripped of the accumulations of centuries of aesthetic ex-

periences.
It is illuminating to contrast the work of Chavez with that of his
countryman, the late Silvestre Revueltas, whose vibrant, tangy scores
sing of a more colorful, perhaps a more mestizo side of the Mexican
character. Revueltas was a man of the people, with a wonderfully
keen ear for the sounds of the people's music. He wrote no large
symphonies or sonatas, but many short orchestral sketches with fan-
cifulnames such as Ventanas, Esquinas, Janitzio (Windows, Corners,
}anitzio) the last named after the little island in Lake Patzcuaro.
His list of compositions would be longer than it is, were it not for
the fact that he died when he was forty years old, in 1940. But the

pieces that he left us are crowded with an abundance and vitality


a Mexican abundance and vitality that make them a pleasure to
hear.

In seeking for qualities of the specifically Western imagination it

seems to me two composers of South and North


that there are
America who share many traits in common, and especially a certain
richness and floridity of invention that has no exact counterpart in

Europe. I am thinking of the Brazilian, Heitor Villa-Lobos, and


of the American from Connecticut, Charles Ives.

Leaving aside questions of relative value, it seems to me one would


have to turn to Herman Melville's biblical prose or the oceanic verse
of Walt Whitman to find an analogous largess. Is it illusory to con-
nect this munificence of imagination in both composers with the

scope and freedom of a new world? They share also the main draw-
back of an overabundant imagination: the inability to translate the

many images that crowd their minds into scores of a single and uni-
fied vision. In the case of Villa-Lobos there is strong temptation to
identify hiscrowded imagination with the luxuriance of a jungle
landscape; the very sound of the music suggests it. In Ives we sense

92
the strain of reaching for the transcendental and the universal that
was native to his part of America.
Do both Ives and Villa-Lobos suffer from an inflated style? Alexis

de Tocqueville, who visited our shores in the eighteen thirties, re-

ported that the "inflated style" was typical for American orators
and writers. There must be something about big countries Brazil,

in case you've forgotten, is


larger than territorial United States

something that encourages creative artists to expand themselves be-

yond all normal limits. The lack of restraint made customary by


tradition plays a role here. And when that lack of restraint is com-

bined with a copious and fertile imagination they together seem to


to
engender a concomitant lack of self-criticism. Is it at all possible
be carefully one possesses no traditional standard of ref-
selective if

erence? It would hardly seem so. The power in both men comes
spite of their inability, at times,
to exercise critical self-
through in
originality of a curiously indigenous
kind
judgment. It is a power of
that makes their music appear to be so profoundly of this hemi-

sphere.
There exist several parallelisms between the work of Ives and of
Villa-Lobos. At one point in their careers they both used impres-

sionistic methods to. suggest realistic scenes of local life. With this

there was the tendency to give their pieces homespun tides: Ives's

matched by
symphonic picture of the Housatonic
at Stocfyridge is

Villa-Lobos' Little Train of Caipira. Both men have^a love JQLJrv-

ing to make the 'Sp^fir tidily jsyTT^fo


n^ ^ nmve^^ They
both were technically adventurous, experimenting with polytonal
and polyrhythmic effects long before they had had contact with
was especially re-
European examples of these new resources. (Ives
markable in this respect.) And they both retain central positions in
to
the history of their country's music because of their willingness
models which for so long had satisfied
ignore academic European
other composers in their respective lands. And yet, in spite of these

93
many similarities, it is characteristic that their music is utterly
per-
sonal and distinct, one from the other.

In strong contrast and occasional grandiloquence


to the floridity

of Ives and Villa-Lobos, but no less representative of another and


different aspect of America, is the music of Virgil Thomson and

Douglas Moore. There nothing in serious European music that is


is

quite like it nothing so downright plain and bare as their com-


merce with simple tunes and square rhythms and Sunday-school
harmonies. Evocative of the homely virtues of rural America, their
work may be said to constitute a "midwestern style" in American
music. Attracted by the unadorned charm of a revivalist hymn, or
a sentimental ditty, or a country dance, they give us the musical

counterpart of a regionalism that is familiar in our literature and


painting but is seldom found in our symphonies and concertos.
Both these men, needless to say, are sophisticated musicians, so that
their frank acceptance of so limited a musical vocabulary is a ges-
ture of faith in theirown heritage. Both have best exploited this
type of midwestern pseudo primitivism in their operas and film
scores.Thomson especially, with the aid of Gertrude Stein's texts in
Four Saints in Three Acts and The Mother of Us All, has succeeded
in giving a highly original twist to the disarming simplicities of his
musical materials. Here, in a new guise, it should be recalled, is an
idea of earlier American composers like Gilbert and Farwell, who
believed that only by emphasizing our own crude musical realities,
and resisting the blandishments of the highly developed musical
cultures of other peoples, would we ever find our own indigenous
musical speech.
I realize that there are undoubtedly among my readers those who
disapprove heartily of this searching for "Americanisms** in the
works of our contemporaries. Roger Sessions, Walter Piston, and
Samuel Barber are composers whose works are not strikingly
"American" in the special sense of this chapter,and yet a full sum-
mary of the American imagination at work in music such as this

