Schwantner: Sparrows / Music of Amber
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Joseph Schwantner (b.1943) Sparrows Soaring Distant Runes and Incantations Two Poems of Aguedo Pizarro Music of Amber The American composer Joseph...
Joseph Schwantner (b.1943)
Sparrows Soaring Distant Runes and Incantations
Two Poems of Aguedo Pizarro Music of Amber
The American composer Joseph Schwantner, who
celebrated his sixtieth birthday on 22nd March 2003, is
considered to be among the most successful and
respected living composers in the United States. In 1978
he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for his orchestral
work Aftertones of Infinity. Music of Amber for chamber
ensemble took first prize in 1981 in the prestigious
Kennedy Center Friedheim Award for Excellence in
Chamber Composition.
Joseph Schwantner's music is marked by the search
for magic and bewitching sounds, whence the title
Delicate Sounds, eliciting from the performers unusual
effects, with the use of unusual additional instruments
such as glasses or crotales. The present selection of
music for chamber ensemble presents, with the flute
piece and two songs with piano, compositions that are
sensual and occasionally tonal, indeed almost
impressionistic, demanding from the interpreters a fine
sense of nuance. The present portrait album was
suggested by the great success of our concert in
September 2000 with his Music of Amber.
Joseph Schwantner was born in Chicago in 1943
and received his academic education at the Chicago
Conservatory and at Northwestern University, where he
graduated in 1968. Subsequently he has served as a
member of the faculties of Yale, Eastman and the
Juilliard School. In May 2002 he was elected to the
American Academy of Arts and Letters. Schwantner
was official composer with the St Louis Symphony
Orchestra in its Meet the Composer/Orchestra Residencies
Program, sponsored by the Exxon Corporation, the
Rockefeller Foundation and the National Endowment
for the Arts. A documentary film was made about him,
under the title Soundings. His music ranges from works
for chamber ensemble to large-scale orchestral
compositions, many of the latter regularly included in the
programmes of the best known American orchestras.
His most successful work must be his Concerto for
Percussion and Orchestra, also recorded on CD by RCA.
The music of Joseph Schwantner is at once
identifiable, so unchanging is his musical language. He
has been principally influenced by three other
composers, George Crumb, Olivier Messiaen and
Debussy. The first of these is perhaps the most
important. Crumb, also an American, distinguished
internationally for his refined, delicately drawn
chamber works, like Schwantner, is fond of luminous
sounds and unusual effects. We also find with him the
frequent direction to hold the sustaining pedal of the
piano, to allow resonances to be heard. He also prefers
mystical, symbolic poems as inspiration for his vocal
and also for his instrumental works. Both composers are
distinguished by their free use of tonality and atonality.
Messiaen's music is marked by its use of harmony,
which is very consistent and gives unequalled attention
to sound colour within a formal section. Schwantner too
seeks a sound system that gives certain direction to his
harmonic practice, and is like Messiaen, who, in his
piano music, seeks a placing of notes that gives bright,
clear sounds. In spite of his modern musical language
Messiaen, incomparably, never gave up tonal writing,
but expanded tonality in a very individual way. The
same is apparent in Schwantner's music from the late
1970s. Debussy set music free from the chains of
functional harmony and was a pioneer, followed by
such composers as Stravinsky, Bartok, Crumb, and also
by Schwantner. He was the founder of a musical
aesthetic expanded by French and American composers,
not least through the teaching of the legendary Nadia
Boulanger.
Schwantner's early compositions are marked by
virtuoso instrumentation and a feeling for colour, but
not yet with the unmistakable sound that marks his
music from the end of the 1970s. In the works included
in the present recording there are certain harmonic
principles that may be briefly outlined:
Schwantner likes chords of equal intervals:
(a) Most frequent is minor third harmony, harmonic
material that is put together from two diminished
seventh chords separated generally by a whole tone, for
example C-E flat-F sharp-A-D-F-A flat-B. Closely
associated with that is melodic writing marked by
intervals such as the tritone, major seventh, and minor
ninth. Schwantner likes to vary this pattern, often in
brilliant descants. This is evident in Shadowinnower,
the first of the Two Poems of Aguedo Pizarro and major
parts of Music of Amber.
(b) Soaring and, very substantially, Distant Runes
and Incantations are marked by the use of major third
harmony. Here two typical chords, F-A-C sharp-E-
G sharp-C, or E flat-G-B-D-F-A-C sharp-E. This
harmonic basis is significantly less tense and has a
softer character.
(c) We occasionally hear harmony based on the
fourth in Soaring, generally associated with an
aggressive gesture. The wider fourths are for
Schwantner more dissonant than the thirds. There is a
particularly harsh harmony in fourths in Soaring, with
E flat-A flat-D flat-D-G-C-C sharp-F sharp-B-C-F-
B flat.
(d) Schwantner makes use of harmony based on the
fifth for more lyrical effects. A particular example is
Black Anemone, the second of the Two Poems of
Aguedo Pizarro. The first piano chord may be noticed
as an example, G-D-A-B-F sharp-C sharp. This can
be understood as the chord of G major, with the major
seventh F sharp, the ninth A, and the eleventh as an
overtone. A gently impressionistic almost siren-like
sensuality distinguishes this form of fifth harmony in
Schwantner's work.
Sparrows was written in 1979 for the Twentieth
Century Consort. The text consists of fifteen haiku by
the eighteenth-century Japanese poet Kobayashi Issa.
