Category: Headlines

Everbest: Remembering H. Wiley Hitchcock

name
H. Wiley Hitchcock (1923-2007)
Photo by John Bentham

Hitchcock, H(ugh) Wiley (b Detroit, MI, 28 Sept 1923; d New York, 5 Dec 2007). Just typing that heading, as it will appear in future editions of The New Grove – with its boldfaces, italics, and parentheses – puts a reality to the news that I have been struggling to accept for the past month. Since it was in his lexicographical role as co-editor, with Stanley Sadie, of the four-volume New Grove Dictionary of American Music (1986) that I knew Wiley best, let me offer a few entries in tribute.

Cultivated. Wiley used the term in his classic textbook Music in the United States (see WIT) to describe the so-called classical tradition of American music, contrasting it with “VERNACULAR” and awarding both traditions pride of place in his thinking and his writings. As general editor of the Prentice Hall series of college textbooks, Wiley had initially anticipated writing the volume on Baroque music, subject of his early scholarly research (as a scholar on Marc-Antoine Charpentier and Giulio Caccini he was as highly respected in the scholarly circles of the French and Italian baroque as he was among Americanists). But lacking an author for the American music volume he had determined to include in the series, he took the project on himself. (My copy is inscribed, in typically mock horror, “What, purchased only in 1981?”) The volume went through four editions, the last one, published in 2000, with the typically modest gesture of ceding the concluding section on post-1980 music to co-author Kyle Gann.

The term also fits the man. Born in Detroit, educated at Dartmouth and the University of Michigan, where his teaching career began, Wiley came to New York in 1961 to assume a teaching position at Hunter College. With his wife, the eminent art historian Janet Cox-Rearick, the couple created a highly productive and enviable intercontinental academic lifestyle, summering annually in Italy (with side trips to Paris or the Italian Riviera), where they did their most productive research and writing. They were the consummate New Yorkers, dashing and debonair, at home at the Yale and Century Clubs, Carnegie Hall, or the Met (Museum and Opera). The loss of his “212” phone number, inadvertently reassigned during a summer disconnection, was the cause of a rare display of despair.

Everbest. Anyone who ever received a letter (often handwritten in elegant script) or email from Wiley will recognize his favored signoff, borrowed (with attribution) from Virgil Thomson. It could also be the ideal epitaph for this brilliant, elegant, cheerful, plainspoken man, combining as it does the superlative and the constancy of personality. He invoked Thomson’s words frequently; after Wiley’s cancer was diagnosed he quoted Thomson in a note to me: “I shall worry constantly, worry being my acceptable form of prayer.”

ISAM Matters. At Brooklyn College, where Wiley went to teach in 1971, he founded the Institute for Studies in American Music, single-handedly—changing the face of American music scholarship. He organized conferences, including (with Vivian Perlis) the Charles Ives Centennial Festival Conference in 1974, oversaw the publication of a series of monographs that now numbers 35, and until his retirement in 1993 edited the lively and informative biannual blue-ink newsletter. He was succeeded by one of his star students, Carol J. Oja, now teaching at Harvard, then by Ellie M. Hisama and Jeffrey Taylor. In a most worthy accolade, the center is to be renamed the Hitchcock Institute for Studies in American Music.

Ives Thrives. Wiley also founded the Charles Ives Society, serving for many years as president and treasurer, and later as chairman. He established the editorial standards and oversaw many of the scholarly Ives editions produced as part of the Society’s mission. His monograph on Ives for the Oxford Composers series (1977), organized by genre, was the first general survey in what is now a robust field of scholarship. How marvelously Wiley captures the essence of Ives’s music: “Stylistic pluralism was characteristic of his music almost from the beginning. Simple and complex, traditional and radical, conventional and experimental, homespun and rarefied, spiritual and slapstick—these and many other dichotomies jostle each other in neighborly fashion throughout his life as a composer. So too do modes of musical expression derived from widely varied sources…his music has roots not only in that of the masters (and lesser composers) of European and American art music and in the friendly vernacular traditions of his native New England (hymn tunes, country fiddling, camp-meeting songs, brass-band marches, piano rags, patriotic and popular ditties, songs of hearth and home) but also in ‘unmusical’ sounds—horses’ hooves on cobblestones, out-of-tune volunteer church choirs the crack of bat and ball, the special quality of ‘a horn over a lake,’ the clash of two bands opposite sides of a town square each playing its own march in its own tempo—and in untried sounds as well: harmonies in massed seconds or other novel stacks of intervals, microtones, tone-rows, rhythmic and metric serialism, unique instrumental combinations.” Wiley embraced it all. Years later, in 2004, his critical edition of Ives’s 129 Songs was published as part of the Music of the United States of America (MUSA) series. It stands as a model of impeccably, and practically, edited scholarly work.

Leader. In addition to those cited above, Wiley’s other leadership roles included the presidencies of the Music Library Association and the American Musicological Society, as well as the editorships of A-R Editions’ Recent Researches in American Music and Da Capo Press’s Earlier American Music series. He also served on the editorial boards of New World Records, Musical Quarterly, American Music, the Committee on the Publication of American Music (which set the guidelines for the MUSA series of critical editions established by the AMS), and was the first program annotator for the American Composers Orchestra. In 1995 Wiley was named Chevalier de l’Order des Arts et des Lettres.

Musician. Wiley’s own description in the introduction to his Music in the United States of his “humming, singing, whistling, and playing through three and a half centuries of American music,” sums up perfectly the practical and tactile approach to scholarship that made his writings and editions so authoritative and so valuable. He learned those lessons well when he studied composition with Nadia Boulanger in the late 1940s. In a NewMusicBox interview, he told Frank J. Oteri:

That’s where I’m at, the music for itself, less than say the sociology of music or biographies of composers, or things like that.

I think my goal as a music historian has been to attempt to reflect the music as it was experienced in its own time, primarily. Also to attempt to reflect what the composer thinks he or she is doing in such-and-such a work and to become, in a sense, a critic myself.

A practical example: recently, as he edited the critical edition of Virgil Thomson’s opera Four Saints in Three Acts, Wiley considered restoring an “original” orchestration to a certain passage. When I pointed out that in my own experience publishing contemporary music I found that composers frequently changed their minds, he was quick to acknowledge that possibility, as well as Thomson’s own sense of pragmatism, which ultimately held sway in Wiley’s final editorial decisions.

When his close colleagues Richard Crawford, Carol J. Oja, and R. Allen Lott produced a festschrift in Wiley’s honor, this Celebration of American Music (1990) included not only dozens of articles about American music by the field’s leading scholars, but music by a wide range of living composers important to Wiley, including Milton Babbitt, Peter Dickinson, Charles Dodge, Ross Lee Finney, Gordon Mumma, William Schuman, and Thomson.

Symmetry. “HWH” – the elegant balance of the three initials seemed so fitting. Wiley was particularly proud to have been the subject of Virgil Thomson’s last completed composition, the portrait HWH: Two Birds. Was it sheer coincidence that Wiley’s own last research project was in turn on Thomson’s Four Saints?

Vernacular. In Wiley’s words, the vernacular was “a body of music more plebeian, native, not approached self-consciously but simply grown into as one grows into one’s vernacular tongue; music understood and appreciated simply for its utilitarian or entertainment value.” Wiley credited his father, who took him from a young age to hear music of all sorts, with his lifelong interest in the vernacular traditions of American music. He played jazz sax and clarinet as a youth, and for a time composed. Even after giving up composition he retained a lively (and highly appreciated) curiosity about new composition and young composers of all stripes.

Wit: That twinkle in his eye illuminated a quick wit. Among my favorites, when Stanley Sadie was named a CBE on the Queen’s Honor’s List, the telegram sent by Wiley and Janet read: “OK Command British Empire but don’t count on colonies.” Vivian Perlis recalled her own telegram, on receiving the Kinkeldey Award from the American Musicological Society: “Kinkelgrats.” And Wiley’s favored “acronym” for his Prentice Hall textbook: MinUS.

*

When, in the spring of 1981, Wiley pulled my resume from the reject pile of applicants for the position of editorial assistant for a one-volume American music spinoff from The New Grove, he forever changed my life. Little did either of us know that this small 18-month project would balloon over the next five years into a four-volume monument to American music. Not only did Wiley oversee the project, commission or write many of the major articles (from Emma Abbott to Tin Pan Alley, with major entries on Art song, Stephen Foster, Histories, Musicology, Notation, Opera, Piano Music, Shaker music, and a group of articles on émigré musicians), but he read every last word at least three times, twice in manuscript and then in galley proofs, whether on the subway to and from Brooklyn College, in Italy, Paris, Los Angeles, or on the beaches of the Caribbean.