94
discussion does not pretend to be would naturally stress the im-
of their work. There is a universalist ideal,
port exemplified by their
symphonies and chamber music, that belittles the nationalistic note
and stresses "predominately musical values." I myself lose patience
with the European music lover who wants our music to be all new,
brand-new, absolutely different. They forget that we are, as Waldo
Frank once put it, the "grave of Europe," by which I suppose
he meant to suggest that we have inherited everything they are and
know; and we shall have to absorb it and make it completely our
own before we can hope for the unadulterated American creation.
Nevertheless, there is a deep
psychological need to look for present
signs of that creation. I know this to be true from my own reactions
to the music of other nations, especially nations whose music is still
unformed, for we makes it char-
inevitably look for the note that
acteristically itself. This attitude may be narrow and wrong, but it
is an unpremeditated reaction which rightfully should be balanced

by the any country are to be


realization that not all the composers of
limited to an obviously indigenous expression.
In a lecture delivered sometime before 1907, the American com-
poser Edward MacDowell said: "What we must arrive at is the

youthful optimistic vitality and the undaunted tenacity of spirit


that characterizes the American man. That is what I hope to see
echoed in American music." I think MacDowell's hope has been
fulfilled partly, at least for if there is a school of American

composers, optimism is
certainly keynote. But the times have
its

caught up with us, and already mere optimism seems insufficient.


If it is not to be mere boyish exuberance it must be tempered, as it

is in the work of our best composers, by a reflection of the American

man, not as MacDowell knew him at the turn of the century, but
as he appears to us with all his complex world about him. Imagina-
tion will be needed to echo that man in music.

95
CHAPTER SIX

The Composer
in Industrial America
is IT SHEER CHANCE, I sometimes wonder, that no one has
ever published an adequate critical summary of the whole field o

American serious composition? There are, of course, several com-

pendiums containing mostly biographical data and lists of works,


but no one has yet attempted to summarize what our composers
have accomplished, nor to say what it feels like to be a composer in
industrial America. What sort of creative life the composer leads,

what his relation to the community is or should be these and

many other interesting facets of the composer's life have hardly been

explored.

My colleague, the American composer Elliott Carter, once said

to me an imaginative mind could possibly


that in his opinion only

conceive itself a composer of serious music in an industrial com-

munityj
like the United States. Actually it seems to me that we
** n
^"^^-.'^^^^ .- ^^^ ,

Americans who compose alternate between states ofSuntflftat make

composition appear "txTBe' the 'most natural and ordinary pursuit


and 62ier moo3s wheiTit seefns completely extraneous to the pri-

mary interest^ pf^our Industrial environment. By temperament I

lean to the side that considers composing in our community as a

natural force something to be taken for granted rather than

the freakisfi occupation of a very small minority of our citizens.


And judging the situation dispassionately, I can see that we
yet,

ought not to take it for granted. We must examine the


place of the
artist and
composer in our kind of society, partly to take account
of its effect on the and
artist also as a
commentary on our society
itself. The fact is that an industrial society must prove itself capable
of producing creative artists of stature, for its inability to do so

would be a serious indictment of the fundamental tenets of that

society.
From the moment that one doesn't take composing for granted
in our country, a dozen questions come to mind. What is the com-

poser's life in America? Does it differ so very much from that of


the European or even the Latin American composer of
today? Or
from the life of United States composers in other periods? Are our
objectivesand purposes the same as they always have been? These
questions and many related ones are continually being written about
by the literary critic, but they are infrequently dealt with in the
musical world. can best consider them by relating them to my
I

own experience as a creative artist in America. Generalizing from


that experience it may be possible to arrive at certain conclusions.
This engenders an autobiographical mood, but it is impossible to
avoid it if I am to use myself as guinea pig.

My own experience I think of as typical because I grew up in an


urban community (in my case, New York City) and lived in
an environment that had little or no connection with serious music.
My discovery of music was rather like coming upon an unsuspected
city like discovering Paris or Rome if you had never before heard
of their existence. The
excitement of discovery was enhanced be-
cause I came upon only a few streets at a time, but before long I

began to suspect the full extent of this city. The instinctual drive
toward the world of sound must have been very strong in my case,

since it triumphed over a commercially minded environment that,


so far as I could tell, had never given a thought to art or to art ex-

pression as a way of life,

97
Scenes come back to me
my early high school v from
myself digging out scores from the dusty upstairs shelves
of tfTC
old Brooklyn Public Library on Montague
Street; here k* w
of which my immediate neighbors were completely unawo
1 r i-11 T "tvv<4re. nr^
I. nose -

were the impressionable years of exploration. I recall


night u
alone singing to myself the songs of Hugo Wolf
mC
li
*
plane which had no parallel in the rest of my daily life T*- " O
am
ing to a school friend, after hearing one of my first P ^^
"
certs in the Brooklyn Academy of Music, in the
days bef
and recorded symphonies, what a large orchestra
sounded rt
forgotten my exact description except for the punch line-
then, and then," I said, after outlining how the
instrumental f
were gradually marshaled little by little, "and then th \^
ORchestra came in." This was musical
glory
manifesting T.Jw
Most of all I remember the
time I openly admi^ A first
, , .
j j
human being that I intended IT-
i_
to become a
emitted to another
composer of
set oneself up as a rival of the masters: what
a darin !i"
^'
heard-of project for a Brooklyn youth! It was
summe ti
was fifteen years old and the friend who heard this
" ^ C0n"
fession might have laughed at me. Fortunately,
The curious thing, in retrospect, is the extent to nrf^k T
L-.^_._I__J i -t__ j- ... - r ., , ,
wnicti 1 was Un
un-"
disturbed by the ordinariness of the workadav TO^IJ r
i
"'uriQ about me It
didn't occur to me to revolt against
was the only world I knew,
its
crassness, f
and I
^
-
i.
ast
analysis it , .
simply a P tt
what it was. Musk Jor me was not a refuge or o ^ f
m
~ ~~~ -- 0-,-^f.^a consolation*
-

it
^^7 ffiY? .W^iPg t
.. ?!
13 own existence, where th
"