Instead of reproducing the aesthetic of the haiku, with
its sharply outlined images, Schwantner's music
absorbs the meaning and character of these naturalistic
and universalist images and expresses them in a
comprehensively lyrical musical form. He thus creates a
series of what might be called dream-stages. These
stages reach from exuberant harmonies, harsh
dissonance, effusiveness finally to gentle hope.
Schwantner draws freely from fully varied stylistic
precursors to represent the poetic imagery.
Reminiscences of Renaissance dances and baroque
polyphony can be heard. By the process of reconciling
contrasting musical styles with the continuity of the
work, Schwantner successfully makes these styles his
own. The wide range of atmospheres and colours is
created by a setting whose acoustical possibilities are
used in a most profound and creative way. The voice is
supported by three instrumental groups, woodwind,
strings (tuned a semitone lower, to add a particular
fullness to the whole ensemble), and a combination of
piano, harp and percussion. The sound of the percussion
is strengthened by the strings, which strike the crotales
or antique cymbals with their bows, evoking an otherworldly
sound to accompany The River of Heaven. The
instrumentalists must also sing at various key points in
the whole work. This chorus element accompanies the
references to sparrows at the beginning and end of the
text. On the first occasion this exotic effect produces a
mysterious atmosphere of threatening danger, while at
the end this effect is particularly intimate, touching and
even soothing.
Soaring was written in 1986 and is a short, highly
virtuosic high-wire act for flute and piano. In
accordance with the title, Schwantner follows his
favourite practice, fanning out chords that give this and
many other pieces their sweeping character. The piano
begins with an intense introductory gesture that
articulates the harmonic element engaged throughout
the work. Following the piano's opening, the flute
enters with a series of declamatory phrases that interact
continually with the piano in a dialogue. The two
instruments form a continuous musical thread, with the
flute forcefully projecting its voice, while the piano
provides a supportive backdrop. The materials here later
formed the basis of a larger more extended work, A Play
of Shadows (1990), a fantasy for flute and chamber
orchestra.
Distant Runes and Incantations was written in 1984
as a kind of piano concerto with full orchestra. In 1987
Schwantner arranged it for chamber ensemble. This
version is scored for solo piano, flute (also piccolo and
alto flute), clarinet (doubling bass clarinet), percussion
and string quartet. The title of the work is taken from a
verse of an independent poem that provides a poetic
support for the music. Schwantner explains that this is a
procedure that he has used in various pieces, as, for
example, in the orchestral Aftertones of Infinity (1978)
and Music of Amber (1981). Although the work is not
particularly programmatic in conception, the poem
provided a source of extra-musical imagery continued
throughout the development of the work, fitting with
and forming the composer's musical ideas. The music
consists of a single extended movement in which the
piano weaves continual threads through the texture. The
piano has the principal responsibility for the
presentation of simple musical elements, sharing,
mixing and uniting these elements with other
instruments.
Two Poems of Aguedo Pizarro were written in July
and August 1980, the third of five works composed for
the American soprano Lucy Shelton. The work was first
performed by her and pianist Margot Garrett on 25th
November 1980 in Alice Tully Hall at the Lincoln
Center in New York City. The texts are taken from a
bilingual collection of poems under the title
Sombraventa-dora/Shadowinnower by the American
poet Aguedo Pizarro. While the original poems were
written in Spanish, the work uses an English translation
by a friend of the poet, Barbara Stoller Miller. The
surrealist images and magical poetic landscapes that the
poems evoke reflect, the composer tells us, the vocal
quality that he found most bewitching in Lucy Shelton's
singing, and the result was an attempt to bring together
these two irresistible worlds. The two songs are very
different. Shadowinnower is a rather aggressive,
harmonically tense song, consisting of various small
sections. Here there are minor-third sounds that also
play a large part in Music of Amber, both works often
using the same musical material. The special feature of
the first song is (apart from the pipe, performed by the
singer and pianist in two places) is the very effective
introduction of four crotales, played by the singer as she
sings, a very unusual demand. Black Anemones, the
second song, offers a great contrast with the dramatic
and complex first song. On the one hand is the vocal
line melodious, singable and catchy, while the work is
harmonically based on fifth overtones, as in two lyrical
passages in Sparrows. The result is a work of a tender,
very romantic, nostalgic, even ecstatic character.
Music of Amber, written for the New York Music
Ensemble in February 1981, is scored for flute, clarinet
(doubling bass clarinet), violin, cello, piano and
percussion. The first performance was on 10th April
1981 at the Civic Center in Chicago. In the same year
the work won first prize in the chamber music category
at the Kennedy Center Friedheim Award. The first
movement, with the subtitle Wind Willow Whisper, was
originally commissioned by the Fromm Music
Foundation to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the
Da Capo Chamber Players and was performed by them
in March 1980 at the Alice Tully Hall. Because of the
relatively short duration of the movement a second
movement was written and the first movement was
enlarged by the extension of the percussion part. The
second movement, with the subtitle Sanctuary, provides
a formal counterbalance, and at the same time reveals
and develops further musical material from the first
movement. The work is dedicated to the American
patron Paul Fromm. There is a short poem before each
of the two movements.
Klaus Simon
English version by Keith Anderson
Sparrows (more info)
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Sparrows - 16:31
Soaring (more info)
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Soaring - 1:38
Distant Runes and Incantations (more info)
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Distant Runes and Incantations - 14:54
2 Poems (more info)
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Shadowinnower - 7:02
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Black Anemones - 4:41
Music of Amber (more info)
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Part I: Wind Willow Whisper - 7:45
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Part II: Sanctuary - 12:31