The growth of the dictionary was at Wiley’s insistence that the most prominent American musicians were as deserving of lengthy articles as their European counterparts, and that the vernacular traditions of rock, pop, jazz, and ethnic musics deserved equal pride of place to the cultivated in such an endeavor. His impeccably penned editorial markings (the dictionary was edited in the pre-computer, pre-fax era) gave cohesion to the work of some 900 writers. Wiley also argued (vehemently at times) on my behalf for everything from adequate office space and support staff to title-page billing, and helped me maintain my equilibrium over regular Yale Club lunches where we theoretically were not supposed to conduct business. Wiley dubbed me the dictionary’s “linchpin,” a moniker I wore proudly, but he was Amerigrove’s brain, heart, and soul. Countless of Wiley’s students have their own tales of similar support, articles or books read in manuscript, or letters of reference that proved to be turning points in their careers, demonstrations of quiet generosity from this most extraordinary man.

Everbest, Wiley. Your inclusive advocacy for American music of all kinds, and your mentoring and support of generations of younger scholars and musicians, brought out the best in so many of us. We so admired your impeccable scholarship, and loved your generosity of spirit and joie de vivre.

Hear the songs!
I know not what are the words,
But they sing in my soul
Of the things our Fathers loved.

(Charles Ives, “The Things Our Fathers Loved”)

***

Susan Feder is Program Officer for the Performing Arts Program at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. A long-time board member of the American Music Center, she previously held positions as Vice President of G. Schirmer, Inc., Editorial Coordinator of The New Grove Dictionary of American Music, and Program Editor of the San Francisco Symphony.

New Music News Wire

 

Donald Martino Elected to Classical Music Hall of Fame

 


Donald Martino

Composer Donald Martino (1931–2005) has been inducted posthumously into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame, a Cincinnati-based non-profit organization whose stated mission is celebrating the past, present, and future of American classical music. In addition to Martino, cellist Yo-Yo Ma, tuba soloist and Indiana University Music Professor Emeritus Harvey Phillips, and the Cleveland Orchestra have also been inducted.

Since 1998, the Hall of Fame has honored prominent American composers, performers, advocates, and institutions in an annual induction ceremony; previous composer inductees include Samuel Barber, Milton Babbitt, Amy Beach, William Billings, John Cage, Elliott Carter, Duke Ellington, George Gershwin, Charles Ives, Arnold Schoenberg, and George Walker. The Hall of Fame, which makes its home in Cincinnati’s Memorial Hall, selected this year’s honorees by a national balloting process of its member organizations, as well as composers, educators, and producers who sit on its directorate. The voting was supervised by the directorate, chaired by composer Samuel Adler and Douglas Lowry, dean of the Eastman School of Music.

Benjamin Lees Donates Archive to Yale

 


Benjamin Lees

Composer Benjamin Lees recently donated his entire archive to Yale University’s Irving S. Gilmore Library. The comprehensive archive includes manuscript sketches and scores for all of the 83-year-old composer’s works, which include two operas, five symphonies, three piano concertos, and six string quartets, as well as correspondence, concert programs, reviews, photographs, and biographical materials.

James Kendrick Appointed to ASCAP Board of Directors

 

The Board of Directors of the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP) has elected Schott/EAM President James M. Kendrick to serve as the Concert Music Publisher representative on its Board of Directors. Kendrick, a distinguished copyright attorney and a member of the board of directors of the American Music Center, is the president of Schott/European American Music, which represents works by composers including Tobias Picker, Harry Partch, Stephen Paulus, Alvin Singleton, and Kurt Weill. ASCAP has additionally appointed to its board Barry Coburn, co-president of Ten Ten Music Group, one of Nashville’s leading independent music publishers.

Two Consecutive Nights of ASCAP Awards Honor a Wide Variety of Music

 

In ceremonies stretching across two consecutive evenings, ASCAP has honored a wide range of music and musicians in its annual Foundation Awards and Deems Taylor Awards ceremonies.

ASCAP Foundation award and scholarship recipients include: Kati Agócs (Leonard Bernstein Composer Fellowship); Brandon Anderson (Frederick Loewe Scholarship), Kit Armstrong (Charlotte V. Bergen Scholarship); Wycliffe Gordon (Foundation Vanguard Award); Sean Hartley (Harold Arlen Musical Theater Award); Joshua Feltman (Foundation Fellowship for Composition and Film Scoring); Raymond J. Lustig (Rudolf Nissim Prize); Lin-Manuel Miranda (Richard Rodgers New Horizons Award); and Aaron Muesing (Boosey & Hawkes Young Composer Award Honoring Aaron Copland). In addition, recipients of the Foundation’s Young Jazz Composer Awards, sponsored by the Gibson Foundation, are Fabian Almazan, Patrick Cornelius, George Dulin, Lee Forest Dynes, Morgan Jones, Grace Kelly, Ross LaFleur, Pascal Le Boeuf, Remy Le Boeuf, Jimmy Macbride, Chase Morrin, Bob Reynolds, Joshua Richman, Robert Rodriguez, Sherisse Rogers, Matt Savage, Jon Snell, Mark Steinert, Nikos Syropoulos, Ted Taforo, Manuel Valera, Joshua Vande Hey, and Ezra Weiss.

The Deems Taylor Awards, now in their 40th year, annually reward excellence in writing and media coverage about music (books, articles, CD booklet notes, internet, radio, and television broadcasts). This year’s award-winning books include John Gennari’s Blowin’ Hot and Cool: Jazz and Its Critics (The University of Chicago Press); Alive at the Village Vanguard: My Life In and Out of Jazz Time, the autobiography of Lorraine Gordon as told to Barry Singer (Hal Leonard Trade Books); Ben Johnston’s Maximum Clarity and Other Writings on Music (University of Illinois Press); and Jack Sullivan’s Hitchcock’s Music (Yale University Press). Award-winning articles include Elizabeth B. Crist’s “Mutual Responses in the Midst of an Era: Aaron Copland’s The Tender Land and Leonard Bernstein’s Candide,” published by The Journal of Musicology, University of California Press; Marilee Bradford’s liner notes to a recording of Herbert Stothart’s scores for the films Random Harvest and The Yearling, released by Film Score Monthly; Ted Panken’s “Smalls Universe,” published by DownBeat; and “Start Small, Think Big,” an article about Joan Tower’s Made in America for Symphony written by NewMusicBox’s own Molly Sheridan.

WNYC FM and wnyc.org were awarded the first Deems Taylor Multimedia Award for 24 Hours and 33 Minutes, The Playful and Playable Cage: A WNYC Festival (Alex Ambrose, Producer; Helga Davis, Host; Brad Cresswell, webmaster; George Preston, WNYC Music Director; and Limor Tomer, Executive Producer). The Television Award was given to American Masters – Les Paul: Chasing Sound, which aired on PBS (John Paulson, director; James Arntz, writer and producer; Susan Lacy, Executive Producer American Masters; Glenn Aveni, Executive Producer Icon Television Music). In addition, a special recognition award was given to Bridge Records, Inc. for the ongoing excellence of its CD booklet notes.

Harvestworks Announnces 2008 Artists In Residence

 

The 2008 Harvestworks artists in residence have been announced. The recipients are commissioned to create a new work in the Harvestworks Digital Media Facility. William Cusick will create a surround sound score to a psychological horror video installation tentatively titled Americana Kamikaze, which tells the story of an American business man whose life inexplicably begins to mirror a series of Japanese ghost stories. Shelley Hirsch will complete Kaddish for Him and Her, a 5.1 surround sound choral piece in memory of the artist’s late parents. Bill Hsu, in collaboration with saxophonist John Butcher, will develop new pieces using an electronic system in which timbral characteristics such as brightness, pitch/noise, roughness, and inharmonicity are tracked over a musical gesture to generate synthesized responses. Sawako Kato will create a 5.1 surround sound journey through two megalopolises, NYC and Tokyo. Jane Rigler will create a new composition for 2 flutes and electronics that deals with dreams, tendencies and cycles of the human physical and spiritual existence.

