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Jewish String Quartets Darius Milhaud (1892-1974), one of the 20th century's most prolific composers, with an opera comprising nearly 450 works,...
Jewish String Quartets
Darius Milhaud
(1892-1974), one of the 20th century's most prolific
composers, with an opera comprising nearly 450 works, belongs historically to
the coterie of French intellectuals and composers who, loosely bonded by their
initial embrace of Jean Cocteau's antisentimental aesthetic ideas, as well as
by their allegiance to composer Erik Satie's spiritual-musical tutelage, were
known as Les Six. That group also included Francis Poulenc, Arthur
Honegger, Georges Auric, Germaine Tailleferre, and Louis Durey. But Milhaud
belongs as well to the significant number of European Jewish emigre
composers who took refuge in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s from
the Fascist-inspired anti-Jewish persecution that emanated from Germany and culminated in the Holocaust.
Milhaud was born in Marseilles but grew up in Aix-en-Provence, which he regarded as his true ancestral city. His was a long-established
Jewish family of the Comtat Venaissin -- a secluded region of Provence -- with roots
traceable there at least to the 15th century. On his father's side, Milhaud's
Jewish lineage was thus neither Ashkenazi nor Sephardi (i.e., stemming neither from
medieval German-Rhineland nor from pre-16th-century Spanish/Iberian Jewry), but
rather, specifically Provençal -- dating to Jewish settlement in that part of southern
France as early as the first centuries of the Common Era. His paternal
great-grandfather, Joseph Milhaud, was one of the founders of the synagogue at
Aix, and he wrote exegetical works on the Torah and conducted the census of
Jews who had returned to France after the Revolution.
Like its Ashkenazi and Sephardi counterparts, Provençal Jewry
had a distinct musical tradition that developed over many centuries. Milhaud's
mother, however, was partly Sephardi on her father's side. This may have lent an
additional perspective to his internalized Jewish musical sensibilities. Both
parents came from middle-class families who had been engaged successfully in respected
business enterprises for generations, and both were musicians as well. Darius
began violin studies at the age of seven and began composing even as a child.
In 1909 he commenced studies at the Paris Conservatoire, where one of his
teachers, Xavier Leroux, immediately recognized that his student had discovered
a harmonic language of his own. His other teachers included Vincent d'Indy,
Paul Dukas, and Andre Gedalge, whom Milhaud later credited as his greatest
influence.
In his memoirs Milhaud wrote that when he first began to
compose, he was already aware of the path of Impressionism, which he viewed as
the end of an artistic current whose mawkishness he found unappealing. He
became profoundly affected as a composer by literature, as well as by Satie's
commitment to a concept of artistic totality, exploring and including the various
art forms in complementary expression. From 1917 to 1919 Milhaud held a
secretarial post at the French Consular Mission in Brazil, where he developed an
interest in native folk rhythms and ethnic music traditions. He later applied
these influences to some of his pieces, and his first two ballet scores drew
directly upon the Brazilian experience.
In the 1920s Milhaud began his association with Cocteau,
whose seminal aesthetic attack on the contemporary direction of "serious"
music and its high-flown "romantic bombast" made a significant impression
on him. Encouraged by Satie and his own musical models, Milhaud -- together with
the other composers who formed Les Six -- embraced aspects of this
aesthetic principle, especially with regard to simplicity, directness,
avoidance of excess sentimentality, sounds related to nature and everyday life,
and, perhaps above all, that attribute so prized by certain French poets of a
previous era: la clarite -- clarity. For Milhaud, perhaps more so than for
the others of his circle, Satie's love of the music hall, the circus, and other
unelevated forms of entertainment was in tune with his own adoption of popular material --French
folksong, Latin American dance rhythms, Jewish secular and sacred melodies, and
one of his most important discoveries: jazz.
Milhaud first encountered jazz in London in the early 1920s,
and he visited Harlem dance halls when he made a concert tour of the United States in 1922-23. He was instantly engaged by the syncopated rhythms, the
improvisatory freedom, the authentic character, and even the purity of the
music, and he created a bit of a stir when he was quoted as saying that jazz was
"the American music" -- according it the same validity as
classical repertoire. Thereafter he turned to jazz elements for his works on
quite a few occasions. Later he was quoted as observing that jazz could only have
sprung from the experience of an oppressed people. After the installation of
the Nazi puppet Vichy regime in France and his escape to America as a Jewish refugee -- as well as the German murder of more than twenty of his
cousins -- that can only have had additional significance for him. It is no
accident that, notwithstanding several prewar Jewish-related works, it was in
his American period and afterward that he turned even more frequently to his
Jewish roots for musical sources.
In 1940, Milhaud's one-act opera Medee (to a text by his
wife, Madeleine) had just reached the stage of the Paris Opera when the German
invasion resulted quickly in France's surrender and the creation of the Vichy government. The occupation of Paris was a clear sign to Milhaud and his wife that it
was time to leave with their son while they still could. The Chicago Symphony
had invited him to conduct a new work it had commissioned, and that invitation enabled
him to receive exit visas from the consulate in Marseilles for himself and his
family. Their friend, the French-Jewish conductor Pierre Monteux, then conducting
the San Francisco Symphony, organized a teaching position for Milhaud at Mills College in nearby Oakland, California, and beginning in 1951, for 20 years, he also
taught every summer at the Aspen Music School and Festival. He is known to have
cautioned his students -- who included such subsequently celebrated musicians as
Dave Brubeck, William Bolcom, Simon Sargon, and Peter Schickele -- against what
he called "overdevelopment" as a pretension to the profound. "It
is false," he told students, "that the profundity of a work proceeds directly
from the boredom it inspires."
Milhaud is often perceived as the champion of polytonality.
Although he neither invented that harmonic technique and language nor was the
first to employ it, he found ingenious ways to make use of its potential.
Perhaps because he so clearly understood its possibilities, it became the
harmonic vocabulary most commonly associated with his music. In the 1920s, however,
Milhaud was considered a revolutionary and an enfant terrible of the
music world. Yet his actual approach owed more to the French composer Charles Koechlin
than to Satie, and it built upon a particular concept of polytonality derived
from Stravinsky's early ballets. Ultimately Milhaud believed not in revolution,
but in the development and extension of tradition. "Every work is not more
than a link in a chain," he postulated, "and new ideas or techniques
only add to a complete past, a musical culture, without which no invention has
any validity."
