COWELL: Quartet / Violin Suite / Songs / Piano Pieces / Polyphonica / Irish Suite
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Henry Cowell (1897-1965): Instrumental, Chamber and Vocal Music 1 Henry Cowell was one of the remarkable figures in American music. A startlingly innovative...
Henry Cowell (1897-1965): Instrumental, Chamber and Vocal Music 1
Henry Cowell was one of the remarkable figures in
American music. A startlingly innovative composer, an
inimitable piano virtuoso, the founder of institutions that
propelled American composition to world stature, a
brilliant writer, teacher and lecturer, Cowell almost
singlehandedly laid the foundations for American
compositional life.
Henry Cowell was born in 1897 in Menlo Park,
California, to an Irish emigre father and a spunky
Midwestern woman, both of them anarchist writers.
After his parents divorced, his mother tried to support
herself and the boy, but as she became desperately ill,
they sank into poverty. Henry, whose formal schooling
had ended at the third grade, eked out a living for them,
selling wildflowers door to door, herding cows, and
cleaning a schoolhouse. Then a Stanford University
professor discovered that the bedraggled twelve-yearold
had an immense vocabulary, knowledge staggering
in its breadth, including a deep command of botany, and
gigantic musical gifts, but he could barely spell.
Arrangements were made for Cowell to study English at
Stanford and music at the University of California,
Berkeley, where the brilliant Charles Seeger guided the
young man's unorthodox musical beliefs. Soon Cowell
was performing his music in the San Francisco Bay area.
After military service in World War I, Cowell's
career bolted forward. His trademark was the "tonecluster,"
or harmony of seconds (adjacent keys on the
piano). Although tone-clusters can occasionally be
found in keyboard music of earlier centuries, Cowell's
often dominated a whole piece and required
performance by the forearm, the flat of the hand, or the
side of the fist. Drawn to the spectacle of a pianist
performing with his forearms, or, later, plucking,
strumming, and stroking the piano strings, sarcastic
journalists made him an international sensation. While
few of them recognised the musical basis of Cowell's
techniques, even his vociferous opponents acknowledged
his integrity. Professional admirers included Schnabel,
Berg, and Bartok (who solicited Cowell's permission to
use tone-clusters in his own music). Yet while Cowell's
piano works revealed new vistas of sound, his advanced
ideas always coexisted with a traditional melodiousness,
stemming from his love of folklore, that renders even his
most "experimental" music immediately accessible. The
piano pieces recorded here suggest both the breadth of
Cowell's pianistic style, and his devotion to his Irish
heritage.
Deep Color (1938), one of his last "radical" piano
pieces, represents the deep purple of Irish valleys. In The
Fairy Answer (ca. 1929) direct playing on the strings
evokes an ancient tale related by Cowell: "There is in
Kildare a glen where, ...if one plays music at one end,
the fairies themselves will answer with their own music
at the other." Although it might sound like an echo, "the
fairy music... is never just the same as the music to
which it responds". Tiger (1928-9) may be Cowell's
most dissonant work; like Deep Color, it uses immense
tone-clusters, though to entirely different ends. Tiger
was first published in the USSR in 1929, when he was
the first American composer to visit the young country.
Cowell, guided by an unfailing faith in his instincts
about sound, cultivated a multiplicity of compositional
approaches. Many piano pieces, for example, are
conventionally played but make other novel demands.
Fabric (1920) is a polyrhythmic study employing an
unusual notation system described in New Musical
Resources, the forward-looking treatise that Cowell
drafted when about twenty years old. In the Suite for
Violin and Piano (1925) he fused the tone-cluster with
the language of the baroque suite.
Until the mid-1930s, Cowell divided his time
between the east and west coasts, toured Europe and
America, and worked indefatigably for American
composers. In 1925 he created the California Society for
New Music; in 1927 he founded New Music, a quarterly
publication of new compositions from the United States,
Latin America, and Europe that was virtually the only
outlet for American modernism. In 1928, Cowell,
Varèse, and others formed the Pan American Association
of Composers to foster inter-American relations through
concerts here and abroad. Then a Guggenheim
Fellowship brought Cowell to Germany to study non-
Western music at the University of Berlin's phenomenal
archive of recorded world music. His deep belief in the
unity of world musical cultures became the thread
connecting his diverse activities.
