William Schuman (1910-1992): Violin Concerto / New
England Triptych
Charles Ives (1874-1954): Variations on America
(orch. Schuman)
William Schuman had several successful simultaneous careers
in music, as composer, educator and administrator. After teaching for ten years
at Sarah
Lawrence College, he became president of the Juilliard School
of Music, and then the first president of the newly inaugurated Lincoln Center
for the Performing Arts in New York. Schuman was by then, according to the New
York Times, probably the most powerful figure in the world of art music.
Besides his full-time positions, he found the time to be director of the Koussevitzky
Music Foundation, the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation, the Chamber Music Society
of Lincoln Center, the National Endowment for the Arts, the National
Educational Television network and the Film Society of Lincoln Center.
Born in New York, Schuman started to compose while still
in high school, and was soon organizing jazz ensembles. His early interest in
music was focused on popular music and jazz. He studied at Columbia University Teachers
College, and took private composition lessons from Roy Harris at Juilliard.
Harris was a great influence, both in Schuman's development as a composer and
in his career. It was Harris who first interested Serge Koussevitzky in his
student's works. In turn, Koussevitzky was one of the first conductors to perform
his music. The violinist Samuel Dushkin commissioned Schuman's Violin Concerto
expecting to give the first performance with Koussevitzky and the Boston
Symphony Orchestra. Koussevitzky, however, left the orchestra the year before
the premiere in 1950, and the first performance was given by Isaac Stern, and conducted
by Koussevitzky's successor in Boston, Charles Munch.
Schuman's compositions include the 1939 American
Festival Overture, one of his earliest successes, a Concerto for Piano
and Orchestra, the ballets Undertow and Night Journey, ten
symphonies, four string quartets, choral works, film scores, Credendum
(commissioned by the United States government) and A Free Song, which
won the first Pulitzer Prize in Music.
The Violin Concerto is one of Schuman's most powerful
works. Emotionally packed, it could almost be considered a symphony for violin
and orchestra. Rather than "accompanying" the soloist in the classic
tradition, the orchestra becomes a participant in the high drama. The work is
indeed extremely theatrical, evoking powerful emotions in a highly charged
romantic atmosphere. Schuman was a poet at heart. His earliest interests
actually included the writing of poetry. The concerto has some of the most
poetic music ever written by Schuman. The work underwent several transformations
after each of the first performances. Schuman seemed unsatisfied with the form,
eventually settling for the final version of two very large movements instead
of the original three. The final version of the work was performed by Roman Totenberg
at the Aspen Festival in Colorado in 1959.
The first movement starts bluntly, as if the theatre curtain
had gone up and the stage lights went on all at once. It grabs the attention.
The main motif that will link the entire work, and re-appear in many disguises,
is stated at the outset by the soloist. The forward motion carries the music
through the first of many dialogues between the violin and the woodwind, but
suddenly it halts, a dramatic and unexpected stop. The dramatic music continues
building up to a climax. It slowly dissipates, leading to a middle section, an
intimate molto tranquillo of chamber music quality, a poetic, nostalgic
violin line supported by tenuous strings, with comments from the solo clarinet
and flute, a most romantic gesture. After the horn adds another lovely touch,
the music builds up speed and momentum, with a fast section by the soloist and
plucked strings, an imaginative coupling. This leads to the violin cadenza, which
Schuman added after one of the early revisions (soloists wanted it), followed
by a nervous rhythmic pulsation in the strings against which the soloist intones
the recurrent motif, The brass takes over from the strings, with the first of
several brilliant passages that contrast the lyrical solo violin against a
pulsating brass rhythm. Suddenly the speed picks up, all at once, like a sudden
change of scene. Broken rhythms abound, this time with most of the orchestra
picking up the earlier brass accompaniment. It explodes into another big orchestral
climax, leading to a brilliant conclusion.
The opening of the second movement features the solo
timpani, one of Schuman's trademarks. After this very dramatic opening
subsides, the solo violin takes over in a very subdued, cantabile fashion,
somewhat reminiscent of the middle section of the first movement. A tiny new
violin cadenza sets the drama in motion once again, leading to an
unexpected fugue by the strings. This eventually leads to a most imaginative dialogue
between the solo violin and the woodwinds, one of the most complicated and
difficult passages in the work. The brass literally puts an end to this mayhem,
and eventually takes over, with another one of the rhythmic dialogues between
trombones and solo violin. After a couple of these interpolations, the solo finally
starts to calm down, leading for the last time to the slow, lyrical section,
reminiscent of the previous cantabile passages. Not for long. The momentum
picks up rather quickly, leading to a hair-raising finale, in which the soloist
becomes just one more participant.
Finally, the orchestra takes over.
New England Triptych, commissioned by Andre Kostelanetz,
and first given under his direction by the Orchestra of the University of Miami,
soon became one of Schuman's most popular works. He wrote the following notes
for the first performances.
