MUSIC AND IMAGINATION (1952) Author: AARON COPLAND
MUSIC AND IMAGINATION (1952) Author: AARON COPLAND
MUSIC AND IMAGINATION (1952) Author: AARON COPLAND
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
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
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
'
Part Two
MUSICAL IMAGINATION AND THE
CONTEMPORARY SCENE
4 Tradition and Innovation in Recent European Music 61
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
of the learned scholars and poets and composers who had preceded
me as incumbents of the Norton Chair was not an easy task. For-
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.
part of our emotive life the part that sings. Purposeful singing
is what concerns most composers most of their lives. Purposeful
music making and music listening. When Coleridge put down his
famous phrase, "the sense of musical delight, with the power of pro-
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-
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-
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-
beauty of a much admired daughter. This must mean that the artist
(or father) considers himself an unwitting instrument whose satis-
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
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
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.
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-
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-
Here, most of all, the listener must fall back upon his own gift;
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-
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
19
isa mark of the intelligent listener. The classics themselves must be
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
tones to be produced.
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
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,
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-
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
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
unforgettable sound of all was that ofa massed orchestra and band
23
tegral part of the expressive meaning o that piece. One thinks
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
25
limitation that sometimes accompanies this affinity. The most fa-
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
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
given a piano, plays in "empty octaves" and the Hindus, "in single,
sustained notes on the harmonium."
other directions; this undoubtedly was partly the reason for the
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
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
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
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
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
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
31
undertaking. For the composer there are additional hazards in the
size and acoustical
variety of tone produced by different players, the
nature, belong to the orchestra, so to speak, even before one can tell
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
however^ that there arc ddjjgjtc .advan rages to.be gained from sep-
.
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
ing himself solely to that purpose. This isn't always possible, for
there are times when a phrase or a section suggests its orchestral
play what notes. Until that happened, sounds were more or less
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.
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-
sheen and sparkle of the combined texture. Add to this his incredible
convinces me that Berlioz was more, much more, than the starry-
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-
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
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-
38
future seems highly conjectural. In a supersonic age the material
of sound become less ethereal and ephemeral, more
itself is likely to
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-
39
CHAPTER THREE
indissolubly linked, more so than in any of the other arts, with the
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.
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
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
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,
f^^s^y^j^^^^p^ffi r
supply tfaaxob^cct.
The making of something out of nothing the special province of
is
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
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
trasting section, and a return to the first part is the usual solution.
But anything that lasts beyond three minutes may cause trouble.
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,
put the emphasis rather on the artist as craftsman, with much talk
44
closest we have come in recent times to a primitive composer, and
the mere mention of their names makes the idea rather absurd.
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
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
composers vary widely in their attitude. But whatever they tell you,
I think it is safe to assume that although a conscious desire for
story of Bach writing each week for the honest burghers of Leipzig,
47
of the main preoccupations of the interpreter is: elocutionary elo-
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
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
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
that point the interpreter is on his own. I know that there are some
have gone to the other extreme and said: "Stop concerning your-
selves with interpretation, just play the notes/' That attitude blithely
easy for the layman. Observation has convinced me that even the
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
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
performers are forced to adopt the manner, even though they may
not be born to it. But the true romantic the interpreter who creates
51
power over audiences everywhere. I am now thinking in terms of
the real thing, not merely of the unfortunate individual making a
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
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
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,
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
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
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-
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
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
57
Part Two
MUSICAL IMAGINATION IN
THE CONTEMPORARY SCENE
CHAPTER FOUR
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
..
musical renaissance,
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-
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
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
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-
mould.
This tendency toward the conservation of old forms and their
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
especially Britten, the youngest among them. His music, and es-
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
tions; and from one man, Arnold Schonberg, who, ironically enough,
pieces had all been short), after which there followed a silence that
lasted for eight years.
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-
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
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
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
72
Boulcz, for a certain time, came under the guidance of the French
73
the purpose and objective of composing today. Surprisingly, this
phase of the "crisis" from Beethoven's day the day when the
creator of modern times was thrown back on his own resources,
74
first time that composers from Great Britain, France, Holland,
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
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
77
CHAPTER FIVE
Musical Imagination
in the Americas
AN ASTUTE FELLOW MUSICIAN was responsible for sug-
ask it; and, moreover, that I myself might be a poor judge of the
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
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
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
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
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-
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
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
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
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-
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
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
accent."
cally the deliberate setting, one against the other, of a steady pulse
with a free pulse. Its most familiar manifestation is in the small
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,
87
eleven by contrast with the more two plus
familiar combinations 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
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
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
90
ward MacDowell, nothing really fructifying resulted It is under-
standable that the first Americans would have a sentimental attrac-
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-
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.
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
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
ported that the "inflated style" was typical for American orators
and writers. There must be something about big countries Brazil,
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
93
many similarities, it is characteristic that their music is utterly
per-
sonal and distinct, one from the other.
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
composers, optimism is
certainly keynote. But the times have
its
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
many other interesting facets of the composer's life have hardly been
explored.
munityj
like the United States. Actually it seems to me that we
** n
^"^^-.'^^^^ .- ^^^ ,
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-
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,
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 -
it
^^7 ffiY? .W^iPg t
.. ?!
13 own existence, where th
"
TiT
^Ut:"
?
" '
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-
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
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
In those days the example of our American elders in music was not
readily at hand. Their music was not often played except perhaps
100
in which most of them had been trained, they composed industri-
ously, they set up
professional standards of workmanship, and en-
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
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
ger was that their music would become a mere adjunct to the grim
of everyday life, a mere exercise in polite living. They
realities
small-town boy from Elmira, New York. He never knew the im-
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
figure of Henry F. Gilbert. His special concern was the use of Negro
material as a basis for serious composition. This idea had been
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
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
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
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-
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
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.
was typical in the period after the First World War. Some of the
opposition came from our elders conservative composers who
and strategies, the converts won, and the hot arguments with dull-
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
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:
by type and the book that is meant for the restricted audience of
intellectuals. In between there is a considerable body of literature
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-
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
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
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,
connection between music and the life about me. Our serious com-
effort on the part of many composers who might better serve the
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
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
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
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^
Molto moderate; Andante sostenuto; Scherzo: Allegro vivace; Allegro ma non troppo
"3
PHYLIJS CURTEN, Soprano
5 GEORGE ZAZOFSKY, Violin
GREGORY TUCKER, Piano
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
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,
Chapter Six
'
107 Barzun, Jacques, "Artist against Society: Some Articles of War," Partisan
'Review (January-February 1952), p. 67.
116