Aaron Copland (1900 -) Fanfare for the Common Man Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes Billy The Kid Appalachian Spring Aaron Copland occupies an unassailable...
Aaron Copland (1900 -)
Fanfare for the Common Man
Rodeo: Four Dance Episodes
Billy The Kid
Appalachian Spring
Aaron Copland occupies an unassailable position in the music of the
United States of America. The son of Jewish emigrants from Poland and Lithuania,
he was born in Brooklyn in 1900, into circumstances comfortable enough to allow
him the study of music. He took lessons from Goldmark, a distinguished emigrant
from Vienna, and in 1920 went to Paris, where he studied with Nadia Boulanger,
the first of her American pupils. In Europe he was able to meet a number of the
leading young composers of the day and to see performances by Dyagilev's Ballets russes. At the same time he was
feeling his way towards a characteristically American style of composition,
that should be as clearly recognisable as the national style of the late 19th
century Russian composers.
In 1924 Copland returned to America, where his compositions began to
attract interest. At the same time he continued to maintain contact with musical
trends in Europe and with expatriate American composers. He organised important
series of concerts of contemporary American music, which he did his utmost to
publicise through his writing and lecturing, the second activity intermittently
at Harvard. During the course of an exceptionally active career, he exercised a
strong influence over a younger generation of composers, without in any way
fostering an exclusive nationalism. His achievements won him awards of all
kinds, at home and abroad, from the Pulitzer Prize in 1945 to the Order of
Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1970.
Fanfare for the Common Man,
scored for brass and percussion, was written in 1942 and first performed in
Cincinnati in the following year under the direction of Eugene Goossens. Billy the Kid, Rodeo and Appalachian Spring, although well enough
known in the concert hall, are ballet scores, their subjects as thoroughly
American as their musical idiom.
Rodeo was completed in 1942 and first staged in the same year by the Ballet russe de Monte Carlo, with
choreography by Agnes de Mille, niece of the Hollywood film-producer and one of
the most distinguished American ballerinas of the day. The sub-title of the
ballet, The Courting at Burnt Ranch, describes accurately enough its slender
plot. The cowboys chase every woman they see, but pay little attention to the
girl working with them on the ranch. The situation changes, however, when she
appears at a Saturday night ball dressed for the occasion, when the famous
Hoe-down is danced, the first time a square-dance had intruded into the world
of ballet. The four dance episodes that form the orchestral suite open with
Buckaroo Holiday, followed by the tranquillity of Corral Nocturne. The mood
changes with Saturday Night Waltz and the final Hoe-down.
The earlier ballet Billy the Kid
was written in 1938, commissioned by Lincoln Kirstein for the dancer Eugene
Loring, who devised the choreography. Kirstein based the story on the life of
the outlaw Billy the Kid, who had
killed a man for every year of his life, and was shot at the age of twenty,
ambushed by his one-time friend, the sheriff. The Open Prairie sets the scene,
an evocation of the Wild West countryside, in all its beauty. There follows
Street in a Frontier Town and the Card Game at Night, the occasion for Billy to
shoot a man who cheats. Gun Battle follows, succeeded by Celebration Dance, and
Billy's Death, shot after he has already escaped from jail by killing his
jailer. The Open Prairie, the music of the opening, returns in conclusion.
The third of the series of popular American ballets is Appalachian Spring, commissioned by the
Coolidge Foundation for Martha Graham and first staged at the Library of
Congress, Washington, in 1944. Copland explains that the ballet depicts a pioneer
celebration in spring around a newly built farm-house in the Pennsylvania hills
in the early part of the 19th century. The future bride and the young farmer
who is to be her husband go through the emotions, joyful and apprehensive,
aroused by their new domestic partnership. Mature experience is represented by
older neighbours, while a revivalist preacher and his followers remind the
couple of the vagaries of human fate, before leaving them to enjoy in peace
their new house. If the first ballet, Billy the Kid, had stressed the
opposition between the outsider and society, Appalachian
Spring breathes reconciliation, its conclusion based on the Shaker
song "'Tis the gift to be simple".
Czechoslovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava)
The Czechoslovak Radio Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava), the oldest
symphonic ensemble in Slovakia, was founded in 1929 at the instance of Milos
Ruppeldt and Oskar Nedbal, prominent personalities in the sphere of music. The
orchestra was first conducted by the Prague conductor Frantisek Dyk and in the
course of the past fifty years of its existence has worked under the batons of
several prominent Czech and Slovak conductors. Ondrej lenard was appointed its
conductor in 1970 and in 1977 its conductor-in-chief.
Stephen Gunzenhauser
The American conductor Stephen Gunzenhauser was educated in New York,
continuing his studies at Oberlin, at the Salzburg Mozarteum, at the New
England Conservatory and at Cologne State Conservatory. His period at the last
of these was the result of a Fulbright Scholarship, followed by an award from
the West German Government and a first prize in the conducting competition held
in the Spanish town of Santiago.
For NAXOS Gunzenhauser recorded Tchaikovsky's Symphony No.5, Beethoven's Overtures, the Saint-Saëns Organ Symphony, Orff's Carmina Buranaand the symphonies of
Borodin. He is currently engaged in recording all the symphonies and symphonic
poems of Dvořak, also for NAXOS.