Gradually Cowell turned from writing piano music
to ensemble music. Polyphonica (1930), a study in
dissonant counterpoint, was first performed in New
York in 1932, conducted by Nicolas Slonimsky. (It is
scored for twelve players, as heard here, or for
orchestra.) Another fascinating piece of this period is the
Irish Suite, an arrangement of three "string piano" pieces
as a concerto, which Cowell first played in Boston with
Slonimsky's orchestra in 1929. Although Cowell often
denied that his pieces were illustrative, he related the
Irish legends to which the titles allude:
"The Banshee is an Irish family ghost who comes
and wails at the time of a death in the family. The
Leprechaun is a gnome who is a cobbler for fairy shoes,
and even when not seen, he may be heard tapping them
together, and sawing his fairy leather." Concerning The
Fairy Bells: "If you walk out into the Irish mountains,
and get lost in the fog there, you will be guided by a faroff
sound; and although you may think it is sheep bells,
you will find that there are no sheep in the mountains
there, -- so what could it be but the fairies?"
Unfortunately, performance instructions for the solo
part of The Leprechaun have disappeared, and much of
the solo part is indicated only as rhythms that organized
a wealth of unusual pianistic techniques. For what
probably was the first performance in almost sixty years,
Cheryl Seltzer reconstructed the piano part, using
descriptions of Cowell's techniques and implements
(darning egg, pencils, metallic objects) from his 1929
programme note, press accounts, and recollections of
Nicolas Slonimsky.
Cowell's frequent lecture-recitals were noted for his
wry wit, which is heard in the Three Anti-Modernist
Songs, composed in 1938 to newspaper poems
republished in Slonimsky's Music Since 1900. These
delightful parodies came at a most difficult time for
Cowell, however. Because of hysteria about sexual
offences in California, a morals infraction brought him a
fifteen-year term in San Quentin prison. Characteristically
optimistic, he used his time to develop an extensive
music education programme for the inmates. After
serving four years, he was paroled in 1940 to the
supervision of Percy Grainger, the celebrated Australian
pianist-composer, who lived just outside New York
City. Two years later, he married an old friend, the folksong
collector Sidney Hawkins Robertson. When he was
offered a wartime job, Sidney Cowell undertook to win
him a pardon, which succeeded when the prosecutor told
the California governor that an injustice had been
committed. Now able to travel freely, Cowell worked at
the Office of War Information, creating music
programmes to be beamed overseas. He was uniquely
suited for the job. He had spent much of the previous
twenty years studying and lecturing on non-Western
music. His pioneering work, which became widely
disseminated through radio programmes and recordings
of his Music of the World's Peoples series, did much to
increase public appreciation of the diversity of world
music. His influence can be felt today in the powerful
position of cross-cultural composition.
The Cowells lived in Manhattan and in the Catskill
Mountains about two hours north of New York City.
Among their frequent collaborations, their biography of
Charles Ives remains a classic. After the war, he
resumed teaching at the New School, where he had
initiated the music programme in the 1920s, and later
joined the faculties of Columbia University and The
Peabody Conservatory. His many students over the
years included John Cage and Lou Harrison, whose
unusual methods of sound production can be traced in
part to Cowell.
While Cowell's later works seem more conservative,
his undying instinct for fresh thinking can be heard in
the Quartet for Flute, Oboe, Cello, and Harpsichord,
written for the harpsichordist Sylvia Marlowe in 1954.
As in the much earlier Suite for Violin and Piano,
Cowell availed himself of a baroque aesthetic,
approaching it with his quiet wit and melodious heart.
Although Cowell's health deteriorated in the last
decade of his life, he and his wife made a round-theworld
journey so that he could finally hear Asian music
in its natural setting. He died in December 1965,
working on his twenty-first symphony on his deathbed.
Joel Sachs
Deep Color (more info)
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Deep Color - 6:33
The Fairy Answer (more info)
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The Fairy Answer - 4:16
Fabric (more info)
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Fabric - 1:24
Tiger (more info)
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Tiger - 2:55
Quartet for Flute, Oboe, Cello and Harpsichord (more info)
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I. Con moto - Allegro - 2:46
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II. Lento - 4:11
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III. Allegro moderato - 1:30
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IV. Molto vivace - 2:24
3 Anti-Modernist Songs (more info)
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A Sharp where you'd expect a Natural - 2:15
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Hark! From the Pit a Fearsome Sound - 3:35
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Who wrote this fiendish 'Rite of Spring'? - 1:04
Suite for Violin and Piano (more info)
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I. Largo - 2:32
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II. Allegretto - 0:59
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III. Andante tranquillo - 2:40
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IV. Allegro marcato - 0:41
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V. Andante calmato - 3:16
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VI. Presto - 0:55
Polyphonica (more info)
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Polyphonica - 3:48
Irish Suite for String Piano and Small Orchestra (more info)
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The Banshee - 4:25
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The Leprechaun - 6:20
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The Fairy Bells - 5:54