Milhaud's personal Judaism as well as his family heritage
informed a substantial number of his compositions, beginning with his Poèmes
Juifs (1916) and followed by several prewar pieces with overt Jewish titles
and content. But it was in his later Jewish works that he relied frequently and
specifically on the Provençal liturgical tradition that he knew from his youth
in Aix-en-Provence. His Judaically related works from the period following his
immigration to America include Cain and Abel, for narrator, organ, and
orchestra; Candelabre à sept branches; David, an opera written
for the Israel Festival; Saul (incidental music); Trois psaumes de
David; Cantate de Job; Cantate de psaumes; and -- arguably his
most significant Judaic work -- Service Sacre, an oratorio-like full-length
Sabbath morning service (with supplemental settings for Friday evening) for
cantor, rabbinical speaker, large chorus, and symphony orchestra, which was
commissioned in 1947 and premiered by Temple Emanu-El in San Francisco. This
service was first recorded in its entirety by the Milken Archive in 2000. (Naxos 8.559409) His
final work, Ani maamin (subtitled un chant perdu et retrouve), on
a text by Elie Wiesel, received its premiere in 1975 at Carnegie Hall,
conducted by Lukas Foss, with soprano Roberta Peters, the Brooklyn
Philharmonic, and several narrators, including Wiesel.
Études sur des thèmes liturgiques du Comtat Venaissin pour
quatuor à cordes
In the early 1970s Milhaud was approached about a commission
by the Braemer Foundation of Philadelphia. That local foundation had, in
conjunction with Congregation Adath Jeshurun in Elkins Park (a Philadelphia suburb), previously sponsored competitions with monetary awards for what it
called "Hebraic string quartets" -- which it defined as works demonstrably
based on established Jewish liturgical music traditions. After two composers,
Nachum Amir and Yehuda Ben Cohen, had each received this award, the foundation
reoriented its direction from competitions toward the commissioning of new
works by well-known composers, and it turned first to Milhaud. The guidelines
remained the same: the piece was to draw directly and identifiably on musical
material that had been documented in one or more reliable notated musicological
source. And the composer's intent must be to create a "Jewish work."
However, according to Milhaud's widow in her recollections 30 years later, the
foundation was even more specific in Milhaud's case, in view of his known
Provençal Jewish heritage. He was asked expressly to incorporate in his quartet
melodies of the Provençal rite -- the liturgical tradition also known as minhag
Carpentras -- insofar as possible from his youthful memories of family
celebrations and services at the synagogue in Aix-en-Provence.
Minhag Carpentras (the custom of Carpentras) so named after one of the four
cities where it once flourished, was the distinct liturgical tradition of the Jews
of the Comtat Venaissin -- a secluded region of Provence where Jews lived, until
the Revolution, within the domains and under the protection of the Church. In
addition to Carpentras, the four communities of the Comtat included Cavaillon, Avignon, and L'Isle-sur la Sorgue. The Jews who were native to that region as late as the
early 20th century are believed to have been the last descendants of the Languedoc and Provençal Jews who had been expelled from the kingdom of France in the 14th and 15th centuries (the Comtat was under papal sovereignty), whose
liturgical customs they inherited and preserved. Jewish life in the region has
been traced to early Jewish settlements in Gaul at the time of the Roman Empire and its conquest.
As he had done previously, especially with regard to the Service
Sacre, Milhaud seized the opportunity to share a heritage virtually unknown
to American Jewry and at the same time to explore the synagogue experience of
his childhood and his own French-Jewish identity. Mme. Milhaud once recalled
that whenever her husband felt inspired while immersed in a piece of music, "at
a spiritual moment he would incorporate a fragment of the minhag Carpentras."
By the postwar decades, however, minhag Carpentras -- which was entirely
different from either the Ashkenazi or the Sephardi services Milhaud might have
known from his Paris days -- had become nearly extinct in practice, and relying
solely on his childhood memory, with the added burden of separating those
melodies from the acquired repertoire of his adult life in America as well as France, could have proved limiting. Fortunately, much of the Provençal rite is preserved in
a 19th-century compendium, Z'mirot yisrael k'minhag Carpentras: chants
Hebraïques suivant le rite des Communautes Israëlites de l'ancien Comtat-Venaissin
(Hebrew Chants / Melodies According to the Rite of the Jewish Communities
of the Old Comtat Venaissin / minhag Carpentras), which was compiled, edited,
notated, and published in 1885 by Messrs. Jules Salomon and Mardochee Cremieu
(both from Aix) under the auspices of the Grand Rabbi of the Consistoire of Marseilles. Milhaud consulted this valuable source and used it in tandem with his own personal
recollections in identifying the melodic foundations for this quartet, which
was published only posthumously (1981) under the present title and subtitle.
Études is a potpourri of tune references and fragments from the musical
repertoire of minhag Carpentras, not an exposition of tunes in their
entirety. Among the melodies from which Milhaud quotes and then develops
motives and phrases are plaintive tunes from Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur
liturgies (atzi kaddish for the morning service, kol atzmotay, mi khamokha
av hara amim, and a ot k'tana, a piyyut -- liturgical poem -- not
found in the Ashkenazi rite); from the Three Festivals, including one seder
song; for Tisha ba'av (the Ninth of Av, commemorating the destruction of
the First and Second Temples); for the Sabbath (l'kha dodi); and for
life-cycle events such as weddings. All these elements are woven into a lucid, lyrical,
and transparent work that typifies Milhaud's manifesto of clarity and in which
the polyphonic textures are never allowed to obscure the melodic source
material.
This quartet received its premiere in 1973 at Congregation
Adath Jeshurun, performed by an ad hoc professional quartet that took the
synagogue's name for the occasion. After that the piece fell into oblivion,
where it remained even after its publication in Paris. Although it could be
found in some bibliographic listings and catalogues of Milhaud's works, even
Milhaud advocates and aficionados were generally unaware of its existence. Its
rediscovery by the Milken Archive occurred by chance in the course of a filmed
interview with Mme. Milhaud in her Paris home in the summer of 2000 as part of the
Archive's oral history project. Its public revival was marked in 2003 by its
New York premiere (and its only known performance to date apart from the
synagogue concert in Elkins Park) at the Jewish Theological Seminary, played by
the Fountain Ensemble as part of the Seminary's and the Milken Archive's
jointly sponsored international conference-festival, "Only in America."
---
Beginning in the late 1920s, for more than four decades, Abraham
Wolf Binder (1895-1966) was one of the most prominent figures among the
stimulating intellectual and artistic Jewish music circles in the New York area. He was also one of the few native Americans of that mostly emigre milieu of
composers, musicologists, learned cantors, other synagogue musicians, and
critics who -- through their sometimes overlapping academic societies and journals -- promoted
a renaissance of interest in serious deliberations about Judaically related
music. At the same time, from a practical perspective, they sought to raise the
musical standards in American synagogues.