TiT
^Ut:"
?
" '

side had litde or none, I couldn't help


r feeling a iTn-u
'

to whom
^^^^
music and
^
^

art in general
uc
meant nothing K * u
sorry tor those

their
*.
own concern.
irfor
As
ii><vi-< ^^~^o' out tnat "wac
myself, I could not
imagine 7-

It seems to me now, some


the
tfairty-five years Jati t
^^ '
life about,mgLdid not touch, Musicwas like
thc*^^ "F^*t -a w

buMngjiat
."
v shut out the street ~ noises.^Sh^r^r
y ^c tnc
f ^ ? -S^
noises natu-
t
ral to a street; but it was good to have the quiet of the great build-
ing available, not as a haven or a hiding place, but as a different
and more meaningful place.
Here at the start, I imagine, is a first difference from the European
musician, whose contacts with serious music, even when delayed,
must seem entirely natural, since "classical music" is German, Eng-
French, Italian, and so forth
lish, has roots, in other words, in
theyoung composer's own background. In my America, "classical"
music was a foreign importation. But the foreignness of serious
music did not trouble me at all in those days: my early preoccupa-
tionswere with technique and expressivity. I found that I derived

profound satisfaction from exteriorizing inner feelings at times,

surprisingly concrete ones and giving them shape. The scale on


which I worked at first was small two or three page piano pieces
or songs but the intensity of feeling was real. It must have been
fhfr
reality nf fhis inner intensity I speak of whJcbLjproduccd the
rnnvjffinn was capable of sogif ^ay wn'fi'q^r a longer, and
th^ I

perhaps, significant work. There is no other way of explaining a


young artist's self-assurance. It is not founded on faith alone (and
of course there can be no certainty about it), but some real kernel
there must be, from which thelater work will grow.

My years in Europe from the age of twenty to twenty-three made


me acutely conscious of the origins of the music I loved. Most of
the time I spent in France, where the characteristics of French cul-
ture are evident at every turn. The relation of French music to the
life around me became increasingly manifest.
that flgyLr**rc
n1
^T^^'nn n;
m iV *ht r^mrhmy t" frft

to my own hark-hnrnfi environment took hold of me. The convic-


tiongrew inside me that the two things that seemed always to have
been so separate in America music and the life about me must
be made to touch. This desire to make the music I wanted to write

come out of the life I had lived in America became a preoccupation


of mine in the twenties. It was not so very different from the ex-'

99
pcrience of other young American artists, in other fields, who had
gone abroad to study in that period; in greater or lesser degree, all

of us discovered America in Europe.


In music our problem was a special one: it really began when
we started to search for what Van Wyck Brooks calls a usable past.

In those days the example of our American elders in music was not

readily at hand. Their music was not often played except perhaps

locally. Their scores were seldom published,


and even when pub-
lished, were expensive and not easily available to the inquiring
student. We knew, of course, that they too had been to Europe as

students, absorbing musical culture, principally in Teutonic centers


of learning. Like us, they came home full of admiration for the
treasures of European musical art, with the self-appointed mission

of expounding these glories to their countrymen.


But when I think of these older men, and especially of the most
important among them
John Knowles Paine, George Chadwick,
Arthur Foote, Horatio Parker who made up the Boston school
of composers at the turn of the century, I am aware of a funda-
mental difference between their attitude and our own. Their atti-
tude was founded upon an admiration for the European art work
and an identification with it that made the seeking out of any
other art formula a kind of sacrilege. The challenge of the Con-
tinental art work was not: can we do better or can we also do some-
thing truly our own, but merely, can we do as well. But of course
one never does "as well." Meeting Brahms or Wagner on his own
terms one is certain to come off second best. They loved the master-
works of Europe's mature culture not like creative personalities
but like the schoolmasters that many of them became. They accepted
an artistic authority that came from abroad, and seemed intent on
m that authority.

I do not mean to underestimate what they accomplished for the


beginnings of serious American musical composition. Quite the
contrary. Within the framework of the German musical tradition

100
in which most of them had been trained, they composed industri-
ously, they set up
professional standards of workmanship, and en-

couraged a seriousness o purpose in their students that long out-


lasted their own But judged purely on their merits as
activities.

composers, estimable though their symphonies and operas and


chamber works are, they were essentially practitioners in the con-
ventional idiom of their own day, and therefore had little to offei
us of a younger generation. No doubt it is trite to say so, but it ii
none the less true, I think, that a genteel aura hangs about them.
There were no Dostoyevskys, no Rimbauds among them; no one
expired in the gutter like Edgar Allan Poe. It may not be gracious
to say so, but I fear that the New England group of composers of
that time were in overgentlemanly, too well-man-
all their instincts

nered, and their culture reflected a certain museumlike propriety


and bourgeois solidity.
In some strange way Edward MacDowell, a contemporary of
theirs, managed to escape some of the pitfalls of the New Eng-
landers. Perhaps the fact that he had been trained from an early

age in the shadow of the Conservatoire at Paris and had spent many
subsequent years abroad gave him a familiarity in the presence of
Europe's great works that the others never acquired- This is pure
surmise on my part; but it is fairly obvious that, speaking gener-
ally, his music shows more independence of spirit, and certainly
more personality than was true of his colleagues around 1900. It
was the music of MacDowell, among Americans, that we knew
best, even in 1925. 1 cannot honestly say that we dealt kindly with

