Vincent Persichetti (1915-1987) Divertimento Psalm Chorale Prelude: O God Unseen Pageant Masquerade O Cool is the Valley Parable IX During the middle...
Vincent Persichetti (1915-1987)
Divertimento Psalm Chorale Prelude: O God Unseen Pageant
Masquerade O Cool is the Valley Parable IX
During the middle years of last century, the aggregation of
woodwinds, brass, and percussion known as the symphonic band, along with its
less densely proportioned relative, the symphonic wind ensemble, began to
flourish in the high schools and colleges of the United States. In addition to
meeting the highest standards of performance, these ensembles encouraged America's leading composers to contribute repertoire tailored specifically to the band
medium while shunning its traditional outdoor pops-concert connotations. As the
medium mushroomed, so did this repertoire, filling a voracious, receptive,
unjaded appetite for new music among young musicians. Some works soon attained
the status of classics, enjoying literally thousands of performances.
Pivotal to the development of this repertoire and perhaps
its most distinguished exponent was Vincent Persichetti, who contributed 14
works, many of which have become staples of the genre. Persichetti was a
central figure in many aspects of American musical life - as a member of the
composition faculty at the Juilliard School for 40 years, as the author of a
widely used composition text,
Twentieth Century Harmony, as a popular
guest-lecturer at college campuses around the country, and as composer of more
than 160 works, including an opera, 9 symphonies, 12 piano sonatas, and
numerous other orchestral, chamber, choral, and vocal works. But it is through
his works for band that his name and his music are most widely known.
Vincent Persichetti was born to an Italian father and a
German mother in Philadelphia in 1915, where he continued to live until his
death in 1987. He began to study the piano at the age of five, which gave
direction to an insatiable musical interest and a talent that soon proved
prodigious. He began to compose almost immediately, and during his adolescence
earned money as a church organist. After graduating from Philadelphia's Combs
Conservatory, he went on to complete his doctorate at the Philadelphia
Conservatory. In 1947 William Schuman invited him to join the Juilliard
faculty, and he taught there for the rest of his life. He became chairman of
Juilliard's composition department in 1963, and in 1970, of the literature and materials
department.
Persichetti's career flourished during a period when American
composition was deeply divided among rival stylistic factions, each seeking to
invalidate the work of its opponents. In the face of this partisan antagonism, Persichetti
advocated, through his lectures and writings, as well as through his music, the
notion of a broad working vocabulary, or "common practice", based on
a fluent assimilation of all the materials and techniques which had appeared
during the 20th century. His own music exhibits a wide stylistic range, from
extreme diatonic simplicity to complex, contrapuntal atonality.
Most of Persichetti's music for band falls along the simpler
end of his compositional spectrum, although
Parable represents the
opposite pole. This is utilitarian music, in the sense that it was written with
an awareness of imminent performance in a variety of different practical
contexts, but there is no compromise in standards of taste or quality of
workmanship. Even the simplest pieces, such as
Psalm and
Pageant,
have a youthful sweetness and exuberance that are utterly genuine, and display
meticulous attention to formal values. Indeed, these qualities, along with a
sense of mischief and a poignant vein of nostalgia, represent the essence of
Persichetti's personality and permeate all his music, though dizzying levels of
complexity are manifest at times.
A fondness for wind instruments dates back to Persichetti's
early years: his Op. 1, composed at the age of fourteen, is a
Serenade for
Ten Winds. In an interview, however, he himself acknowledged with characteristic
whimsy the misgivings many hold about the band medium and its
'rusty
trumpets, consumptive flutes, wheezy oboes, disintegrating clarinets, fumbling yet
amiable baton wavers, and gum-coated park benches. If you couple these
conditions with transfigurations and disfigurations of works originally conceived
for orchestra, you create a sound experience that is nearly as excruciating as a
sick string quartet playing a dilettante's arrangement of a 19th-century piano
sonata. But when composers think of the band as a huge, supple ensemble of
winds and percussion, the obnoxious fat drains off and creative ideas flourish'.
During the same interview, he recalled
'composing in a log cabin schoolhouse
in Eldorado, Kansas, during the summer of 1949. Working with some lovely
woodwind figures, accentuated by choirs of aggressive brasses and percussion
beating, I soon realized the strings weren't going to enter, and my Divertimento
began to take shape.' Completed the following year, the work exemplifies
Persichetti's propensity for pieces comprising tiny epigrammatic movements. The
opening
Prologue displays one of the composer's most distinctive trademarks:
the use of rapid duple metre as a framework for lively, playful, syncopated
rhythmic by-play. This feature can be heard throughout the works on this disc.
Song
is reflective in tone, with melody and accompanimental material all based
on an undulating figure.
Dance is gentle and childlike.
Burlesque features
the tubas with a mocking melody in Lydian mode against raucous offbeats, framing
a taunting central section. In
Soliloquy a cornet solo creates a mood of
haunting nostalgia.
March returns to the rousing spirit of the opening
movement.
Psalm was composed in 1952 and highlights the warm sonorities of the band in
chorale treatment. A solemn opening is followed by a hymn-like section that leads
into a jubilant
Allegro vivace. After an exhilarating development, the
work culminates in a fervent return of the hymn-like material. Persichetti
completed
Pageant the following year and the spirit of the two works is similar
enough that the later piece might almost be regarded as a sequel. In two
sections,
Pageant opens with a three-note horn motif upon which the
entire work is based. The first section is again in chorale style, while the
second is vigorous and march-like, suggesting a parade. Several thematic ideas,
all based on the opening horn motif, are subjected to a development whose thoroughness
is belied by the music's exuberant, extroverted character.
Chorale Prelude: O God Unseen is Persichetti's final piece for
band. Written in 1984, it is a solemn expansion of a hymn which originally
appeared in the composer's
Hymns and Responses for the Church Year.
Persichetti often re-used material originally composed for
another purpose.
Masquerade for Band, dating from 1965, is a set of ten
ingenious variations on a theme created from musical examples written for the textbook
Twentieth Century Harmony. The language is somewhat more dissonant and
angular here than in the preceding works, although the expressive content reflects
many of the composer's familiar characteristics.
O Cool Is the Valley was
composed in 1971, inspired by a poem of James Joyce. A calm, pastoral mood is maintained
throughout.
Parable for Band
, a work of very different character, appeared the following
year. It is Persichetti's most complex band composition and the ninth in his series
of 25 parables, which he described somewhat enigmatically as 'non-programmatic
musical essays about a single germinal idea. They convey a meaning indirectly
by the use of comparisons or analogies.' Using an expanded vocabulary of
gestures and textures, as well as more linear material, the work unfolds in a manner
that is dramatic, coherent, and thoroughly abstract.
Walter Simmons