Binder was reared in an orthodox environment (his father was
a ba'al t'filla, or lay cantor), and he commenced his Jewish musical
experiences as a boy chorister in an orthodox synagogue. At the age of 14
in the densely concentrated eastern European immigrant neighborhood of New York's Lower East Side, he led a choir for the locally distinguished cantor Abraham
Singer, and through various succeeding positions and associations and
self-tutored studies, he acquired a thorough familiarity with the full range of
the eastern and west-central European cantorial and synagogue choral
repertoire. It was within the American Reform movement, however, that he
eventually used that knowledge and early experience to make his most important
contributions and leave his most enduring mark -- not only as a composer for the
liturgy, but equally as a pedagogue, writer, lecturer, editor, choral director,
and general savant. Perhaps more than any of his contemporaries or colleagues,
he can be credited with having lifted the American Reform musical scene out of
its nationwide malaise by introducing substantial amounts of authentic
tradition. As a prime mover in that restoration of liturgical music tradition,
he enriched and infused Reform practice with long-established melodies, biblical
cantillation, and the adapted work of some of the principal European synagogue
composers of the modern era. At the same time, he befriended many of the
synagogue composers who immigrated to America during the 1930s and 1940s, and
he encouraged them to continue expanding the aggregate repertoire with their own
compositions.
Born in New York City, Binder attended the Settlement Music School there, and then Columbia University from 1917 to 1920, graduating from
the New York College of Music with a bachelor of music degree. During that
time, in addition to various choral conducting positions, he was appointed
music director of the YMHA / YWHA (Young Men's and Women's Hebrew Association,
now known as the 92nd Street Y, a Jewish counterpart to the YMCA network),
where, in addition to teaching music, he organized a choral society and an
orchestra. He also became an instructor of liturgical music in 1921 at the
Jewish Institute of Religion, which merged in 1950 with Hebrew Union College
(the rabbinical school and training institute of the Reform Movement) to become
the New York branch of the principal campus in Cincinnati. When the New York school established America's first academically oriented cantorial ordination and
degree program (the School of Sacred Music), in 1952, he was able to
offer his knowledge to future cantors there. In 1953 Hebrew Union College conferred upon him an honorary doctor of Hebrew letters degree (D.H.L.). From
1954 until 1958 he also lectured on Jewish music and liturgy at Union
Theological Seminary in New York, the premiere nondenominational liberal Protestant
institution.
Meanwhile, Binder became the music director at the Stephen
S. Wise Free Synagogue in New York, one of the city's leading Reform
congregations, named in honor of the great American Zionist leader and Reform
rabbi. (The word free in the synagogue's name referred partly to its
rabbis' right to speak freely about Zionism, which at that time was actually prohibited -- sometimes
by contract -- in some Reform congregations, as well as their right to speak about
the labor union movement.) Binder's visits to Palestine in 1924 and 1932, and
to Israel in 1952, introduced him to Israeli musical activity and to important elements
of Hebrew Palestinian and Israeli song, which then informed some of his own
compositions and arrangements and inspired him to promote the music of Israel in America. His two-volume publication of arrangements, New Palestinian Folksongs (1926;
1933), was one of the first widely available vehicles in modern format for the
American public.
Binder was one of the founders and principal activists of
the American Palestine Music Association -- MAILAMM (the acronym for makhon
aretz [eretz] israel [yisra'el] la-mada'ey [l'mada'ey] musika) -- one of the
most important and sophisticated Jewish music organizations in America, whose objectives were to assist the Palestine Institute of Musical Sciences, to promote
a musical bond between Palestine and the Diaspora, and to encourage Jewish
musical creativity through concert programs, academic seminars, and educational
programs in the United States. In 1934 it became affiliated with the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, with the aim of establishing there its Jewish music library as
well as a research department. Eventually Binder broke with the group and established
a second organization, the Jewish Music Forum, more specifically and more
narrowly geared to local contemporary music programs, discussions, and scholarly
lectures and papers, which were published in its annual bulletins. The Jewish
Music Forum also functioned as a means for professional participants in various
aspects of Jewish music to share ideas. (MAILAMM's de facto demise was a result
of the commencement of the Second World War, which made pursuit of its aims in Palestine nearly impossible.)
Binder was the editor of the third edition (1932) of the Union
Hymnal, which, notwithstanding his many compositions and variety of other
activities, might be considered his most indelible legacy and his most profound
contribution. Published by the Reform movement originally in 1897 (2nd edition,
1914) as the official adjunct to its Union Prayerbook, its contents
consisted -- before Binder's work on it -- largely of second-rate hymns, mostly in English,
and many adaptations from non-Jewish sources such as opera, classical Lieder
and oratorio, and Western folksong. It contained very little in the way of
tradition. Binder carefully rethought its entire purpose and aesthetic and
thoroughly revised the hymnal to include many established tunes from eastern
and western European Ashkenazi traditions. He also included melodies and
settings extracted from the works of some of the major European synagogue
composers, such as Salomon Sulzer, Louis Lewandowski, Samuel Naumbourg, and
Eliezer Gerowitsch -- who were introduced to the American Reform Synagogue for the
first time, albeit in adapted and abbreviated versions that made them appropriate
for the American Reform worship format. Many congregational tunes that eventually
predominated for decades in synagogues throughout America, orthodox and
traditional as well as Reform, thus entered the American Jewish consciousness
as a result of Binder's efforts on this 3rd edition. These tunes included the
most ubiquitous and once nearly exclusive versions of adon olam and ein
keloheinu (the mistakenly so-called 'Freudenthal melody', after the organist
and choirmaster in Braunschweig, Germany, who first printed and perhaps
adapted -- but did not compose -- the tune in that synagogue's hymnal in the 1840s).
The Union Hymnal thus constituted a watershed event in the musical
development of the Reform movement, giving it (or restoring) its musical roots;
and it also had a ripple effect among American Jewry in general.
Binder was appointed to be the consultant on Jewish music
for the United States Armed Forces Hymnal, which was prepared for
servicemen during the Second World War. Published in 1941, it included
appropriate hymns for the three principal American faiths: Protestant
Christian, Roman Catholic, and Jewish.
As a composer, Binder is remembered chiefly for his numerous
liturgical choral settings, which include many individual prayers as well as
entire services. Some of his once-popular earlier works, such as his children's
oratorio Judas Maccabeus (1919), are long forgotten, but many of his
later prayer settings became part of the standard repertoire in Reform
congregations and are sung to this day. He also wrote several classically
oriented Hebrew and Yiddish art songs, which may be considered worthy components
of the aggregate American Jewish lieder repertoire. And he tried his hand as
well at orchestral composition, although those pieces are now obscure. For the
most part, he was at his best as a miniaturist in his succinct artistic
expressions of Hebrew liturgy for Reform services.