his work at that period; his central position as "foremost composer


of his generation" made him especially apt as a target for our im-

patience with the weaknesses and orthodoxies of an older genera-


tion. Nowadays, although his music is played less often than it

once was, one can appreciate more justly what MacDowell had: a
sensitive and individual poetic gift, and a special turn of harmony
of his own. He is most successful when he is least pretentious. It
101
seems likely that for a long time MacDowelTs name will be secure
in the annals of American music, even though his direct influence
as a composer can hardly be found in present-day American music.
The search for a usable past, for musical ancestors, led us to ex-
amine most closely, as was natural, the music of the men who
immediately preceded our own time the generation that was active
after the death of MacDowell in 1908. It was not until about that
period that some of our composers were able to shake off the all-
pervasive German influence in American music. With Debussy and
Ravel, France had reappeared as a world figure on the international
musical scene, and French impressionism became the new influ-
ence. Composers like Charles Martin Loeffler and Charles T. Griffes
were the radicals of their day. But we see now that if the earlier
Boston composers were prone to take refuge in the sure values of
the academic world, these newer men were in danger of escaping
to a kind of artistic ivory tower. As composers, they seemed quite

content to avoid contact with the world they lived in. Unlike the

poetry of Sandburg or the novels of Dreiser or Frank Morris, so


conscious of the crude realities of industrial America, you will find
no picture of the times in the music of Loeffler or Griffes. The dan-

ger was that their music would become a mere adjunct to the grim
of everyday life, a mere exercise in polite living. They
realities

loved the picturesque, the poetic, the exotic medievalisms, Hin-


duisms, Gregorian chants, chinoiseries. Even their early critics

note in their music.


stressed the "decadent"

Despite this fin-de-stide tendency, Charles Griffes is a name that


deserves to be remembered. He represents a new type of composer
as contrasted with the men of Boston. Griffes was just an ordinary

small-town boy from Elmira, New York. He never knew the im-

portant musical people of his time and he never managed to get


a better job than that of music teacher in a private school for boys,
outside Tarrytown, New York. And yet there are pages in his
music where we recognize the presence of the truly inspired mo-
102
ment. His was the work of a sentient human being, forward-look-
ing, for its
period, with a definite relationship to the impressionists
and to Scriabin. No one can say how far Grififes might have de-

veloped if his career had not been cut short by death in his thirty-
sixth year, in 1920. What he gave those of us who came after bin?
was a sense of the adventurous in composition, of being thoroughly
alive to the newest trends in world music and to the stimulus that

might be derived from such contact.


Looking backward for first signs of the native composer with an'
interest in the American scene one comes upon the sympathetic

figure of Henry F. Gilbert. His special concern was the use of Negro
material as a basis for serious composition. This idea had been

given great impetus by the arrival in America in 1892 of the Bo-


hemian composer, Antonin Dvorak. His writing of the New World
Symphony in the new world, using melodic material strongly sug-
gestive of Negro spirituals, awakened a desire on the part of sev-
eral of the younger Americans of that era to write music of local
color, characteristic of one part, at least, of the American scene.
Henry was a Boston musician, but he had little in common
Gilbert
with his fellow New Englanders, for it was his firm conviction
that it was better to write a music in one's own way, no matter how
modest and than to compose large works
restricted its style might be,
after a foreign model. Gilbert thought he had solved the problem

of an indigenous expression by quoting Negro or Creole themes


in his overtures and ballets. What he did was suggestive on a primi-
tive and pioneering level, but the fact is that he lacked the technique

and musicianship for expressing his ideals in a significant way.


What, after all, does it mean to make use of a hymn tune or a

cowboy tune in a serious musical composition? There is nothing

inherently pure in a melody of folk source that cannot be effec-


tively spoiled by a poor setting. The use of such
materials ought

never to be a mechanical process. They can be successfully handled

only by a compose." who is able to identify himself with, and reex-

103
press in his own terms, the underlying emotional connotation of
the material. A hymn tune represents a certain order of feeling:
simplicity, plainness, sincerity, directness. It is the reflection of those

qualities in a stylistically appropriate setting, imaginative and un-


conventional and not mere quotation, that gives the use of folk
tunes reality and importance. In the same way, to transcribe the
cowboy tune so that its essential quality is preserved is a task for
the imaginative composer with a professional grasp of the prob-
lem.
In any event, we in the twenties were little influenced by the
efforts of Henry Gilbert, for the truth is that we were after bigger

game. Our concern was not with the quotable hyinn or spiritual:
we wanted to find a music that would speak of universal things in
a vernacular of American speech rhythms. We wanted to write
music on a popular music far behind
level that left music with
a largeness of utterance wholly representative of the country that
Whitman had envisaged.
Through a curious quirk of musical history the man who was

writing such a music a music that came close to approximating


our needs was entirely unknown to us. I sometimes wonder
whether the story of American music might have been different if
Charles Ives and his work had been played at the time he was com-

posing most of roughly the twenty years from 1900 to 1920.


it

Perhaps not; perhaps he was too far in advance of his own gener-
ation. As it turned out, it was not until the thirties that he was

discovered by the younger composers. As time goes on, Ives takes


on a more and more legendary character, for his career as com-
poser is surely unique not only in America but in musical history
anywhere.
In the preceding chapter I mentioned the abundance of imagina-
tion in the music of Ives, its largeness of vision, its experimental
side,and the composer's inability to be self-critical. Here I want to
be more specific and stress not so much the mystical and transcen-