In addition, Joseph Delappe, Derek Frantz, Shauna Moulton, Jessica Peavey, and Christine Sugrue have been awarded residencies to create video, web, or interactive performances, and Laure Drogul will create a networked interactive knitting needle working symphony involving approximately 40 knitter-performers knitting in unison with mini pick-up microphones to create a singular knit object-environment. The following artists were chosen as alternates: Maya Suess, Joe Diebes, Brian Block, and Eunjung Hwang. The following artists were awarded educational scholarships: Penelope Umbrico, Andy Deck, Mary-Beth Gregg, Phillys Bulkin-Lehrer, Paul Amitai, and Gisburg.

The applications were reviewed by Zach Layton (composer, curator and new media artist), Liz Slagus (Director of Educatiuon and Public Programming at Eyebeam), and Kenseth Armstead (digital media artist and sculpturist).

27 Composers Receive Over $30K in Latest AMC Composer Assistance Program Awards

 

The American Music Center has awarded a total of $33,555 to 27 American composers residing in 11 states and ranging in age from 27 to 67 through the autumn round of its Composer Assistance Program. For a complete list of the award-winning composers and the ensembles who will premiere their works, please visit the AMC website.

Compiled and edited by Frank J. Oteri

Critical Improv Intensive


Pauline Oliveros and Jesse Stewart

Improvised music of the sort generally labeled “avant-garde” is arcane, hyper-specialized; it tends to please small and devoted audiences and has little impact on the wider world, which is dominated by far more commercial and accessible sounds. But what if an improvised performance is more than an improvised performance? Does improvised music open a door to possibilities for social change? And if that’s the case, shouldn’t more people be paying attention?

These are the kinds of questions being addressed by a team of scholars heading up “Improvisation, Community and Social Practice” (ICSP), a multifaceted, seven-year research project led by Ajay Heble, professor of English at the University of Guelph in Ontario, and funded to the tune of $2.5 million by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).

“Improvised music,” Heble contends, “is a form of creative practice that fosters a commitment to cultural listening, to a widening of the scope of community and to new models of trust and social organization.” It’s hoped, therefore, that the project will create a new level of visibility for today’s most innovative improvisers; foster productive contacts between scholars in a wide range of fields; and ultimately develop a deeper understanding of the complex relationship between art and society, and how that relationship can be channeled toward social and political renewal.

Ever since he launched the Guelph Jazz Festival in 1996, Heble has made a point of uniting theory and practice, viewing the pragmatic business of concert programming through a scholarly prism. “For a number of years we’ve offered a colloquium—an academic conference—as part of the festival schedule,” he says. “Guelph is the only Canadian jazz festival that offers this kind of ongoing education component, and it’s really taken off. A couple of co-edited books have come out of it [The Other Side of Nowhere: Jazz, Improvisation, and Communities in Dialogue (Wesleyan), Rebel Musics: Human Rights, Resistant Sounds, and the Politics of Music Making (Black Rose)]. And that led to the start of our peer-reviewed, open-access online journal, Critical Studies in Improvisation in 2004.”

With these activities, Heble and his colleagues established a track record and laid an intellectual foundation for the highly competitive SSHRC grant. They were unsuccessful on their first attempt, however, which made victory this round all the sweeter. From a field of at least 30 candidates, ICSP was one of two awardees in 2006. The study officially launched in September 2007.

In his book Landing on the Wrong Note: Jazz, Dissonance and Critical Practice (Routledge, 2000), Heble spells out the implications of this kind of scholarship in the starkest terms: “[W]hat’s at stake in our understanding and assessment of the music, I would suggest, is nothing less than the struggle to reconstruct public life” (p. 230). At first blush this may seem hopelessly ambitious. But Heble, even informally over the phone, has a way of highlighting the more intuitive aspects of the ICSP mission. The task at hand, he says, is to study “the complex and often unrecognized ways in which improvisation informs debates beyond the borders of the purely artistic. Our goal is not only to understand the music, but also its broader social implications, how it opens up a consideration of issues that are central to the challenges of diversity and social cooperation in the new millennium.”

Jazz, of course, is not the only music to involve improvisation, nor the only music with an activist, political tradition. Of necessity, ICSP will have to limit its focus. “We’ll be dealing with a set of current practices that arose in response to an experimentalist impulse in the 20th century,” Heble explains. “This involves jazz, but it’s not just jazz: it’s a set of practices that emerged largely in response to jazz, but have been picked up and circulated through wider networks of cultural exchange.” What Heble is referring to, in the main, is the avant-garde or “free jazz” movement of the 1960s and its globe-spanning, genre-defying legatees.

Speaking of the “long and illustrious history that links improvised musical practices with struggles for social justice and human rights,” Heble cites such figures as Archie Shepp, Max Roach, Sun Ra, and Horace Tapscott, bands like the Art Ensemble of Chicago, and entities like the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM). “A lot of these artists began with a social and ethical mandate and were explicit in seeing their music as part of a larger struggle.” ICSP aims not simply to look back at these past endeavors but to highlight present-day artists who work in a similar spirit.

“One thing we’re trying to understand is how improvised musical practices can be understood as forms of insurgent knowledge production,” says Heble, slipping into voguish academic parlance. “There’s something special about improvised music,” he continues, “something about the kind of activist listening it demands, that helps to disrupt orthodox standards of coherence and notions of fixity. It encourages us to hear the world anew.”

Ironically for a study of improvisation, ICSP’s seven-year plan is rigorously mapped out, as any large, grant-driven project must be. The team has received matching funds not only from the University of Guelph, but also McGill and the University of British Columbia: $4 million in total. The program involves 33 researchers from 18 different academic institutions; among them are the noted improvisers George Lewis (trombone, electronics) and Pauline Oliveros (just-intonation accordion), as well as UC-Santa Barbara sociologist George Lipsitz, Harvard musicologist Ingrid Monson, and University of Kansas gender theorist Sherrie Tucker. There are also 13 “community partners,” notes Heble, “ranging from the Canada Council to street-level organizations that work with at-risk youth.”

The program will encompass seven research areas: law and justice, pedagogy, social policy, transcultural understanding, gender and the body, text and media, and social aesthetics. The researchers select their areas according to interest and expertise, and each area has its own research coordinator. Similarly, there are seven research tools: policy papers; the online journal; three annual colloquia to be held at Guelph, McGill and UBC (21 conferences in the seven years); a “research-intensive” website, distinct from the journal; a summer institute; a series of five books (forthcoming from Wesleyan University Press); and a public outreach component. “We have a complicated grid,” Heble laughs, “with each person assigned a spot in relation to the research tools for each area. So, for instance, the pedagogy area has different reps for policy papers, summer institute, and so on.”

Built into the SSHRC grant is an accountability structure; Heble and the team are required to submit a “milestone report,” undergo a formal midterm evaluation, and uphold strict allocation standards. What this ensures is a focus on results. “We’re concerned with a number of specific outcomes, in arts funding policy and other areas,” Heble submits. “Improvisation tends to be disparaged or misunderstood, seen as an individual’s expression of personality without recognizing that it has these broader community impacts. We want to address these misunderstandings both among the public but also in terms of arts funding structures, pedagogy, and social policy. For example, it’s very difficult as an improviser to get funding, whereas a composer has far more options. What does that tell us about structures of legitimation and access to resources? We’re hoping to make interventions in these kinds of policy deliberations. The outcomes are concrete, and we hope they will have long-lasting impact.”

Perhaps the most readily graspable goal of ICSP is transcultural understanding. When we witness encounters between musicians “who may not even speak the same language but can make wondrous music without preparation,” as Heble puts it, “what does that tell us about negotiating difference?” The rub is that such performances are fleeting and involve relatively small groups of people. There is a tension, readily acknowledged by Heble, between the harnessing of ephemeral musical experiences and the building of long-term communal bonds and political progress. To extrapolate from a festival gig to the hope of widespread and fundamental change may strike many as a leap. Even Heble is wary of articulating concrete social-change benchmarks that, by themselves, would signify success or failure at the end of seven years.

The point, rather, is to initiate a process and build a home for a community of scholars who could enhance the public good over time. “We’ve always understood that this is going to evolve in ways we can’t predict,” says Heble, who ultimately hopes to establish a permanent international center for improv-related scholarship. “I think we’ve helped to break open an emerging field of inquiry,” he declares. “Effectively we’re defining and shaping a brand new kind of interdisciplinary study, for what I would argue is a hugely important social and cultural phenomenon.”