Binder's book Biblical Chant (1959) was at one time widely
used as a guide to cantillation, although it has been superseded by more recent
studies on the subject. He also wrote monographs, entries for encyclopedias and
other reference works, and journal articles. In 1971 Irene Heskes edited and
published posthumously a number of his lectures and writings under the title Studies
in Jewish Music: The Collected Writings of A. W. Binder. This volume
continues to serve as a valuable resource.
Two Hassidic Moods
As a composer, Binder's most successful work and principal
reputation rests on his vocal music. Yet his Two Hassidic Moods (1934)
for string quartet, little known and still in unpublished manuscript, is probably
his finest exception. As the title suggests, the piece explores moods and even
altered states associated with Hassidic mysticism, although it does not quote any
known or established Hassidic tunes. The melodic material here appears to be
entirely original. The work does, however, rely on certain modalities typical of
Hassidic song -- modalities that Hassidim adopted from their surrounding host
cultures in the Ukraine and Poland during the 18th and 19th centuries but which
have come to be perceived as emblematic of Hassidic expression. In that sense,
Binder treats his material in the context of traditionally Hassidic aesthetics
and sensibilities.
The first movement, Meditation, has the
characteristic feeling of meditative, soulful prayer among Hassidim. Just as
the more complex Hassidic niggunim (religious melodies) typically begin
slowly and increase in the intensity of mystical closeness and clinging to the
Divine essence, the tempo of this movement builds gradually as the melodic
ideas are developed and repeated with variations in different string
combinations. The mood then reverts to a slow yet pulsating dance feeling, reflecting
an even deeper level of the desired spiritual ecstasy and climax, which segues
to a concluding cadenza for the cello.
The second movement, Dance, also begins slowly -- this
time almost as if to suggest a gradual series of warm-up movements in
preparation for an actual dance. The movement is built on a simple motive and
its continuous development through alterations, fragmentation, and augmentation
and expansion. Following another solo cadenza for the cello, the entire
ensemble engages in a vigorous dance. After a brief lyric interruption, the
momentum returns and increases until the movement's conclusion.
This string quartet conveys, through the standard artistic
devices of Western composition, some of the quintessential fervor and entranced
states of Hassidic prayer, song, and dance -- which can be intertwined on several
levels in Hassidic perceptions of communication with God. The piece focuses on
two aspects of Hassidic life: meditative contemplation, whose goal is to reach
a state of the soul's clinging to God with ecstatic love (hitlahavut); and
joy -- at that very closeness to the Divine, but also as a continual celebration
of life. Although such fastpaced dance might appear on its surface to represent
simple frivolity, in the Hassidic world it becomes a form of profound ecstasy
in the context of religious experience, as much so as quiet contemplation.
These two movements, therefore, are interrelated and might be considered two
manifestations of a single spiritual encounter.
---
Although her parents were part of the Viennese Jewish
community, Ruth Schonthal (b. 1924) was born in Hamburg, where they were
living at the time. She began her musical studies at the age of five at the
Stern Conservatory in Berlin, where she had piano and theory lessons. Shortly after
the elections of 1932-33 led to the National Socialist regime, however, Jews
were no longer permitted to attend such institutions, and she was expelled as a
Jewess in 1935. As the persecution increased, her family emigrated and sought
refuge in Stockholm, where she continued her studies at the Royal Academy of Music. There she studied piano with Olaf Wibergh and composition with Ingemar Liljefors,
and in 1940 her first piano sonatina was published. But when safety for Jews in
Sweden began to appear less secure, she and her family left and became
refugees once again -- this time in Mexico City (to which they had to travel via
the Soviet Union) in 1941. She continued composition studies with Manuel Ponce, and at the age of 19 she was the soloist in the premiere of her own piano
concerto (Concerto romantico) at the Palacio de Bellas Artes. When the
great emigre composer Paul Hindemith (also a refugee from the Third Reich) came
to Mexico City on a concert tour, he had occasion to meet Schonthal and hear
some of her piano works. He offered her admission and a scholarship at Yale,
where he had been on the faculty since 1940 -- an offer she quickly accepted,
graduating in 1948.
For a time in the 1950s and 1960s Schonthal's serious composing
entered a phase of partial hiatus, as it became necessary for her to help with
the support of her family. (By then she was married to an artist, with whom she
had two sons, in addition to one with her first husband in Mexico.) She took several part-time teaching positions; played piano in bars, cocktail lounges, and
supper clubs; and wrote popular songs and music for television commercials. By
the early 1970s she was once again composing in earnest, and she was able to
devote the major part of her artistic energies to new works and to the
continued development of her stylistic approach and technical procedures.
More romanticist than modernist, yet fully conversant with
20th-century developments, Schonthal pretty much resisted the sway of both the
European and American avant-garde forces. But some of those influences are
still to be found within her synthesized aesthetic, which includes many
elements of the aggregate European musical tradition, Mexican folk music,
aleatoric aspects, and even occasional nods to more recent so-called
minimalism. She sees all these factors not as artistic ends in themselves, but
as tools to serve her primary concern: the conveying of emotion. By her own
observation, she envisions her work "as a mirror held up to a world full
of complex human emotions." And she has acknowledged to students of her
work that she conceives of music as a dense tapestry of musical associations in
which the individual elements are "linked to each other in multiple,
symbiotic relationships."
Schonthal has been the recipient of numerous commissions for
chamber music, operas, symphonic works, and piano and organ pieces. Her
large-scale works include a second piano concerto (1977) and her operas The
Courtship of Camilla (A. A. Milne), and Jocasta (1996-97), to a
libretto by Helene Cixous -- a reworking of the Oedipus story (produced in New York in 1998) in which the two principal characters are each represented by an actor, a
singer, and a dancer. Among her important smaller-scale piano compositions are Gestures
(1978-79), which explores her idea of "emotional time" versus "metrical
time"; Canticles of Hieronymus (1986), after paintings by Bosch; Self
Portrait of the Artist as an Older Woman (1991); and From the Life of a
Pious Woman (1999). Her chamber music, apart from the String Quartet no. 3
recorded here, includes traditional forms -- such as her quartets nos. 1 (1962)
and 2, In the Viennese Manner (1983); as well as creative combinations
such as Collagen (1991), for soprano, flute, two clarinets, cello,
piano, synthesizer, and percussion, based partly on the work of the Berlin Dada
artist Hannah Hoech, a friend of her family's in the 1930s; A Bird Flew Over
Jerusalem (1992), for flute, piano, and electronic tape, which addresses
a clash of cultures and religious traditions; Abendruhe mit süssem Traum (1993,
rev. 1996), for cello, piano, vibraphone, and timpani; and Bells of Sarajevo (1997), for clarinet and prepared piano. She has written a number of guitar
works, including Fantasia in a Nostalgic Mood (1978) and Fantasy-Variations
on a Jewish Liturgical Theme (1994, rev. 1997), for electric guitar. Her
many songs and other vocal pieces have included settings of poetry of Lorca,
Rilke, Yeats, Wordsworth, and Whitman -- as well as some of her own.