104
dental side of his nature the side that makes him most nearly
akin to men like Thoreau and Emerson but rather the element
in his musical speech that accounts for his
acceptance of the ver-
nacular as an integral part of that speech. That
acceptance, it seems
to me, was a highly significant moment in our musical develop-
ment.
Ives had an abiding interest in the American scene as lived in,
the region with which he was familiar. He grew up in Danbury,
Connecticut, but completed his schooling at Yale University, where
he graduated in 1898. Later he moved on to New York, where he
spent many years as a successful man of business. Throughout his
life one gets the impression that he was deeply immersed in his
American roots. He was fascinated by typical features of New
England small-town life: the village church choir, the Fourth of
July celebration, the firemen's band, a barn dance, a village election,
George Washington's Birthday. References to all these things and
many similar ones can be found in his sonatas and symphonies.
Ives treated this subject matter imaginatively rather than literally.
Don't think for an instant that he was a mere provincial, with a
happy knack for incorporating indigenous material into his many
scores. No, Ives was an intellectual, and what is most impressive
isnot his evocation of a local landscape but the over-all range and
comprehensiveness of his musical mind.
Nevertheless Ives had a major problem in attempting to achieve
formal coherence in the Wdst of so varied a musical material. He
did not by any means entirely succeed in this difficult assignment.
At its worst his music is amorphous, disheveled, haphazard like
the music of a man who is incapable of organizing his many dif-
ferent thoughts. Simultaneity of impression was an idea that in-
trigued Ives all his life. As a boy he never got over the excitement
of hearing three village bands play on different street corners at the
same time. Ives tried a part solution for reproducing this simulta-

neity of effect which was subsequently dubbed "musical perspective"

105
by one music critic. He composed a work which is a good example
of this device. It is called "Central Park in the Dark," dates from

1907, and, like many of Ives's work, is based on a poetic transcrip-


tion of a realistic scene. The composer thought up a simple but
ingenious method for picturing this scene, thereby enhancing what
was in reality a purely musical intention. Behind a velvet curtain
he placed a muted string orchestra to represent the sounds of the
night, and before the curtain he placed a woodwind ensemble which
made city noises. Together they evoke Central Park in the dark.
The effect is almost that of musical cubism, since the music seems
to exist independently on different planes. This so-called musical
perspective makes use of musical realism in order to create an im-
pressionistic effect.
The composer will not be known until we
full stature of Ives as

have an opportunity judge his output as a whole. Up to now,


to

only a part of his work has been deciphered and published. But
whatever the total impression may turn out to be, his example
in the twenties helped us not at all, for our knowledge of his work
was sketchy so little of it had been played.

Gradually, by the late twenties, our search for musical ancestors


had been abandoned or forgotten, partly, I suppose, because we
became convinced that there were none that we had none. We
were on our own, and something of the exhilaration that goes with
being on one's own accompanied our every action. This self-reliant

attitude was by the open resistance to new music that


intensified

was typical in the period after the First World War. Some of the
opposition came from our elders conservative composers who

undoubtedly thought of us as noisy upstarts, carriers of dangerous


ideas. The fun of the fight against the musical philistines, the sorties

and strategies, the converts won, and the hot arguments with dull-

witted critics partly explain the particular excitements of that pe-


riod. Concerts of a gamble: who could say whether
new music were
Acario Catapos of Chile, or Josef Hauer of Vienna, or Kaikhosru

106
Sorabji ofEngland was the coining man of the future? It was an
adventuresome time a time when fresh resources had come to
music and were being tested by a host of new composers with en-
ergy and ebullient spirits.
Sometimes it seems to me that it was the composers who were
the very last to take cognizance of a marked
change that came over
the musical scene after the stimulating decade of the twenties. The

change was brought about, of course, by the introduction for the


time of the mass media of distribution in the field of music.
first

First came the phonograph, then the radio, then the sound film,
then the tape recorder, and now television. Composers were slow
to realize that they were being faced with revolutionary changes:

they were no longer merely writing their music within an indus-


trialframework; industrialization itself had entered the framework
of what had previously been our comparatively restricted musical
life. One of the crucial
questions of our times was injected: how
are we to make contact with this enormously enlarged potential

audience, without sacrificing in any way the highest musical stand-


ards?

Jacques Barzun recently called this question the problem of num-


bers. "A_hugc increase in the number of people* in the number of
nf
rfcsiffg qy^ satisfactions. is the gprat

new fact." Cornpnsrrfi gr ^ free to ignore this "great new: Jfort". if


they choose; no OP** is fnfrjpg the^to^ake_dieja.rge new public
into account. But it would be foolish to side-step what is essentially
a new situation in music: foolish because musical history teaches
that when the audience changes, music changes. Our present condi-
tion is very analogous to that in the field of books. Readers arc

generally quick to distinguish between the book that is a best-seller

by type and the book that is meant for the restricted audience of
intellectuals. In between there is a considerable body of literature

that appeals to the intelligent reader with broad interests. Isn't a


similar situation likely to develop in music? Aren't you able even

107
now to name a few best-seller compositions of recent vintage? Qcr-
the piece that is "born difficult" is an
tejnl^thft complex piece
entirely familiar musical manifestation. But it is the intelligent lis-

tcne with broad interests who Hag tasti^ gf


jE^priynt time which
are difficult to define. Qmp ngpr<
"lay ^YCj^LIfJi^fflffi
'
W think-
ing habits aadjbcopme. xoQrc. rr>n<trT nn ^y AWtf^cf.lh'* ne w audience
for whom thg^arf writing.