***


David R. Adler

David R. Adler is the editor of Jazz Notes, the quarterly publication of the Jazz Journalists Association, and covers jazz for The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia Weekly, Jazz Times, and Down Beat. His writings have also appeared in The New York Times, The New Republic Online, Slate, Democratiya, NewMusicBox, All Music Guide, Global Rhythm, All About Jazz, Signal to Noise, Coda, and Jewish Currents. As a guitarist, David has performed with a wide variety of musicians in some of New York’s best venues, including Avery Fisher Hall, Roseland, Joe’s Pub and Fez. During his tenure with the East Village band Keeta Speed (1996-1999), David worked with the famed producers Dave McDonald (Portishead), Patrick Dillett (B-52’s, They Might Be Giants) and Dave Fridmann (Flaming Lips, Mercury Rev).</p

Robert Moevs (1920-2007) – A Personal Memoir

name
Robert Moevs
Photo courtesy Edward B. Marks Music Company

I first met Robert Moevs through his music. It was April 12, 1958 when George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra gave the world premiere of his Three Symphonic Pieces. The musical climate in my hometown was then not very welcoming to adventurous new works. Szell respected little written after Richard Strauss. When he did program works by living composers, preference went to conservative idioms. One gets a sense of audience taste in the program note by the redoubtable Arthur Loesser, who wrote of Robert’s work: “a witty little stroke…pleasant and titillating…the repeated note and the ascending strain proceed on their fluffy way…flakes and feathers float back and dominate the end.” These expressions turned out to have no applicability to the music we were about to hear. Further false expectations were aroused by the fact that the work was commissioned by Rodgers and Hammerstein. Anyone hoping to hear variations on “Oh, What A Beautiful Mornin'” was in for a shock.

What I remember about that premiere is that the sounds were bold and startling. Their syntax was unlike anything I had heard previously, possibly excepting Le Sacre de Printemps. I seem to remember a wild contrabassoon solo. Hearing this work left a deep impression.

A year and a half later I found myself, a college freshman, in a class in harmony taught by the very composer of this unusual music. Mr. Moevs struck us as an intimidating figure, with an otherworldly gleam in his eye, who spoke slowly in a flat (he was born in Wisconsin) but intense—even incensed—tone. The first class, in which he discussed modulation, consisted of philosophical reflections on existence—being somewhere, going somewhere, returning to where you thought you were. There was to be nothing routine about establishing a key and then changing it: these were matters of deep significance. Plato and Aristotle were invoked. One left class frightened.

During the first weeks he played the piano very little. Thus we were unprepared when, during a preposterously difficult ear training exercise, he tossed off the first Chopin Etude. We were expected to write down a Roman numeral analysis as he played. The virtuosity was so dazzling that no one could even begin. We had to ask him please to slow down. I remember a sheepish grin of embarrassment that he had perhaps been caught out in a display of technique rather than something loftier; he seemed more human and accessible from that point on.

It was the year of the premiere of Attis, his setting of the Catullus poem for tenor, chorus and orchestra. Richard Burgin conducted the Boston Symphony assisted by the Harvard Glee Club. This astonishing work, filled with great chains of tritones that snarled and lashed out at the audience, created such a stir that the Christian Science Monitor reported it as front-page news, drawing a parallel with the premiere of Le Sacre. So wrapped up in Neapolitans, augmented sixths and diminished sevenths was he, though, that he never once mentioned to the class his own music or the attention it had just received.

Soon after Attis the Claremont Quartet played Robert’s first String Quartet in Paine Hall. This was so enthusiastically received that the second movement was repeated. The tape of this performance would be heard many times around Harvard in the immediate years ahead, as when a delegation of Russian composers came to visit. They were conspicuously impressed; and so was Leo Schrade, the Norton Lecturer in 1962-63, who pronounced it a masterpiece.

In senior year I entered Robert Moevs’s seminar in composition. The first and only assignment was to take the sequence Victimae Paschali Laudes and subject it to some suitable transformation so that it could form the basis of music in a contemporary style. The chant melody was to give us a link to the past as well as a common starting point; but the six of us were each encouraged to go in our own direction. Stylistic coherence and consistency—this was after all the sixties and he was a Boulanger pupil—were to be our aims. Only one member of the class resolutely resisted the notion of what was then considered a contemporary idiom: he preferred to write songs in the style of Schubert. This did not distress Robert: he took the effort seriously and gave advice about accompaniments and word setting.

But what he was increasingly interested in at that moment was serial technique. I believe he came to serialism in the aftermath of Attis. That work prompted serious reflection on tonality, atonality, and the means of organizing material. From Piston and Boulanger he had received little encouragement to explore Schoenberg, Berg, or Webern. One felt that Stravinsky, perhaps also Varèse, were the stronger influences on his thinking. Then Boulez showed up at Harvard, in the very year about which I am speaking, and everyone—Robert included—began talking rows, grids, palindromes, total organization etc. In time Robert would define his own approach to serial procedure as “systematic chromaticism.”

The composition seminar met Monday afternoons and was devoted to a discussion of instruments, notation, structural principles, a close review of our individual efforts, along with further Aristotelian ruminations. Robert Moevs was never long-winded. After a thoughtful, penetrating, silent perusal of newly composed measures, he would typically distill his advice into one beautifully concentrated, devastating, “Well….” Further elaboration was generally unnecessary. That which went unsaid was inferred, intuited, absorbed by osmosis. His facial expression told a lot.

As I have suggested, Robert’s taciturn manner extended to the subject of his own music. He could hardly bring himself to discuss it—much less promote it, which is one reason why his career was not bigger. Another is the difficulty of his works, which make their point effectively only when given a dedicated, thoroughly worked-out performance. Still another is what I grew to perceive as his own fragility. The rough and tumble of the composition business—rejections, bad reviews, under-rehearsed performances, cancelled dates—wounded him to the point where he retreated into other pursuits—historical restoration, photography—with the result that his compositional output diminished. His dedication to teaching, however, remained as intense as ever.

After graduation from college I followed Robert Moevs to Rome (where he spent his Guggenheim) and then to Rutgers, where I worked with him while obtaining a master’s degree. Whether as a coach for piano performances, an adviser with orchestration, an encourager during moments of self-doubt, or a cautioner during moments of over-confidence, I have relied on him for most of my adult life. He was the ideal mentor.

NewMusicBoxOffice: Another Year, Another Concert Season


Gil Rose
Photo by Liz Linder

Can you believe another year just flew by? Well, thanks to online banking and debit cards, at least we don’t have to remember to fill out the correct year when writing a check at the grocery store—do stores still accept checks? Anyway, another year, another concert season. Let’s get down to business.

They grow up so fast, don’t they? I bet that sentiment is running through Gil Rose’s head about now as the Boston Modern Orchestra Project turns ten. Yes, BMOP is smack dab in the middle of tweendom. To celebrate, the group performs world premieres by Ezra Sims and Osnat Netzer (January 25 info). Beantown composers Michael Gandolfi and Leon Kirchner have compositions on the program as well as a performance by Byron Hitchcock, winner of the BMOP/NEC concerto composition, playing William Bolcom’s Violin Concerto.


Seattle Chamber Players

What happens when a couple music critics team up to curate a festival? Probably a lot of shouting matches, but in the case of Seattle Chamber Player’s Icebreaker series, dubbed Critic’s Choice, it appears that Kyle Gann and Alex Ross are on the same page. The three day event includes a fully packed day of panel discussions, a film presentation, lectures, and a concert (Janurary 25 – 27 info). By the end of the weekend you will have heard more than a dozen world premiere compositions commissioned specifically for the occasion, penned by John Luther Adams, Mason Bates, Anna Clyne, Kyle Gann, Alexandra Gardner, Janice Giteck, Judd Greenstein, Elodie Lauten, and Nico Muhly. In keeping with one of the festival’s mottos – The American Future: All Ages/No Rules – there’s a performance by William Duckworth’s and Nora Farrell’s Cathedral Band, a piece by Eve Beglarian, and William Brittelle’s Michael Jackson, which you can listen to right now on MySpace. Oh, if you need any more convincing on this gig, two words: Feldman Marathon! Seattle is making Brooklyn a little jealous with this one.

Oh, and speaking of Feldman, the Los Angeles Philharmonic is dabbling in the quiet-zone, performing the composer’s Turfan Fragments (January 11 info). The best part about this concert is that you don’t have to sit through a Bruckner symphony to get to the modern works – the whole program is 20th century. Ives, Berio, Benjamin, Zimmermann…the only thing missing is Dudamel.

