Bloch: America / Suite Hebraique
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Ernest Bloch (1880-1959) America (An Epic Rhapsody for Choir and Orchestra) Suite hebraïque Born in Switzerland, Ernest Bloch studied the violin and...
Ernest Bloch (1880-1959)
America (An Epic Rhapsody for Choir and Orchestra) Suite hebraïque
Born in Switzerland, Ernest Bloch studied the violin and
composition there, before first moving to Brussels as a
pupil of Eugène Ysaÿe, then continuing his studies in
Frankfurt-am-Main and later in Munich. He returned to
Geneva, combining musical activities with work in his
father's clock-making business, but by 1916 he was in
the United States, conducting, teaching and composing,
acquiring a particular reputation as a Jewish composer.
From 1920 to 1925 he was Director of the Cleveland
Institute of Music, thereafter taking on similar
responsibilities at the San Francisco Conservatory. He
had become an American citizen in 1924, but spent
much of the 1930s in Switzerland, returning to the
United States at the end of the decade. His posthumous
reputation has rested largely on his works of Jewish
inspiration such as Schelomo, Baal Shem and the Suite
hebraïque and Viola Suite.
Bloch was an all-embracing composer, whose
intellect and senses thirsted to learn and feel as much as
possible. He was involved with his surroundings and
nature, mankind and ideology, ethnology and history.
No wonder that he underwent several changes in his
styles. He was involved with his personality and
emotions. Still, any kind of spontaneity was at the same
time well controlled, seeking perfection of the art of
composing. Above all, Bloch never gave in to the
common fashion. He always remained true and faithful
to himself. He observed the world profoundly, and used
his amazing sense of prophecy in his visions, expressed
in ideas and sound. He used to say that 35 years after his
death, his music would be accepted. He wrote an
enormous amount of music, masterpieces of orchestral,
instrumental, vocal, and chamber music, but at present
only a relatively small proportion of all this is being
played. Among his symphonies he dedicated three to his
Jewish-Swiss-American heritage. He named them
Israel, Helvetia, America.
Bloch wrote America, an Epic Rhapsody in Three
Parts for Orchestra in 1926. The first part treats the
early history of the country: The Soil - The Indians -
(England) - The Mayflower - The Landing of the
Pilgrims - 1620. The second part deals with the Civil
War: Hours of Joy - Hours of Sorrow - 1861-1865 and
the third part moves on to the time of composition: The
Present - The Future . . . - 1926.
Bloch started the score by quoting Walt Whitman:
'O America, because you build for mankind, I build for
you'. The uniqueness of the America Symphony is that it
describes history and events in the language of sound
and is thus so different from any other symphony ever
written. America was created in mysterious changes of
spiritual moods, with tunes for each subject and period,
like 'the South - old Ballad played by corno inglese' in
the second part. The symphony covers the period
between 1620 and 1926, the year of composition. He
even wrote the last part, which he named The Future, in
a manner of prophecy developing to a style and noises
(automobile horn) that doubtless resembles the styles to
come later during the twentieth century. The score is
constructed with Bloch's programme remarks,
quotations from Walt Whitman, and instructions for the
various events to the performers.
Bloch built the symphony by embroidering the
thematic material along with micro motifs of the final
anthem, and with tunes that he collected of the various
types of folk-music involved: Native America, Pilgrim,
Celtic, Negro, Creole, Civil War, mourning, and the
new seeds of the future. He used motifs of the anthem
throughout the symphony and built it towards the
enthusiastic climax of the simple pure anthem, before
which he commented in the score about a new prophetic
vision: 'The Call of America to the Nations of the
World'.
In 1927 the work won the prize in a national
competition sponsored by Musical America magazine.
Its first performance was on 20th December 1928, with
the New York Philharmonic and chorus, conducted by
Walter Damrosch. In his preface, Bloch wrote:
'This Symphony has been written in love for
this country in reverence to its Past - In faith in
its Future. It is dedicated to the memory of
Abraham Lincoln and Walt Whitman whose
vision has upheld its inspiration. The ideals of
America are imperishable. They embody the
future credo of all mankind: a Union, in
common purpose and under willingly accepted
guidance, of widely diversified races, ultimately
to become one race, strong and great.
Though this Symphony is not dependent on a
program, the composer wants to emphasize that
he has been inspired by this very ideal.
The Anthem which concludes the work, as its
apotheosis, symbolizes the Destiny, the Mission
of America. The symphony is entirely built
upon it. From the first bars it appears, in root,
dimly, slowly taking shape; rising, falling,
developing, and finally asserting itself
victoriously in its complete and decisive form.
It is the hope of the composer that this
Anthem will become known and beloved, that
the audience will rise to sing it, becoming thus
an active and enthusiastic part of the work and
its message of faith and hope.'
A Bloch Festival, organized by the Covent Club of
Illinois, was held in Chicago in December 1950 to
celebrate Ernest Bloch's seventieth birthday. Bloch,
deeply moved, decided to present the organizers with a
suitable new musical composition, the Suite hebraïque.
The suite was written first for viola or violin and piano
in 1951. Later, on 10th March 1952, he completed
orchestrating the work. The first performance of the
orchestral version was on 1st January 1953, with the
viola soloist Milton Preves and the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra conducted by Rafael Kubelik. The Suite
consists of three parts, Rapsodie - Processional -
Affirmation. Bloch composed the entire piece in the
Jewish style, a kind of reminder and nostalgia for his
past Jewish cycle. As a matter of fact the very few
famous works by Bloch which have remained well
known to the world of today, belong to that period of his
Jewish cycle.
For the Suite hebraïque Bloch used traditional
Jewish melodies. In a comment to J.H. Braun he wrote:
'I have absorbed them to such a point that it may be
difficult for future musicologists to determine what is
traditional and what is Bloch'.
Prof. Dalia Atlas
America: an Epic Rhapsody (more info)
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I. - 19:42
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II. 1861 - 1865 - 15:46
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III. 1926 - 14:35
Suite hebraique (more info)
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I. Rhapsody - 6:31
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II. Processionals - 2:29
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III. Maestoso - 3:40