In the past, when I have proffered similar gratuitous advice on


have often been misinterpreted. Composers of abstruse
this subject, I

music thought they were under attack, and claimed that complexi-
ties were natural to them "born that way," a contention that I
never meant to dispute. I was simply pointing out that certain
modes of expression may not need the full gamut of post-tonal im-
plications, and that certain expressive purposes can be appropriately
carried out only by a simple texture in a basically tonal scheme. As
I see it, music that is born complex is not inherently better or worse
than music that is born simple.
Others took my meaning to be a justification for the watering
down of their ideas for the purposes of making their works accept-
able for mass consumption. Still others have used
my own composi-
tions to prove that I make a sharp distinction between those written
in a "severe" and those in a "simple" style. The inference is some-
times drawn that I have consciously abandoned my earlier dissonant
manner in order to popularize my style and this notion is ap-
plauded enthusiastically; while those of a different persuasion arc
convinced that only my so-called "severe" style is really serious.
In my own mind there never was so sharp
^dichotomy between
the various works I have written. DifFer^pt purppggg p rf >rijirr- / ffi-
ferent kinfo nf wnrlr that i'g all The new mechanization of music's
t

media has emphasized functional requirements, very often in terms


of a large audience. That need would naturally induce works in a

simpler, more direct style than was customary for concert works of
108
absolute music. But it did not by any means lessen my interest in

composing works in an idiom that might be accessible only to culti-


vated listeners. As I look back, it seems to me that what I was try-

ing for in the simpler works was only partly the writing of com-
positions that might speak to a broader audience. More than that
they gave me an opportunity to try for a more homespun musical
idiom, not so different in intention from what attracted me in more
hectic fashion in my jazz-influenced works of the twenties. In other
words, it was not only musical functionalism that was in question,

but also musical language.


This desire of mine to find a musical vernacular, which, as lan-

guage, would cause no difficulties to my listeners, was perhaps noth-


ing more than a recrudescence of my old interest in making a
1

connection between music and the life about me. Our serious com-

posers have not been signally successful at making that kind


of

connection. Oblivious to their surroundings, they live in constant


communion with great works, which in turn seems to make it dc

rigueur for them to attempt to emulate the great works by writing


one of their equivalent plane. Do not misunderstand
own on an
me. I entirely approve of the big gesture for those who can^carry
it off. What seems to me a waste of time is the self-deceiving "major"

effort on the part of many composers who might better serve the

community by the writing of a good piece for high school band.


themselves
Young composers are especially prone to overreaching
to the the writing of ambitious works,
making gesture by
grand
often in a crabbed style, that have no future whatever. It is un-

realistic and a useless aping, generally of foreign models. I have no

illusion, of course, that this good advice will be heeded by anyone.

But I fr* to riii


nlr ^ qt ?n my nwn work
couraged the notion that a composer writes for jlifferent purposes
and from different viewpoints. It is a satisfaction to know that in
the"composing of a ballet Iike~B*7/y the
Kid or in a film score like

109
Our Town, and perhaps in the Lincoln Portrait, I have touched off
for myself and others a kind of musical naturalness that we have
badly needed along with "great" works.
An honest appraisal of the position of the American composer in
our society today would find much to be proud of, and also much
to complain about. The worst feature of the composer's life is the

fact that he does not feel himself an integral part of the musical

community. There is no deep need for his activities as composer,


no passionate concern in each separate work as it is written. (I
speak now not of my ownpersonal experience, but of my observa-
tion of the general scene.) When a composer is played he is usually
surrounded by an air of mild approval; when he is not played no
one demands any case are rare events,
to hear him. Performances in
with the result that very few composers can hope to earn a liveli-
hood from the music they write. The music-teaching profession has
therefore been their principal resource, and the composing of music
an activity reserved for their spare time. These are familiar com-
plaints, I know, perhaps immemorial ones; but they show little

sign of abatement, and in the aggregate they make composers as


a group an unhappy lot, with the outward signs of unhappiness

ranging from open resentment to inner frustration.


On the brighter side of the ledger there the cheering fact that
is

numerically there are many more active composers than there once
were. There is private encouragement on the part of certain foun-
dations and individuals, and prizes and commissions are much
more frequently given. An occasional radio station or recording
company will indicate a spurt of interest. The publishers have shown
signs of gratifying
awakening, by a willingness to invest in the
future of unknowns. The music critics are, generally speaking,
more open-minded in their attitude, more ready to applaud than

they were a quarter of a century ago. And best of all, there appears
to be a continual welling up of new talents from all parts of
America that augurs well for our composing future.
no
In the final analysis the composer must look for keenest satisfac-

tion in the work that he does in the creative act itself. In many
important respects creation in an industrial community is little dif-
ferent from what it has always been in any community. What, after

all, do I put down when I put down notes? I put down a reflection

of emotional states: feelings, perceptions, imaginings, intuitions.


An emotional state, as I use the term, is compounded of everything
we are: ourbackground, our environment, our convictions. Art
particularizes and makes actual these fluent emotional states.
Be-
cause it particularizes and because it makes actual, it gives meaning
to la condition humaine. If it gives meaning it necessarily has pur-

pose. I would even add that has moral purpose.


it

One of the primary problems for the composer in an industrial

society like that of America is tc^achievc integratioi^ to find justi-


fication for the life of art in the lite about mm. Tmust believe in
the ultimate good of the world and of life as I live it in order to
create a work of art. Negative emotions cannot produce art; posi-
tiveemotions bespeak an emotion about something. I cannot im-

agine an art work without implied convictions;


and that is true
also for music, the most abstract of the arts.

need for a positive philosophy which is a little frighten-


It is this
cannot make art out of fear
ing in the world as we know it. You
and suspicion; you can make it only out of affipa^tivc beliefs. This
sense of affirmation can be had only paiftrom one's inner being;
in

for the rest it must be continually reactivated by a creative and yea-


one. The artist should feel him-
saying atmosphere in the life about
self affirmed and buoyed up by his community. In other words,
art

and the life of art must mean something, in the deepest sense, to

the everyday citizen. When that happens, America will have achieved
a maturity to which every sincere artist will have contributed.