If you like architecture as much as modern composition, here’s a little of both: The Calatrava-designed Milwaukee Art Museum plays host to the Present Music ensemble (January 12 info). The plan is to perform compositions in unique spaces within the museum for a migrating audience. A more traditional sit-in-a-chair approach will be used for works by Randall Woolf, Kamran Ince, and a world premiere of a new piece by Alex Mincek. Another museum, Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art, presents Paul Dresher’s chamber opera The Tyrant (January 25 info). (Subliminal message: Impeach Bush) If you’re in the area, checkout the MCA’s exhibition called Sympathy for the Devil: Art and Rock and Roll since 1967, but hurry – the show closes the first week of the new year (now through January 6 info).


Del Sol String Quartet
Photo by Jim Block

I’m a sucker for the didjeridu, and a fan of the Bay Area-based king of the “didge” Stephen Kent. I was thrilled to see that he’s performing with the Del Sol String Quartet (January 29 info). The program, called Coming Together, gets its title from a Derek Bermel piece for clarinet and string quartet, which probably spawned programming the zippy klezmer-inspired Osvaldo Golijov work Dreams and Prayers of Isaac the Blind. The rest of the concert includes a piece by Mexican composer Arturo Salinas and Aussie Peter Sculthorpe’s String Quartet No. 16 – you can infer which piece includes didjeridu.

While trolling around MySpace, I found some interesting gigs like this one in PA. And this one which Maciej Flis bills as Bassoon Night! High on my list of instrumental favs, but by no means a didjeridu. But my favorite internet find is a little gem called SIX_EVENTS (January 21 – 27 info). Composer Jason Eckardt seems to be onboard. But wait a minute here. Are we going to let the British co-opt America’s wacky, experimental tradition like this so easily? Sure! Why not? So I want to see all my peeps out there doing strange things on buses, in bars, grocery stores, and parks. Go crazy—punch a higher floor.

Andrew Imbrie (1921-2007) – A Role Model for Composers


Andrew Imbrie

I was saddened to hear of Andrew Imbrie’s passing. I haven’t been in touch with Andrew for many years, but for a brief moment in the early 1970s, he was a teacher who provided me with a model for what it might mean to pursue a career as a composer. Though I eventually developed a very different aesthetic than Imbrie, his example of deep musicianship and commitment to following his musical ideas helped me find my own way as a composer.

In 1973 I moved from Vermont to San Francisco to join a friend’s rock and roll band. Though I’d been playing rock and jazz through my college years, I had just recently started to study classical piano again, and my interest in composition was sparked by exposure to works by Schoenberg, Webern, Stockhausen, Ives, and Rudhyar. When my rock band fizzled, I decided to apply to the San Francisco Conservatory to study composition. Though I studied some with a young composer named John Adams, I was particularly interested at the time in studying with Andrew Imbrie, whose music was much more embedded in the modernist style which fascinated me then.

Throughout 1973 and ’74, I met weekly with Andy in his studio in the Berkeley Hills. The studio was a beautiful sanctuary nestled in the trees, with walls of scores and books on music and a piano and writing desk. Each week we would sit together at the piano while he read through the scores I brought in, bringing my notes to life in a way I never could with my limited skill as a pianist. I remember his hands as being long and flexible, easily reaching a 10th, and, if I remember correctly, even being able to stretch to a 12th.

What I most recall is his careful study of what I wrote, and his suggestions for refining my ideas and developing my own approach to composing. I remember one discussion in particular, as I was trying to develop a piece which would embody total serialism, organizing all aspects of the piece around a particular row. After we’d looked through my work, I asked him if he found this way of working exciting. Much to my surprise, he said he didn’t. He told me he found it mechanical, and the discussion led us back to look at the work of his teacher, Roger Sessions. Imbrie saw Sessions’s work as the height of American 20th-century modernism, using the techniques of Schoenberg to make a uniquely personal and American statement.

Until this discussion, I’d assumed that a young composer should be following whatever was the most “new” and “avant-garde” styles. Imbrie, whose own music was beautifully crafted and seemed to flow from his personality, gave me a lesson in writing what I heard, not what was in fashion.

When I moved on to graduate study at UC Berkeley, I didn’t study with Imbrie again, though he was on the faculty. By that time I’d begun to search for my own musical voice in the popular music and jazz which I’d grown up with. Though this took me to an aesthetic realm which no longer was of interest to Imbrie, I credit that discussion of serialism and Sessions with empowering me to look beyond current musical fashion to find a voice of my own.

New Music News Wire

 

Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez wins 2008 Barlow Prize

 


Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez

Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez has been awarded the 2008 Barlow Prize to compose a new work for percussion ensemble. The award of $10,000, which was sought after by a total of 327 composers applying from nearly two dozen countries, will fund the commissioning of a work scheduled to premiere in 2009.

Born in Mexico City in 1964, Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez studied composition with Henri Dutilleux, Jacob Druckman, and Martin Bresnick. He serves as Composer-in-Residence at the Morelia International New Music Festival in addition to similar duties with the Binghamton Philharmonic. Past awards include prizes from the Koussevitzky, Guggenheim, Fromm, and Rockefeller foundations. He holds an Associate Professorship in Composition at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York.

In addition, out of 135 applications for our General and LDS commissioning programs, the endowment granted $76,000 to twelve composers who will write works for the following:

Robert Beaser (Boston Youth Symphony)
Ross Bauer (New York New Music Ensemble)
Eric Moe (Boston Modern Orchestra Project)
Ronald Smith (Del Sol String Quartet)
Christopher Tignor (Brooklyn Rider String Quartet)
Peter Gilbert (Michael Norsworthy, clarinet)
Lawrence Moss (Left Bank Concert Society)
David Sanford (Duo D’amore)
Matthew Barnson (Sospiro Winds)
Ethan Wickman (Avalon String Quartet)
Bruce Polay (Lynn University Conservatory String Quartet)
Peter McMurray (Willow Flute Ensemble)

The judging panel included the Endowment’s Board of Advisors: Melinda Wagner, Claude Baker, Lansing McLoskey, Daniel Gawthrop, and Steve Ricks. John Costa served as a guest judge. Three representatives from the performing consortium associated with the 2009 premieres of Carlos Sanchez-Gutierrez’s new work for percussion ensemble also collaborated in the deliberations: Ray Dillard (Nexus–Tornoto, Canada); Anders Loguin (Kroumata–Stockholm, Sweden); and Adam Sliwinski (So Percussion–New York City, USA).

Next year’s Barlow Prize will be a major new work for string quartet. Further details will be announced after the first of the year.

Zizi Mueller Named New Director of Composers & Repertoire at Boosey and Hawkes

 


Zizi Mueller

Flutist Zizi Mueller has been named the new Director of Composers & Repertoire at Boosey and Hawkes, Inc., the New York-office of the London-based publishing firm whose roster of American composers includes John Adams, Elliott Carter, Aaron Copland, Chick Corea, Andrew Hill, Meredith Monk, Steve Reich, and Igor Stravinsky.

Mueller has commissioned and performed new works by a spectrum of international composers throughout the Americas and Europe and is the Founder and Artistic Director of the new music group MOSAIC. She has also served as a recording producer for a variety of new music recordings: Steven Mackey’s Heavy Light; Whispers, a CD of Sebastian Currier’s chamber works; the recording of Margaret Brouwer’s orchestral works with Evelyn Glennie, Gerard Schwarz and the Liverpool Philharmonic; and a DVD of music and video of works by composers Rand Steiger and Sebastian Currier, to be released by Bridge Records later this year.

In her new role, Mueller will be responsible for overseeing all promotion and publicity activities in North and South America, covering the full range of Boosey & Hawkes repertoire as well as catalogues that B&H represents on an agency basis. She will liaise with key composer estates and manage the New York company’s roster of composers, including their future projects and commissions. She will also work closely with Janis Susskind, the group’s overall Publishing Director, in developing the catalogue and identifying new talent. Zizi Mueller succeeds Helane Anderson who left B&H earlier this year to become Artistic Administrator of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. In addition, Trudy Chan’s role in the New York office has expanded. Now Senior Promotion Executive, Chan—who has worked at B&H since 2004—will continue to handle responsibilities she has undertaken since Anderson’s departure.

Fromm Music Foundation Announces 2007 Commissions

 

The Board of Directors of The Fromm Music Foundation at Harvard University has announced the recipients of the 2007 Fromm commissions. A total of 13 composers out of a total of 224 applications have been awarded:

Steve Antosca (Rosemont, MD)
Tamar Diesendruck (Los Angeles, CA)
Mark Engebretson (Greensboro, NC)
Joel Feigin (Goleta, CA)
David Glaser (New York, NY)
Shirish Korde (Cambridge, MA)
Paul Lansky (Princeton, NJ)
Lei Liang (San Diego, CA)
Philippe Manoury (San Diego, CA)
Tamar Muskal (New York, NY)
Allan Schindler (Fairport, NY)
Suzanne Sorkin (Wynnewood, PA)
Du Yun (New York, NY)

In addition to the commissioning fee of $10,000, a subsidy is available for the ensemble performing the premiere of the commissioned work.