She has been honored with several important awards and
citations, including the Internationaler Künstlerinnen Preis of the city of Heidelberg in 1994, and an exhibition at the Prinz Carl am Kornmarkt Museum was devoted to
her life and work. In the United States she has received awards and grants from
ASCAP (American Society of Composers and Publishers) and Meet the Composer. She
has also served on the faculty of New York University from 1979 to 2004 and at
SUNY (State University of New York) at Purchase.
In 1996 Schonthal was invited to compose a piece about the
Berlin Wall and its dismantling. In one section she incorporated the infamous
Horst Wessel song, the official anthem of the Nazi party from 1931 on (banned by
law in postwar Germany to this day), whose lyrics she still remembers hearing
as a child from her family's balcony as the storm troopers marched through the streets:
"Already millions are looking to the swastika full of hope. ... Soon Hitler
flags will fly over every street. ... When Jewish blood will spurt from our
knives, then things will be twice as good!" After the elections of 1932-33
resulted in Hitler's appointment as chancellor, the song, which had been
adapted to a much-earlier tune by Wessel -- a party organizer who was killed in a
confrontation with Communist Party members and then glorified as a Nazi
martyr -- was commonly sung together with Deutschland über Alles (the
national anthem) at official events. Schonthal built what she calls a "gruesome
parody" around the song.
"For me," Schonthal has said, "the
contrasting elements -- the beautiful-ugly, tension-release, good-evil -- are
opposite ends of one and the same thing. They have a magnetic attraction
towards each other; they are never static. I deliberately combine the good old
with the good new, because of my background and because I believe that every
revolution throws out the baby with the bathwater. I am not religious -- on the contrary -- but
I believe in a spirit of devotion."
In 1999, in honor of her 75th birthday, the prestigious
Academy of the Arts in Berlin (Akademie der Künste) presented a full concert of
her music in the very city she was forced to leave more than sixty years earlier -- where,
as a nine-year-old girl, she had become unwelcome.
String Quartet No. 3, "In Memoriam Holocaust"
In composing her String Quartet no. 3 (1997), which is
subtitled In Memoriam Holocaust, Schonthal was fully reticent about the
artistic as well as ethical dangers inherent in trying to represent through
music the calculated annihilation of European Jewry. "I always wanted to
stay away from the Holocaust," she explained in a 1999 interview, "because
I didn't want to trivialize it."
"Some composers 'use' it," she lamented, referring
to the continual opportunistic efforts to exploit the event for personal career
attention -- a phenomenon that seems to be on the rise even at the beginning of
the 21st century. "They make decorative material out of it -- cheap stuff."
Still, Schonthal realized that art is too powerful a medium to eliminate this
subject altogether from consideration as a vehicle -- not so much of depicting the
Holocaust, but of ensuring its perpetual remembrance. "The challenge here
is that when you want to convert something into art with an agenda like that,
ultimately it still must be art -- it still must be a work on its own." She
feels that eventually she found a way in this work, by using the quartet as a representation
of four different personal experiences and reactions, including the most
significant and telling element of all: nothing and nothingness. One of the defining
features of the Germans' collective murder of European Jewry -- one that in many
ways distinguishes it from all previous massacres, perpetrated horrors, and
even attempted genocides throughout history -- is that the Jews' death was
essentially for no purpose, to no advantage to its enemies, and to accomplish
no objective -- for nothing. "Nothing -- this is a moment the quartet captures,"
Schonthal emphasized.
In the first movement, each player takes on the role of an
individual victim of the German mass murder. After the slow, relatively
dissonant introduction, the four parts become independent of one another. Their
individual rhythmic and melodic motifs become interspersed with collective
anguish, portrayed in the music by multilayered swirls of sound and abrasive shrieks
in the upper registers of each instrument. A series of parched, edgy repeated
chords and singlepitch patterns in angular rhythms expresses desolation as a sort
of existential nothingness. The unmitigated panic and distress at the end of
the movement rings transparently in high and low ends of the registers.
The second movement, Lament and Prayer, is introduced
by an extended rhapsodic and passionate solo cello passage, a sort of
soliloquy, which the other three instruments join incrementally. Dissonances
are more moderate than in the first movement, but there is an underlying
disharmony. A recurring three-note motive with an augmented
interval -- mediant-raised supertonic to tonic -- represents the scale of one of the principal
Ashkenazi prayer modes in eastern European cantorial tradition: the so-called ahava
raba mode, which, although it has come to have a distinctly "Jewish"
perception and association, is derived historically from the Arabic hijaz mode.
The movement concludes with an air of prayer, which nonetheless offers no
solace in the music. If indeed it is prayer, it is prayer as an unanswerable
question. "The listener is meant briefly to relive these moments,"
the composer has stated. "That is the function of this musical memorial."
Its world premiere was given in 2002 (two years after its recording for the
Milken Archive) in Washington, D.C.
---
Since the mid-1970s, composer, performer, and record and
concert producer John Zorn (b. 1953) has been one of the most
illustrious and charismatic figures associated with the avant-garde world of
alternative, experimental, fusion-based, and free improvisational expression
known as New York's "downtown" music scene.
Born in New York City, Zorn attended the United Nations International School and then went on to Webster College in St. Louis. There, he came into
contact with the Black Artists Group (BAG) and the Association for the
Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), which exerted profound influences on
his subsequent path; and he turned to the saxophone as his principal
instrument, becoming an accomplished virtuoso and a leading innovator in terms
of its expanded possibilities. After a brief sojourn on the West Coast, he
returned to New York and began making a name for himself in the stimulating downtown
milieu -- an environment in which he flourished naturally and whose devotion to
spontaneous, communal participation and collective extemporization encouraged
and nurtured his own propensities.