Ill
Postscript
THE NORTON PROFESSORSHIP COMMITTEE Suggested to IHC the
performance of a certain amount of live music after each of my talks. I
readily agreed, for I have often envied the art historian his illustrative slides
and the poethis lengthy quotations from the works he admired. In music we

have the phonograph; but experience has taught me that one uses the phono-
graph with only moderate success outside the classroom. The idea of a brief
posdecture concert seemed worth trying, although the music chosen for per-
formance had, at times, only indirect relevance to the substance of my lecture.
Contact with the live sound of music always helps to dispel that vague and un-
satisfactory sensation that follows on any mere discussion of music. These short
concerts had the further advantage of forcing me to be as concise as possible,
while holding out to my listeners the promise of a dessert to follow on the
bare bones of my discourse.
The programs were presented in 1951 on November 13, 20, 27 and in 1952
on March 5, 12, 19. The list here corresponds with the sequence of the six
chapters of this book, although in actual presentation the fifth program pre-
ceded the fourth.

Programs
PATRICIA NEWAY, Mezzo-soprano
ARTHUR GOLD, Pianist
*1 ROBERT HZDALE, Pianist
JOHN LA MONTAINE, Accompanist
CONCERTO PER DUE PIANOFORTI SOU (1935) Igor Stravinsky
Con Moto; Notmrno; Quattro variazioni; Preludio c Fuga

SONGS Hector Berlioz


Absence (1834; revised 1841); La Mort d'Ophclie (1848); La Captive (1832; revised
1834); Au Cimetiere (1834; revised 1841); Villanelle (1834; revised 1841)

JEUX D'WFANTS (1873?) (Excerpts) Georges Bizet


Lai Toupie, Impromptu; Les Quatre Coins, Esquissc; Petit Petite
man, femme, Duo;
Le Bal, Galop

112
SYLVIA MARLOWE, Harpsichord and Piano
WOLFE WOLFINSOHN, Violin
O GEORGE FINKEL, Violoncello
^ FRANCES SNOW DRINKER, Flute
WILDER E. SCHMALZ, Oboe
ROBERT C. STUART, Clarinet
SONATA FOR VIOLIN AND HARPSICHORD (1778) K. 301 Mozart
Allegro con spirito; Allegro
(The second movement was repeated with the piano substituted for the harpsichord^

LES PASTES DE LA GRANDE ET ANCIENNE MENESTRANDISE (pub. 1717)


(Harpsichord alone) Couperin
Lcs Notables ct Jur& (marche); Les Vielleux et les Gueux (Bourdon); Les Jongleur*,
Sauteurs et Saltimbanqucs; Les Invalides; Desordre et deroute de route la troupe

CONCERTO PER CLAVICEMBALO, FLAUTO, OBOE, CLARINETTO, VIOUNO


E VIOLONCELLO (1926) de Folia
Allegro; Lento (giubiloso ed energico); Vivace (flcssibilc, scherzando)

REAH SADOWSKY, Pianist


3Q PAUL DBS MARAIS, Ptamst
SONATA IN B FLAT MAJOR (posthumous) Schu&ert

Molto moderate; Andante sostenuto; Scherzo: Allegro vivace; Allegro ma non troppo

PIANO VARIATIONS (1930) Copland

ONDINE (from GASPARD DE LA NUIT) (1908) Ravel

NEW MUSIC STRING QUARTET:


BROADUS ERLE, Violin

MATTHEW RAIMONDI, Violin


WALTER TRAMPLER, Viola
GLAUS ADAM, Violoncello

STRING QUARTET, OPUS 28 (1938) Anton Webern

Massig; Gemachlicli; Sehr flifjpyrd

STRING QUARTET NO. 2 IN F SHARP (1942) Michael Tippett

Allegro grazioso; Andante; Presto; Allegro appassionata

"3
PHYLIJS CURTEN, Soprano
5 GEORGE ZAZOFSKY, Violin
GREGORY TUCKER, Piano

SONATINA FOR VIOIIN AND PIANO (1924) Carlos Chavez (Mexico)

SUITE FOR SOPRANO AND VIOLIN (1923) Heitor Villa-Lobo* (Brazil)


A Mrnina c a Canc$o; Quero Ser Alegre; Sertaneja

THREE SONGS Alejandro Caturla (Cuba)


Bito Manue* (1931); Dos Poemas Afro-Cubanos (1930): (a) Mari-sabel; (b) Jucgo
sa&to

THE MUSIC OF LENNIE TRISTANO, DAVE BRUBECK, BUD POWELL, AND


OSCAR PETTIFORD (recorded

WILLIAM MASSELOS, Piano


NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY ALUMNI CHORUS,
6
ft
LORNA COOKE DE VARON, Conductor
ELIZABETH DAVIDSON, Accompanist
FIRST PIANO SONATA (1902-1909) Charles E. Ives
i. Adagio con moto andante con moto allegro risoluto adagio cantabile; 2.
Allegro moderate, 'In the Inn": allegro; 3. Largo allegro largo, come prima;
4. Allegro presto (as fast as possible); 5. Andante maestoso adagio cantabile
allegro allegro moderate ma con brio

AMERICANA, chorus of mixed voices (1932) Randall Thompson


(text from The American Mercury)
I. May Every Tongue; 2. The Staff Necromancer; 3. God's Bottles; 5. Lovcli lines

LARK, mixed chorus with baritone solo (1938)


Copland
(text by Genevieve Taggard)

Sources
For those readers who may wish to know the sources of my principal quotations
in the text^ I append the following list.