Founded by the contemporary music patron Paul Fromm (1906-1987), the Fromm Foundation has commissioned more than 300 new compositions and has sponsored hundreds of new music concerts and concert series since its inception in 1952. Originally based in Chicago, the Foundation was moved to Harvard University in 1972 where it remains to this day. The Fromm Commissions represent one of the principal ways that the Fromm Music Foundation seeks to strengthen composition and to bring contemporary concert music closer to the public. Among a number of other projects, the Fromm Music Foundation also sponsors the annual Fromm Contemporary Music Series at Harvard and supports the Festival of Contemporary Music at Tanglewood.

2008 Grammy Finalists Announced

 

The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) has announced the finalists for the 2008 Grammy Awards.

This year’s nominees for Classical Album of the Year include two discs devoted exclusively to contemporary American music: Joan Tower’s Made in America, featuring performances by the Nashville Symphony conducted by Leonard Slatkin (Naxos American Classics); and Peter Lieberson’s Neruda Songs, written for and sung by mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson shortly before her death in a live performance with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by James Levine (Nonesuch). Neruda Songs, which was awarded the 2008 Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition earlier this week, and Made in America, from Tower’s same-titled disc, were also nominated for Best Classical Contemporary Composition along with Jennifer Higdon’s Zaka (which was recorded by eighth blackbird), David Chesky’s Bassoon Concerto, and Northern Concerto by Spanish composer Joan Albert Amargós. Lorraine Hunt Lieberson’s performance of Neruda Songs has also been nominated for Best Classical Vocal Performance.

The Joan Tower disc was the only disc featuring American repertoire to be nominated for Best Orchestral Performance, although a disc devoted to concertos by Miklós Rózsa in performances by Anastasia Khitruk and the Russian Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Dmitry Yablonsky (Naxos American Classics) as well as a disc featuring a performance of Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto by Canadian violinist James Ehnes with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra conducted by Bramwell Tovey (CBC Records) have both been nominated in the category of Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with Orchestra). Strange Imaginary Animals, a disc of performances by eighth blackbird featuring Higdon’s Zaka has been nominated for Best Chamber Music Performance. Nominees for Best Classical Producer of the Year include: Blanton Alspaugh (Stephen Hartke: The Greater Good and Rider On The Plains: Cello Concertos By Virgil Thomson And Charles Fussell) and Judith Sherman ( From Barrelhouse To Broadway: The Musical Odyssey Of Joe Jordan and Strange Imaginary Animals, eighth blackbird).

The Turtle Island String Quartet’s disc of arrangements of music by John Coltrane has been nominated for Best Classical Crossover Album. Albums by Will Bernard, Brian Bromberg, Eldar, Herbie Hancock, and Jeff Lorber have been nominated for Best Contemporary Jazz Album; albums nominated for Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album are Terence Blanchard’s A Tale Of God’s Will (A Requiem For Katrina) (Blue Note), The Bob Florence Limited Edition’s Eternal Licks & Grooves (Mama Records), The Bill Holman Band’s Hommage (Jazzed Media), Maria Schneider’s Sky Blue (ArtistShare), and the Charles Tolliver Big Band’s With Love (Blue Note).

Nominees for Best Musical Show Album are: Scott Frankel and Michael Korie’s Grey Gardens and Duncan Shiek’s 2007 Tony Award-winning Spring Awakening, plus cast albums of revival productions of Stephen Sondheim’s Company, Marvin Hamlisch and Edward Kleban’s A Chorus Line, and Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim’s West Side Story. Scores by James Newton Howard (Blood Diamond), Javier Navarrete (Pan’s Labyrinth), John Powell (Happy Feet), Gustavo Santaolalla (Babel), and Howard Shore (The Departed) have been nominated for Best Score Soundtrack Album For Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media.


H. Wiley Hitchcock

H. Wiley Hitchcock (1923-2007)

 

American musicologist H. Wiley Hitchcock died on December 5 after a long battle with cancer. Hitchcock was founder of the Institute for Studies in American Music at Brooklyn College of the City of New York (1971) and co-editor, with Stanley Sadie, of the New Grove Dictionary of American Music (1986). A lengthy conversation with Hitchcock was first published on NewMusicBox in December 2002 and can still be accessed here.

 


Andrew Imbrie

Andrew Imbrie (1921-2007)

 

NewMusicBox has also just learned of the passing of American composer Andrew Imbrie. Imbrie’s extensive compositional output includes three symphonies, three piano concertos, concertos for violin, cello, and flute, five string quartets, a requiem and two operas. Although atonal in harmonic disposition, Imbrie eschewed serialism. A longtime member of the music department of the University of California, Berkeley, he taught composition, theory, and analysis there from 1949 until his retirement in 1991.

(Compiled and edited by Frank J. Oteri)

Peter Lieberson’s Neruda Songs Wins 2008 Grawemeyer

name
Peter Lieberson
Photo by Lorraine Hunt Lieberson;
courtesy University of Louisville

Neruda Songs, a song cycle written by composer Peter Lieberson that became a parting gift to his dying wife, has earned the 2008 University of Louisville Grawemeyer Award for Music Composition. The work, a group of songs based on five love poems by Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, was chosen for the $200,000 prize among 140 entries from around the world.

Lieberson began writing the song cycle in 2003 for his wife, the late mezzo-soprano Lorraine Hunt Lieberson. In 2005, she learned that she was ill with cancer. She performed it with the organizations that jointly commissioned it, the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Boston Symphony, before she died in 2006. Shortly after her death, Nonesuch issued a CD of Neruda Songs, recorded from a live performance by Lorraine Hunt Lieberson with the Boston Symphony conducted by James Levine.

Each song represents a different stage of love, from first passion to the end of life, according to Marc Satterwhite, a UofL music professor who directs the award program. “The piece has beauty and surface simplicity, but great emotional depth and intellectual rigor as well,” he said.

Lieberson, the son of former Columbia Records president Goddard Lieberson and ballerina Vera Zorina, was born in New York City. He studied music at Columbia and Brandeis universities, also studying Tibetan Buddhism, a theme reflected in his works. He now lives in Santa Fe and devotes his time exclusively to composing music. Among his other compositions are three concertos and several solo pieces for pianist Peter Serkin, the concerto Six Realms for cellist Yo-Yo Ma, and the operas Ashoka’s Dream and King Gesar.

The Grawemeyer Foundation annually awards $1 million for outstanding works in music composition, ideas improving world order, psychology, education, and religion. Winners of the other 2008 Grawemeyer Awards will be announced later this week.

***

Frank J. Oteri: What were your models for the Neruda Songs?

Peter Lieberson: I think in many ways the Neruda Songs is a culmination of what I have always hoped to do in composing music and for many reasons was unable to, partly because of the time in which I grew up, actually, and partly for personal reasons. Who knows? It’s very difficult to pinpoint. I always saw music as a means of expression of some kind, and not purely as an intellectual exercise. But at the time in which I grew up as a composer, there was a great deal of emphasis on intellectual comprehension of the structure of music, the possibilities of logic in music. All of the things that in many ways we appreciate almost intuitively in composers like Brahms or Schubert or Mozart. But one wonders how articulated those things were for those composers; whereas for some reason there’s a period of extraordinary self-consciousness starting from maybe the late 1950s after the war.

There was a certain faith that was put in the science of music. In the same way, spirituality really became undermined by the wars; a new religion was born which was science, and I think that affected music a great deal. When I was in my early 20s and began to study in earnest, there was a sense of really having to master that kind of scientific approach. I feel a distinction can be made between musical form guided by intuition as well as the intellect, and musical form based primarily on conceptual ideas. The first approach allows for spontaneity, while the second produces enormous struggle and is a sign of lack of confidence in oneself. For whatever it’s worth, I received an extraordinary education, though it might have been kind of at-odds with what we might call expressing the heart.

FJO: So many composers of your generation have talked about this historical phenomenon, but from all the evidence anyone can glean whoever was putting all this faith in structure and science vis-a-vis music, it certainly wasn’t the general audience.