Zorn quickly caused a stir with his array of unorthodox
sonic experiments, which at that early stage included blowing duck calls into
bowls of water and creating strange howling sounds on a removed saxophone
mouthpiece. He began to appropriate freely the sounds from what he has called
the "media bombardment" of our age. More conventional musicians might
lament the onslaught of industrial noises, commercial cacophonies, and
electronic media-induced sounds that permeate our surroundings, but Zorn
welcomes them as inspirational influences as well as extra-musical parameters
in his pieces. Virtually all sounds, whatever their source, have come in
principle to be fair game for his musical manipulation and incorporation.
Zorn's experimental work with rock and jazz, especially in fusions
with other genres and styles, has attracted a group of loyalists that has been
characterized as a cult following. But in the aggregate his work draws on a
much broader variety of his experience, which has included classical forms,
hard-core and punk rock, eastern European Jewish band music, non-Western ethnic
traditions, and film, cartoon, popular, and improvised music apart from traditional
jazz. He credits a selective variety of artistic sources as having fueled his
early development: American innovators within the mold of cultivated art music,
such as composers Charles Ives, Elliott Carter, John Cage, and Harry Partch;
the 20th-century phase of the European tradition as manifested in the Second Viennese School (Schoenberg, Berg, and Webern) as well as the work of Stravinsky,
Boulez, and Kagel; experimental jazz and rock; and avant-garde theater, film,
visual art, and literature. Like "downtown" composers in general, his
music defies conventional or academic categories. But perhaps even more than
his contemporaries from that world, Zorn has pursued an irreverent and
intensely idiosyncratic brand of expression that often dissolves the boundaries
between and among previously established styles, while blurring the demarcation
between traditionally perceived composition in the Western sense (i.e.,
organized and then notated musical development) and improvisation. And
frequently he has eroded the distinction between recording and live
performance. Some of his pieces are in fact best suited to the recording studio
as an actual medium, where they can be assembled bit by bit, moment by moment,
event by event, and gesture by gesture.
Particularly curious is Zorn's proudly acknowledged debt to
cartoon sound tracks and their composers, whose sonic world, he maintains, is
similar to his own: "That comes from all the films and TV shows I absorbed
at an early age." Keyboard magazine once referred to his music as resembling
"soundtracks for movies never made." A significant leap to commercial
success came with Zorn's release of his 1986 LP album, The Big Gundown, which
included arrangements of music by the Italian film composer Ennio Morricone. As
in a number of successive pieces, he employed self-contained blocks of sound
that alternate abruptly among contrasting styles, timbres, and sound sources.
He notated these parameters on index cards to introduce structure into
otherwise free collective improvisation. Hence the name "file card pieces,"
from the cards that contain his jotted down musical ideas (which he calls "musical
moments"), which are then sorted and ordered as suggested instructions to
the other performers. This became one of his early trademarks. In his
improvisatory "game pieces," that structure, for example, is provided
by using the cards to steer the performers' interaction, without specifying the
precise musical material of the individual parts.
Zorn's other significant recordings from the 1980s include Archery,
a set of electronically colored improvisations; Ganryu Islands, duets
between Zorn on reeds and the Japanese shamisen player Michihiro Sato; and Spillane,
the title track of which is informed by the B-movie music from the popular
Mickey Spillane detective films of the 1950s. During the 1980s Zorn was cited
by no less a classically oriented critic than John Rockwell in The New York
Times as the single most interesting, important, and influential composer
to arise from Manhattan's downtown avant-garde since Steve Reich and Philip
Glass. "What they [Reich and Glass] were to the 1970s," wrote
Rockwell, "he [Zorn] is to the 1980s." Zorn continued to compose and
record prolifically, and to celebrate his 40th birthday, in 1993, he played a
month-long series of concerts -- each with distinct music -- at the Knitting Factory,
which by then had become the focal point of downtown music.
Much has been made in the press of Zorn's "rediscovery"
of his Jewish heritage in the early 1990s. Although a Jew by birth, he had not
previously been involved with either religious or secular Jewish culture, but now
he began exploring Jewish roots in his music -- in the context of his own
ever-evolving aesthetics. His first composition to address Jewish subject
matter was Kristallnacht (1992), a Holocaust-related work inspired by
the memory of the orchestrated pogrom throughout the Third Reich on 9-10 November
1938, which, following five years of increasing persecution, became the prelude
to Germany's eventual attempt to annihilate European Jewry altogether. A
pastiche of songs and disparate sound elements that has been dubbed a "brutal
sound portrait of the Holocaust" -- ranging from references to traditional
Jewish folk melos to chaotic, discordant, violent, screeching, and even
ear-shattering noises -- the recording contained a provocative warning on its
jacket concerning its high-frequency extremes at the limits of human hearing and
beyond: "Prolonged or repeated listening is not advisable, as it may
result in temporary or permanent ear damage." Kristallnacht marked
a watershed in Zorn's career, and following its release, he increasingly promoted
himself and his self-invented persona as a "Jewish composer."
That newfound Jewish identity fitted comfortably into the
downtown school's partial shift during the 1990s from an essentially
cosmopolitan sensibility to the concern with ethnic roots that had already
fixed its hold on popular imagination elsewhere in American society. As the
downtown musicians now began to exhibit curiosity about an array of world
musics outside the Western cultural orbit, Zorn's refashioned image as a "Jewish
composer" -- whatever that might mean -- in some ways embodied that trend. For
him, as with some fellow downtown musicians, that tendency toward ethnic
awareness could provide an artistic anchor -- a vehicle for focus and even a sense
of mission.
Also in the 1990s, Zorn, together with Marc Ribot, formulated
a new initiative called Radical Jewish Culture, whose stated purpose it is to
extract, expose, and illuminate elements that he perceives to be Jewish
components of American culture. Not all those subjective perceptions of what
may constitute Jewish components, however, are necessarily shared either by
mainstream (including reasonably liberal) Jewish cultural or social critics or
by Judaically informed artists, many of whom would view some of those
components as at most marginal if not superficial trappings. Others would go
further to dismiss altogether the proposition that cartoon aesthetics,
industrial noises, or pop- and rock-oriented fusions can have any legitimate
role vis-à-vis Jewish artistic expression. For them, applying such features
to cantorial chants or Jewish folk tunes, for example, risks diluting and even
cheapening, rather than elucidating, Jewish content. To the most cynical detractors,
some of what travels under that radical Jewish umbrella -- and even what might
motivate the undertaking in the first place -- smacks of a questionable cross
between contrived "hype" and a version of the post-1960s bandwagon of
ethnic appropriation. How more recent, post-1990s phenomena such as vulgar sounds
of human bodily functions or pornographic imagery fit into any conception, even
radical, of a "Jewish composer" -- presumably connoting a composer whose
music is intended for acceptance as "Jewish" -- poses yet further
questions.