William Billings (1744-1800) is a major figure in the history
of American music. His works capture the spirit of sinewy ruggedness, deep
religiosity, and patriotic fervor that we associate with the Revolutionary
period in American history. I am not alone among American composers who feel a
sense of identity with Billings, which accounts for my use of his music as a
departure point. These three pieces are not a "fantasy" nor
"variations" on themes of Billings, but rather a fusion of styles and
musical language. Billings, text for Be Glad then America includes the
following lines:
Yea, the Lord will
answer
And say unto his
people-behold
I will send you
corn and wine and oil
And ye shall be
satisfied there with.
Be glad then, America,
Shout and rejoice.
Fear not O land,
Be glad and
rejoice.
Hallelujah!
After a short introduction by the solo timparti, the strings
develop music that suggests the "Halleluyah" heard at the end of the
piece. The main section starts with trombones and trumpets in a varied setting
of the words "Be Glad then, America, Shout and Rejoice." The solo
timparti leads to a fugal section based on the words "And Ye Shall be
Satisfied." The music gains momentum as combined themes lead to a climax, followed
by a free adaptation of Billings' "Halleluyah" music and a final
reference to the "Shout and Rejoice" music.
The setting of When Jesus Wept is in the form or a round.
This time, Billings' music is used in its original form.
When Jesus wept
the following tear
In mercy flowed
beyond all bound;
When Jesus
groaned, a trembling fear
Seized all the guilty
world around
Chester, composed by Billings as a church hymn, was
subsequently adopted by the Continental Army as a marching-song. The orchestral
piece derives both from the spirit of the hymn and the marching-song:
Let tyrants shake
their iron rods,
And slavery lank
her galling chains,
We fear them not,
we trust in God,
New England's God
forever reigns.
The foe comes on
with haughty stride,
Our troops advance
with martial noise,
Their vet'rans
flee before our youth,
And gen'rals yield
to beardless boys.
Charles Ives was born in Danbury, Connecticut in 1874.
His father George was his main music teacher and influence during his formative
years. George Ives was a bandmaster with highly original musical ideas. The young
Charles often played drums in his father's band and organ in one of Danbury's
churches. Later on, he attended near-by Yale University in New Haven, studying
composition with Horatio Parker. Upon graduation, Charles Ives moved to New
York City to work as an insurance clerk and in his spare time as a church
organist. At the age of 32 he founded his own insurance company, Ives &
Myrick, starting a series of important innovations such as estate planning.
Early on Ives had come to realise that his music could
not provide a living income, as it was too unusual and innovative, and he
decided he would write music mostly for his own satisfaction. His insurance
business became a great success, making him very wealthy, but he would not
compromise with his music, keeping intact his ideals and originality. As a
result, he remained way ahead of his time in many of the musical innovations of
the twentieth century, such as polytonality, quarter-tones, stylistic mixture,
and so on, but he had almost no influence on the new music of his colleagues
because his works remained unpublished and unperformed for a very long time.
The busiest period in Ives' life was from around 1908, when he married Harmony Twitchell,
until he retired from his insurance firm and stopped composing in 1930. It is curious
how and why everything stopped at once for Ives, both his business and his
music. During that previous 22-year period he composed the bulk of his music
and built one of the most successful insurance companies in America. For the
next 24 years he lived to see his music starting to take hold with
publications, performances, and even important awards. Conductors like Leonard Bemstein
began to champion him. He never heard his Fourth Symphony, one of his
most imaginative and original works, first performed by Leopold Stokowski and
the American Symphony Orchestra in New York years after the composer's death. I
remember that performance well. I was the second conductor, standing on a
separate podium next to Stokowski.
It was Stokowski, during my early years as his Associate
Conductor in New York, who first interested me in the music of William Schuman.
Stokowski asked me to conduct the Ives-Schuman Variations on America for
the Teenage Concerts we both shared at Camegie Hall. These were marvellous,
memorable events. Ever since his Philadelphia days, Stokowski loved to interest
young people in concert music. With the American Symphony, he organized a
series during which he would conduct the opening and closing works, all short, and
I would conduct the bulk of the programme. While I conducted, Stokowski would
sit on a stool by the side of the podium, attentively following the
proceedings. In between works he would address the students with impromptu
remarks. After a few years he asked me to take over the series. The Variations
on America remained a favourite and we performed it every year.
William Schuman came often to the concerts, always with
his family, and sometimes he spoke to the students. William Schuman was a
superb orchestrator, as his own music proves. What he was able to do with works
of other American composers gives further proof of this special talent.
Broadcast Music Inc. commissioned him in 1963, at the instigation of Oliver
Daniel, to orchestrate Ives' Variations on America, an early (1891)
organ piece. Schuman was able to capture the humour, one of Ives' special
talents, and emphasize the polytonality by using different instrumental blocks
for each contrasting key. While we now hear these remarkable polytonal passages
without blinking an eye, it must have been startling at the time it was
written, way ahead of its time. It may be open to argument whether Ives was
having fun with the old national hymn known as America in the United
States (and as God Save the Queen in Britain), or at the idea of
"variations" as an old and silly musical form. In either case, it is an
irreverent work, and Schuman captured the spirit and intention of every
variable, adding a personal touch at every turn. The Variables on America
was first performed by the New York Philharmonic conducted by Andre Kostelanetz.
Jose Serebrier