PL: No, it never was. It’s very curious. It’s almost as if music became an academic subject to study, like zoology, not to make fun of zoology. I think I was very affected by this. Over the years, I tried to allow all those technical things that I learned to become more spontaneous and somehow allow something else to come through. Probably this is the result of my involvement with spiritual practice, Tibetan Buddhism, for many, many years. I can’t draw complete connections like that.

I think really when I met Lorraine it was quite an amazing time in my life. I had just turned fifty. I had just written an opera called Ashoka’s Dream. That was the closest I really felt I had come toward expressing something that was very personal, and hopefully more universal, too, because it was a story about a transformation that a human being underwent. Meeting Lorraine who was such an intuitive musician, such a powerful presence, so unafraid of her emotions, so able to access those emotions and express them, a person who could hold the space on stage in a way I’d never seen before. There was no artifice. It wasn’t like you had to ask Lorraine, “Where did you study to learn how to be like that on stage?” That would have been a joke. And she was very much the same way off stage as she was on stage.

Lorraine’s identification with words was also really remarkable. She could actually just quote the words of a song and just burst into tears because she was so involved with the meaning of the words, and she just embodied them. In fact, whenever she did a masterclass, she wouldn’t concentrate so much on the technique, because that would often be the problem. People were thinking too much about the technique and not enough about the words. Perhaps that was a kind of catalyst for me. It was a very important moment for both of us; we were very much in love.

I had written the Rilke Songs for her over a period of maybe five years. And then finally this opportunity came. Esa-Pekka Salonen at the L.A. Phil had asked me for a concerto, and over a few years it morphed into a different kind of commission and I asked if I could write a song cycle for Lorraine. So the impetus or the ground for the Neruda Songs was my love for Lorraine. That made it very easy to compose. And finally there was a kind of breakthrough where I was able to compose very spontaneously. So if you asked for models, I really wouldn’t know what to say.

FJO: But, of course, you’re the son of Goddard Lieberson, who was a composer as well whose music is unfortunately all too little known, but who was world renowned as a record producer of an astoundingly wide variety of music for Columbia Records. He wasn’t only responsible for many great classical music recordings of standard repertoire and contemporary work, he was responsible for the existence of Broadway original cast albums. So I’m sure you were hearing an incredible range of music in your home growing up.

PL: I was. And in fact, it’s almost as if that early exposure to so much different music came through very naturally when I was composing the Neruda Songs, because in a way the harmonic palette for that goes back to my love of Bill Evans or the early Miles Davis quartets. I was completely involved with jazz when I was about 18. If I had a better right hand, I would have been a jazz musician. But of course, going all the way back, I went to the premiere of The Sound of Music. My Fair Lady was something I heard all the time in my house, because my father was the person who convinced CBS to invest in it. So I heard all the premieres of shows from the time I was six all the way through to my teens, way up through A Chorus Line. So, all of that was part of my musical life, too. But it isn’t as if I was trying to draw on those things; it was just that you are exposed to forms your character when you grow up to a large degree.

FJO: After listening to those two song cycles, I went back and listened to some of your other music, and I now hear them in a different way. Works like your cello concerto, The Six Realms, is also characterized by dominant melodic lines. And then I read your notes to the recording where you talked about becoming much more conscious of the idea of melody as being supreme rather just one among many equal ingredients through your connection to Lorraine.

PL: That’s very interesting. Good, I’m glad. And I think actually that’s a very important point as far as the Neruda Songs are concerned, because previous to that I just began to realize when I listened to Lorraine singing in a production of an opera, whatever it would be, how powerful the line was, and how much it carried not just the form of the piece, but the heart of the piece.

FJO: If Neruda Songs is a plateau for you, what happens from here compositionally?

PL: Well, it’s been difficult. I actually did complete a whole other piece while Lorraine was still alive. To tell you the truth, I’m not really sure how I managed to do that, or even when. It was around the time we were touring together for the Neruda Songs; the final tour was in March 2006. I wrote this piece for the New York Philharmonic, with Lorraine as part of it. It’s called The World in Flower. It has a selection of text I made from many different sources, and is for mezzo and baritone soloists, chorus and orchestra. It’s about forty minutes. The premiere was postponed because Lorraine was too ill, and also I finished it too late. Then I became ill as well. I actually orchestrated the piece while I was undergoing chemotherapy in Houston. I’d actually do it in the hospital, or wherever else. It was really good therapy.

I was asked by the Boston Symphony and James Levine to do another set of songs. He wanted me to do a second cycle of the Neruda poems for Lorraine, but I said, “No, I don’t think that would work.” After she passed away, I thought maybe I would do another cycle, but for baritone. I’m writing another set of songs based on the Love Sonnets; they’re called Songs of Farewell. It’s such a treasure trove, Neruda’s poetry. So that’s what I’m working on now.

FJO: The Neruda Songs were so integrally related to the person they were written for. Obviously now with the Neruda Songs winning the Grawemeyer, one of the hopes whenever a composition wins this award is that there could be a greater chance that it will somehow enter the repertoire. And that means it would be performed by many different people. But it’s hard to imagine what it would be like with someone else’s voice.

PL: Well, we’ll find out because in May, Bernard Haitink is conducting them at the Chicago Symphony with a young mezzo named Kelly O’Connor, whom I haven’t met. He’s doing that also at Carnegie Hall and then I think he’s going to Berlin to do them with the Berlin Philharmonic.

FJO: How do you feel about that?

PL: I feel fine. I think it might be more difficult for the singer than for me. I don’t think Lorraine would have wanted them to be only her province. Even if she were alive today, I don’t think she would want that. She’d want other singers to sing them, I know she would.

FJO: Certainly that goes hand in hand with her advocacy for contemporary music. She was a real crusader for new music.

PL: Yes, she was, and her involvement with contemporary music predates her involvement with me. Peter Sellars involved her in John Adams’s music, and she knew John Harbison in Boston. She was always involved with contemporary music to some extent; also as a violist she was part of a string quartet that did contemporary music.

FJO: I actually have a Dallapiccola LP on 1750 Arch Records which features performances of an ensemble in which she was the violist, Lorrie Hunt. There are singers on the recording, but she’s only playing viola.

PL: I didn’t know she actually recorded. And she was Lorrie still. That’s one thing that changed when we got together, she became Lorraine.

FJO: Many of your pieces over the years have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize, probably more than any other composer.

PL: Five times. Someone told me I had a record. I had originally hoped that when the Neruda Songs were a finalist for the Pulitzer that it would have won while she was still alive, so she would have had that honor. I have to say I never really concern myself too much with prizes, awards, and so on. But this one is meaningful to me precisely because it is for the Neruda Songs and because of the kind of panels that are involved for the Grawemeyer. There are lay people, so to speak, involved, too. It’s such a meaningful piece to me, so it’s very nice that the prize was awarded to it.

New Music News Wire

ASCAP & Lehmann Foundation Announce Winners of Art Song Competition

 


Zachary Wadsworth

Frances Richard, ASCAP Vice President and Director of Concert Music and Linn Maxwell, President of the Lotte Lehmann Foundation (LLF) announced the winners of the second ASCAP/Lotte Lehmann Foundation Art Song Competition on November 16. The competition, named for German-American soprano and vocal pedagogue Lotte Lehmann (1888-1976), was established to encourage and recognize gifted young composers under the age of 30 who write for voice.

The First Prize ($3,500) has been awarded to Zachary Wadsworth, age 24, of Richmond, VA. Wadsworth will receive a commission to write a song cycle for voice and piano to be published by E.C. Schirmer. The commissioned song cycle will be performed in three major American cities. Second Prize ($1,000) was awarded to Allen McCullough, age 29, of Lansdowne, PA and Third Prize ($750) was awarded to Ryan Gee, age 29, of Austin, TX. Both Second and Third Prize winners receive commissions to compose an art song for voice and piano. The Damien Top Prize ($500) was awarded to Isaac Shankler, age 28, of Los Angeles, CA. The Damien Top Prize is a commission to set a poem by Andrée Brunin to be premiered at the 2008 Albert Roussel International Festival in France.

The competition judges were composers Susan Botti, William Rhoads, Su Lian Tan, and pianist/conductor, Scott Dunn.

The Lotte Lehmann Foundation, founded in 1998, is devoted to the preservation of Lehmann’s artistic and teaching legacy, and to her commitment to educating the public to appreciate art song—music written for classically trained voice and piano, set to pre-existing poetry. ASCAP, established in 1914 as the first U.S. Performing Rights Organization, represents over 8.5 million copyrighted musical works of every style and genre from more than 300,000 songwriter, composer and music publisher members.