Still, actual Jewish themes have inspired some of Zorn's most
admirable works, some of which do indeed legitimately integrate aspects of
authentic Jewish melos from a variety of sources. Improvisational chamber pieces,
such as Bar Kokhba and Issachar, contain echoes of prewar eastern
European Jewish life and explore comparisons between jazz and instrumental
Jewish folk music. His celebrated ensemble, Masada (one of his several bands),
is named after the plateau fortress above the Dead Sea in Israel, where a fanatical group of zealots staged a last holdout against Rome and -- according to a
legend that has been subjected in recent years to historical
reexamination -- committed collective suicide (which, at least in the case of the
children, must be admitted as homicide) rather than surrender. He has written
more than 100 "Masada tunes" for the group. Another ensemble, Bar
Kokhba -- a sextet named after the Jewish rebel leader who organized an illfated revolt
against Roman authority in 132 C.E. -- was formed in 1996 and continues to
flourish.
Zorn's compositional approach has been described as "kaleidoscopic"
because of the way many of his pieces present rapidly changing flashes of
unrelated and fleeting sound elements, gestures, and series of musical
moments -- all in a quick-paced flow of sonic information. The music, which can
appear to leap from idea to idea and from idiom to idiom in distilled abstractions,
without much in the way of development, can have a hyperkinetic air about it.
By the dawn of the new millennium, when his reputation as the "bad boy"
of the avant-garde was firmly established, his works had already appeared on
more than 60 recordings.
Not all of Zorn's works are completely improvisatory. His
notated compositions have been commissioned and performed by such "uptown"
ensembles and artists as the New York Philharmonic, the Kronos Quartet, the Netherlands
Wind Ensemble, the WDR Symphonieorchester Koln (Cologne), and the Bayerischer
Staatsoper. His own record label, Tzadik (a Hebrew word signifying a righteous
spiritual leader, more often than not in Hassidic contexts), on which his music
appears, has also included works of such academically rooted outsiders to the
downtown aesthetics as Charles Wuorinen.
A part of Zorn's Jewish self-discovery has been his mantra
that Jews are inevitably and unalterably "outsiders" drifting among
host cultures -- including the American environment -- that will never accept them.
For a composer so successfully entrenched in so patently an American world as
Zorn's, that claim of forced marginalization as a Jew can ring hollow. If
anything, his Jewish phase has only brought him increased attention in the
context of American awakenings to ethnic -- including Jewish -- musics. To what
extent that charge is a function of the culture of defiance and rebellion that
partly informed the rise of the downtown scene in the first place -- and whether
there is a tongue-in-cheek aspect to it, perhaps even to provoke legitimate
discourse -- is anyone's guess. But it is difficult to ignore the publicity value
of such allegations.
It is even more difficult to reconcile Zorn's perception of
a culture closed to Jewish identity with the very mission of his Radical Jewish
Culture project, whose raison d'être seems to be founded on the assumption that
Jewish components are already so embedded in American culture as to require
rescue. Also, whatever the currents of anti-Semitism that might once have presented
obstacles to American Jewish musicians (symphony orchestra conducting posts,
for example, or factions within the composers establishment), it could now be
argued astutely that Jews have become consummate insiders on the American music
scene in general. The sheer number of non-Jewish American composers who have
written works with consciously intended Jewish connections is telling in itself.
And certainly Zorn must be considered an ultimate insider within his own chosen
downtown arena.
Zorn is also noted for his vocal repudiation of assimilation.
It is unclear what he means, since the very nature of his cherished fusions
with quintessentially American genres, influences, and sound bespeaks a fruitful
form of assimilation.
In the framework of his Radical Jewish Culture movement, he
has conferred the status of "Jewish music" on pieces by composers who
happen to be able to claim Jewish lineage, but where the music itself has no
Jewish content, connection, or even intention -- music to which the religion or
ethnic ancestry of the composer is entirely irrelevant. That stance has aroused
some critical rebuke, hinting as it does of the kind of racial identification once
intended to exclude. For it was identity-based exclusion -- policies based solely
on the religion or ethnicity of artists and scientists rather than on their work -- that
reached its zenith in the Third Reich, and to some extent in the Soviet Union. Zorn's thoroughly different -- opposite, in fact -- purpose in such "Jewish music"
labeling relates of course to inclusion. But it may turn out to be a misguided
inclusiveness that tends to attenuate actual Jewish substance. Writing about
Zorn in a 1999 New York Times analysis, Adam Shatz saw it as a "prank"
and deplored the result as radical kitsch. "Ultimately it [Zorn's
perception of 'Jewish music'] rests on a racial definition of Jewish music that
Jews have battled since Richard Wagner published his notorious tirade, Judaism
in Music, in 1849," he maintained. "The fact that this definition
is now being pressed into the service of [Jewish] tribalism rather than
anti-Semitism is little consolation."
How seriously some of Zorn's rhetoric should be taken, how
coarse a grain of kosher salt should be added, or to what degree his purpose is
tied to its shock value, is not always apparent. Yet for all the challenges to
his theorizing about Jewish music or identity, there is no mistaking his
musical talent. "He can with equal justice be called a 'serious' musician,"
wrote Rockwell, "as serious and as important as anyone in his generation."
That was, however, in the 1980s. That Zorn has discarded, rethought, and
reformulated many of the premises and procedures traditionally embraced by
classical as well as other composers is an undeniable part of his originality. But
how far-out is too far in terms of some of his more recent outlandish recorded
provocations, and at what point the creative becomes the bizarre for its own
sake, must remain for future assessments from the more removed perspective of
his entire oeuvre.
Kol Nidre
John Zorn's Kol Nidre for string quartet is atypical
of the bulk of his work in its conservatively reverential exposition and in its
notational precision, which calls for no improvisation. And it is neither a
setting nor an arrangement of that famous Yom Kippur signature melody. Rather,
it is a clever, imaginative, and perfectly respectful exploration of barely
recognizable snippets (confined for the most part to as few as two pitches continually
transposed, extended, and developed) of only three of the constituent motives
and phrases of the traditional and exclusive kol nidre melody in the
Ashkenazi rite. An entirely original composition that illustrates Zorn's
classical capabilities, it relies on traditional source material only as a
departure point, evoking the mood of supreme awe and somber introspection that
governs the holiest of days on the Jewish calendar, the Day of Atonement.
The kol nidre text is recited or sung just prior to
sundown on the eve of Yom Kippur. It is an early medieval legal formula in
Aramaic that absolves Jews, in advance, of all vows that may be made in the new
year ("from this Yom Kippur until the next") that do not affect the
interests of others and that might be made rashly, impulsively, unwittingly, or
under duress. It is a petition for release from vows between man and God, not
between persons.