Page Introduction
3 Aaden, Wystan H., "Some Reflections on Opera as a Medium," Partisan
Review (January-February 1952), p. n.
*-3 Sartre, Jean-Paul,L'lmaginaire (Paris: Gallimard, 1940); translation, The
Psychology of Imagination (New York: The Philosophical Library, 1948),
pp. 278-280,

"4
Page Chapter One
7 Coleridge, Samuel T., Biographia IJteraria, Evcr>uua'i Library edition (Lon-
don: J. M. Dent & Sons, 1949), chapter xiv, p. 153.
** 1
10 BuIIough, Edward, 'Psychical Distance as a Factor in Art and as an Aes-
V (19I2/, part II, pp. 87-
thetic Principle," British Journal of Psychology,
n 8, quoted in Susanne Langer, Philosophy in a Xctv Key [ Cam-
esp. 91;
bridge: Harvard University Press, 1942;, pp. 209-210, 223.
10 Claudcl, Paul, The Eye listens, translated by Elsie Pell (New York: The
Philosophical Library, 1950), p. 209.
12-13 Hanslick, Eduard, Vont Musfyalisch-Schonen (Leip2ig: R. Weigcl, 1854),
p. 103; quoted in Langer, Philosophy in a New Key, p. 238.
13 Langer, Susanne, Philosophy in a New Key (Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1942), chapter viii, pp, 204-245, csp. 245.
13 Santayana, George, Reason in Art, voL IV of The Uije of Reason (New York,
Scribner's Sons, 1905), p. 58.

18-19 E)ent Edward J., 'The Historical Approach to Music," The Musical Quarterly,
XXHI (January 1937), p. 5.
19 Santayana, George, Three Philosophical Poets (Cambridge: Harvard Univer-
sity Press, 1910), Introduction, p. 3.

Chapter Two
26 Wierzynski, Kazimierz, The Life and Death of Chopin, translated by N.
Gutcrman, with a Foreword by Artur Rubinstein (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1949)* P- *97-
27 Sachs, Curt,Our Musical Heritage (New York: Prentice Hall, 1948), pp. 9-28.
31 Schdnberg, Arnold, Style and Idea (New York: The Philosophical Library,
195) P- 38.
32 Spender, Stephen, World Within World (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1951).
p. 93-
Wcinstock
39 Chavez, Carlos, Toward a Neur Music, translated by Herbert
(New York: Norton and Co., 1937), P- 178.

Chapter Three

Maritain, Jacques, Art and Poetry, translated by E. dcP.


Matthews (New
41
York: The Philosophical Library, 1945), p. 89.
See
42 Coleridge, Samuel T. Biographia JJteraria, chapter xiv, pp. 151-152.
above.
44 Sessions, Roger, The Musical Experience of Composer, Performer, Listener
6
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1950) > P- 7-
Richards, I. A., Coleridge on Imagination (New
York: Harcourt, Brace fc
45
Co., 1935), P- 47- ^ t N
46 Mcllcrs, Wilfrid, Music and Society (New York: Roy Publishers, 1950),

p. 206.
Chapter Four
the International Society of
61 Goldbeck, Frederick, in Music Today, Journal of
Contemporary Music, edited by Rollo H. Myers (London: Denis Dobsoa,
1949), p. no.

115
Page
63 Tovey, Sir Donald F., Musical Textures, voL n of A Musician Talfe (Lon-
don: Oxford University Press, 1941), p. 45.
64 Busoni, Fcrruccio B., Sketch of a New Esthetic of Music, translated from
the German by Dr. Th. Baker (New York: G. Schirmer, 1911), p. 5 Sfe &
also Skulsky, Abraham, 'Wladimir Vogcl," Musical America, vol. LXIX,
no. 15 (December I, 1949), p. 7, quoting Busoni.
64 Sessions, Roger, The Musical Experience of Composer, Performer, Listener,
pp. 62-66. See above,
66 James, William, As William James Said, edited by Elizabeth Perkins Aldrich
(New York: The Vanguard Press, 1942), p. 109, requoted from James,
The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), p. 363.

73 Busoni, Ferniccio B., Sketch of a New Esthetic of Music, p. 22. See above.
74 Dent, Edward J., in Music Today, p. 102. See above: Goldbeck.

76 Richards, I. A., Principles of Literary Criticism (5th ed., New York: Harcourt,
Brace & Co., 1934), pp. 25-33.

Chapter Five
86 Mellers, Wilfrid, Music and Society, pp. 195-196, quoting Roy Harris. See
above.
88 Sargeant, Winthrop, Jazz: Hot and Hybrid (New ed., New York: E. P.
Dutton & Co., 1946), p. 71.
95 Frank, Waldo, The Re-discovery of America (New York: Scribner's Sons,

1929), pp. 56-66 (chapter v, *The Grave of Europe").


95 Howard, John Tasker, "Edward MacDowell," The International Cyclopedia
of Music and Musicians, edited by Oscar Thompson (5th ed., New York:
Dodd, Mead & Co., 1949), p. 1058; quoting from a lecture published in
MacDowell, Critical and Historical Essays (Boston, 1911).

Chapter Six
'

107 Barzun, Jacques, "Artist against Society: Some Articles of War," Partisan
'Review (January-February 1952), p. 67.

116

You might also like