BMI Foundation Receives $250,000 Donation, Awards 1st Evelyn Buckstein Scholarship

 

The BMI Foundation, Inc. announced on November 21 that Evelyn Buckstein, BMI Assistant Vice President and Counsel and BMI Foundation Board Member, has established an endowed fund of $250,000 to create the Evelyn Buckstein Scholarship program. The recipient of the first scholarship is Charmel Rogers, a junior music major at City College of New York (CCNY). Rogers, who is a primarily self-taught guitarist and keyboardist, will receive a full tuition scholarship for the 2007-2008 academic year. After years of performing experience, Rogers has chosen to return to school in the CCNY jazz program to deepen his musicianship and be exposed to new ideas, including composing.

Evelyn Buckstein’s bequest, the largest single donation in the Foundation’s 22-year history, will provide scholarships for talented students attending college in the New York City area who hope to become professional songwriters, composers, performers or music teachers. In addition to the new scholarships, Evelyn Buckstein previously established the Foundation’s Jerry Harrington Musical Theatre Awards, an annual program to acknowledge outstanding creative achievement of participants in the BMI Lehman Engel Musical Theatre Workshop.

The BMI Foundation, Inc. is a not-for-profit corporation founded in 1985 to support the creation, performance, and study of music through awards, scholarships, commissions, and grants. Tax-deductible donations to the Foundation come primarily from songwriters, composers and publishers, BMI employees, and members of the public with a special interest in music. Because both the Foundation staff and the distinguished members of its advisory panel serve without compensation, over 95% of all donations and income are used for charitable grants.

Herb Alpert Foundation Pledges $30 Million for UCLA Music Department

 

The Herb Alpert Foundation has given the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) a $30-million endowment pledge to establish the cross-disciplinary UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, officials announced on November 16. The endowment will join UCLA’s currently separate departments of ethnomusicology, music, and musicology, creating a single department for the study and performance of music of all genres.

A panel comprising faculty members from each of the merging departments has been assembled to plan curriculum changes before the year’s end, which in addition to courses integrating the study of various music disciplines, will include classes about the music business, music in the public sector, and music and health. The Alpert School, which will be inaugurated in 2008, will be housed in existing facilities in the university’s Schoenberg Hall. Timothy Rice, a professor in the department of ethnomusicology since 1987, has been named the first director of the new school which will be a division of UCLA’s School of Arts and Architecture (UCLA Arts), which will remain under the leadership of Christopher Waterman, who has served as Dean of UCLA Arts since 2003.

The Alpert Foundation’s endowment, which according to Waterman is expected to generate approximately $1.4 million annually over the course of its three-year disbursement, is the largest single gift to music education in the western United States. Among other gifts, the foundation, which will have distributed about $100 million by the end of the year since its founding in 1988, annually presents unrestricted grants to five mid-career artists (the Alpert Awards in the Arts, administered by California Institute of the Arts) and scholarships to four college-bound students (Emerging Young Artists Awards, administered by the California Alliance for Arts Education). Alpert additionally has funded a variety of programs across the country in support of jazz performance and education.

Six Musicians Among 2007 USA Fellows

 

Six musicians—Don Byron, Michael Doucet, Leila Josefowicz, Jason Moran, John Santos, and Evan Ziporyn—were among 50 recipients of 2007 fellowships from the United States Artists Foundation. The $50,000 fellowships, which are awarded in the categories architecture/design, crafts/traditional arts, dance, literature, media, music, theater arts and visual arts, are selected after nominations by an anonymous committee. To be eligible, artists must possess “expert artistic skill,” have “received artistic education or training (formal or informal),” “attempted to derive income from those skills” and “been actively engaged in creating artwork and presenting it to the public.”

The United States Artists Foundation was established in response to the Urban Institute’s 2003 study of the support structure for U.S. artists with $20 million in seed money from the Ford, Rockefeller, Prudential, and Rasmusen Foundations in September 2005. The foundation began awarding $50,000 fellowships to artists in all disciplines in December 2006. Among the 2006 music awardees were John Luther Adams, Bill Frisell, and Ali Akbar Khan. In addition, Meredith Monk received a fellowship in 2006 for theatrical arts. Among the 2007 fellowship recipients in other discipines are choregraphers Bill T. Jones and Shen Wei, visual artists Uta Barth, Gary Simmons, and Ann Hamilton, director/playwright Tina Landau, filmmaker Julie Dash, and poet John Haines.

For further information about United States Artists, visit their website. The complete text of the Urban Institute’s 2003 study, “Investing in Creativity: A Study of the Support Structure for U.S. Artists” is available as a PDF download.

(Compiled and edited by Frank J. Oteri)

New Music News Wire

 

Elliott Carter Receives BSO’s Horblit Award Weeks Before 99th Birthday


(L to R) James Levine and Elliott Carter
Photo by Whitney Riepe

Elliott Carter has been named the recipient of the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s Mark M. Horblit Award for distinguished work by an American composer. Carter, less than one month shy of his 99th birthday, accepted the $5000 prize from BSO managing director Mark Volpe on November 16 at 4 p.m. during a ceremony hosted by Harvard University’s Department of Music which also featured a panel discussion with Carter, BSO music director James Levine, and Professor Anne Shreffler, who is currently compiling a volume of Carter’s correspondence.

Upon receipt of the award, Carter exclaimed, “What you have given is not to me, but to my music; my music can’t speak, but my music is very grateful.” At one point during the ensuing discussion, Levine surprised Carter and the entire audience by sitting down at the piano to give the U.S. premiere performance of Carter’s 2007 solo piano composition Matribute. The award followed the world premiere performance of Carter’s new Horn Concerto by James Sommerville and the BSO, under the direction of Levine, on November 14.

Previous recipients of the Horblit Award, which was established in 1947 by the late Boston attorney Mark M. Horblit to “foster and promote the writing of symphonic compositions by composers resident in the United States,” include Aaron Copland, Walter Piston, Ned Rorem, Donald Martino, Earl Kim, and Leonard Bernstein, who received the award in 1949 at the age of 31. The award was not been given since 1993, when it was received by John Corigliano. The 2007 award is Carter’s second Horblit Award; he received the first in August of 1988 (several months before he turned 80) at the Tanglewood Music Center’s annual Festival of Contemporary Music.

Morten Lauridsen and Les Paul Among 2007 National Medal of Arts Honorees


Composer Morten Lauridsen and President George W. Bush

Choral composer Morten Lauridsen and electric guitar innovator Les Paul were among the 2007 National Medal of Arts Honorees announced by President George W. Bush in an East Room ceremony at the White House on November 14. The National Endowment for the Arts manages the National Medal of Arts nomination process and notified the artists of their selection to receive a medal, the nation’s highest honor for artistic excellence.

The other recipients this year are: painters George Tooker and Andrew Wyeth; N. Scott Momaday, author, essayist, poet, professor, and painter; R. Craig Noel, director of the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego; and arts patrons Henry Steinway and Roy R. Neuberger. Also receiving an award from the President will be Erich Kunzel, conductor of the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra and a 2006 National Medal of Arts recipient who was not able to attend last year’s event.

Musical America Announces 2008 Awards

Pianist Charles Rosen, Atlanta Symphony Music Director Robert Spano, and the San Francisco-based men’s chorus Chanticleer will be among the honorees receiving 2008 Awards from Musical America in a special ceremony at Lincoln Center on December 13. In addition, Paris-based Finnish post-spectralist Kaija Saariaho has been named 2008 Composer of the Year, and Russian soprano Anna Netrebko was awarded the top honor, Musician of the Year.

Rosen, named Instrumentalist of the Year, was lauded for his multiple careers as a pianist, author, and scholar, and for his advocacy of contemporary composers including Stravinsky and Carter. Spano, named Conductor the Year, was hailed for “his richly inventive programming, “commissioning countless new works,” and for possessing “all the right qualities to bring an American orchestra success: solid musicianship, intellectual curiosity, and a palpable enthusiasm that is contagious on both sides of the footlights.” Chanticleer, the 2008 Ensemble of the Year, was praised for their “unique sound and distinctive style” as well as for commissioning 60 new works.

Musical America, which was founded as a weekly newspaper in 1898, began the tradition of choosing an annual Musician of the Year in 1960, concurrent with the publication of their first annual directory—now an industry-standard reference guide to artists and performing organizations worldwide. Awards for Instrumentalist, Conductor, Composer, and Vocalist of the Year date from 1992; the Ensemble of the Year category was added in 1995.

(Compiled and edited by Frank J. Oteri)