This kol nidre melody is one of the group of fixed tunes
of the Ashkenazi rite known collectively as the missinai tunes, which
date to the medieval Rhineland communities and have remained in continuous use
to this day throughout the Ashkenazi world. Apart from biblical cantillation
and possibly certain derived modalities, the missinai tune tradition
forms the oldest musical layer of minhag Ashkenaz -- the Ashkenazi custom,
or rite, that is embraced by Jews whose ancestry dates to western, central, and
east-central Europe.
This particular melody was probably one of the latest annexations
to the missinai tune category (possibly as late as the 15th century,
with the first documentation in the 16th century) as a fixed tune in all
Ashkenazi synagogues throughout the world. It has no known discretionary
alternative, apart from reasonable variation and extension that still preserves
its audible identity. The melody has remained ingrained in collective Ashkenazi
Jewish consciousness as a sine qua non of the High Holy Days -- more so than any
other missinai tune and, arguably, more deeply than any other synagogue melody
for any occasion. It has even spilled over into the popular entertainment
realm, divorced from its liturgical context altogether. Eventually it acquired
pop versions and arrangements even for non-Jewish performers, such as Johnny Mathis,
who included it in a slick but "soulful" rendition on an LP recording
in the 1950s.
The traditional kol nidre missinai melody is really a
conglomerate series and assortment of loosely related, individual, and
separable motifs and phrases that have acquired variants over time -- and from one
generation to another -- rather than a precise tune in the Western sense (i.e.,
the Western "closed form" with a fixed beginning, middle, and
conclusion, or an established order of phrases and sections). Its complexity probably
reflected the structural properties of certain ornate, labyrinthine Western
medieval song forms. But its free form -- in which those constituent motifs can be
alternated, reordered, repeated, repositioned, and even improvised in different
ways, almost as a "mixand- match" procedure -- reflects the equally
significant inherited Near Eastern influences that were operative even on the
early formulation of Ashkenazi tradition.
Although Zorn's piece draws exclusively on a few fragments
of these motives and on bits of the original modality, some of the principal
operative features of those motives -- especially the identifying intervals -- are not
present, even in the initial statement. Yet those are the very features that
would provide audible reference to the melody, while Zorn's selected fragments
are not sufficient to do so. Without prior knowledge of the title, therefore,
the identity of the kol nidre tune is not necessarily recognizable even
to those thoroughly familiar with it -- especially in the absence of the rhythmic parameters
of the words. If minimalism amounts to stripping down to the bare essentials,
then this treatment might be considered "radical" or "minimal"
minimalism, since even the basic skeleton of the signature opening phrase is
reduced simply to the first two pitches: the tonic and the raised seventh
(leading tone) of the scale, which could apply to any number of unrelated
tunes. Still, once it is realized that the piece is inspired by kol nidre, the
allusions to its motifs, however fragmentary, do make musical sense in their
continuous permutations, alterations, and transpositions. Most of the linear movement
occurs in parallel perfect fourths in the inner voices, suggesting the
antiquity of liturgical chant. The outer voices provide a sustained pedal point
effect.
Written in 1996, this piece shows Zorn capable of behaving
himself with dignity when he so chooses and creating a piece of genuine Judaic
connection and content. Among its many performances was one on 11 September 2002, by the string quartet Ethel at the site of the massacre of civilians at New York's World Trade Center, for a ceremony marking the first anniversary of the
Arab-Islamic attack on America. There are several alternate versions of the
piece, including one for string orchestra and another for clarinet quartet.
---
Although he excelled in a number of musical genres, sacred
as well as secular and classical as well as commercial, Sholom Secunda (1894-1974)
will always be remembered primarily for his illustrious association with the
American Yiddish musical theater. He established himself as one of the
preeminent composers and songwriters in that arena of mass popular
entertainment known as Second Avenue, which flourished among Yiddish-speaking
immigrant generations from the late 19th century through the 1940s.
Born in Aleksandriya, in the Kherson region of the Ukraine, the young Secunda became a coveted boy alto soloist in major synagogue choirs, and
he soon gained a reputation as a brilliant wunderkind boy hazzan (cantor).
Following a pogrom in Nikolayev, where his family had relocated, he emigrated
to America with them in 1907 and, until his voice changed, was known in the New York area too as "the prince of the young hazzanim." By 1913 he was engaged
as a chorister in Yiddish theater productions, for which he also began writing
songs. A year later he began studies at the Institute for Musical Art (now The
Juilliard School), and shortly afterward, together with Solomon Shmulevitz
(1868-1943), a well-established songwriter and lyricist for Yiddish theater and
vaudeville, he wrote his first full-length score -- Yoysher (Justice). In
that same time frame, the legendary prima donna Regina Prager introduced one of
his songs, Heym, zise heym (Home Sweet Home), which became his first
real success. But after his studies at the Institute, his interest in classical
expression remained. When he became acquainted with the music of Ernest Bloch,
he was struck by the high artistic level to which Jewish music could be elevated,
and he took lessons with Bloch for about a year.
After working in Yiddish theaters in Philadelphia for three
years, Secunda saw his first operetta with his own orchestration, Moshka,
produced in New York (Brooklyn) in 1926. As his composing for the Yiddish theater
increased, he began simultaneously turning his attention to serious Yiddish
poetry with a view to writing art songs. But the lure of the theater remained
paramount for him in those years, along with opportunities in Yiddish radio
programming and broadcasting. Between 1935 and 1937 alone, Secunda wrote scores
for at least seven shows, and he also began to experiment with more serious
incidental music for Maurice Schwartz's Yiddish Art Theater.
In the late 1930s Secunda began a rewarding artistic
association with Cantor Reuben Ticker, who subsequently became the
international superstar opera tenor Richard Tucker and reigned for many years
at the Metropolitan Opera House. Secunda
Etudes sur des themes liturgiques du Comtat Venaissin, Op. 442 (more info)
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No. 1: Modere - 4:53
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No. 2: Anime - 2:05
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No. 3: Modere - 1:51
2 Hassidic Moods (more info)
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I. Meditation - 4:41
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II. Dance - 7:09
String Quartet No. 3, "In Memoriam Holocaust" (more info)
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I. Grave - 8:00
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II. Lament and Prayer - 10:49
Kol Nidre (more info)
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Kol Nidre - 6:20
String Quartet in C minor (more info)
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I. Allegretto - 9:15
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II. Adagio - 4:02
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III. Allegro - 7:47
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IV. Allegro con fuoco - 10:30