Elie Siegmeister (1909-1991) Piano Music, Vol. 1 Elie Siegmeister is a significant figure among those native-born composers who defined American musical...
Elie Siegmeister (1909-1991) Piano Music,
Vol. 1
Elie Siegmeister is a significant figure
among those native-born composers who defined American musical style in the
twentieth century. Although he himself admitted that in childhood there was no
great evidence of his profound musical gift, his unswerving perseverance and
innate creativity helped him become a prodigiously productive composer. His
wide range of inventiveness encompassed virtually every musical medium, with a
stylistic diversity ranging from the most complex to the most simple, from the
most oblique to the most direct. With the piano, however, he found one of his
most potent vehicles for creative expression.
Born in New York City in 1909, Elie
Siegmeister enjoyed the many cultural advantages of an upper-middle-class
family. He studied piano with Emil Friedberger and, subsequently, music theory
and composition with Seth Bingham at Columbia University, from which he
graduated cum laude with a
Bachelor of Arts degree in 1927. Following four turbulent years in Paris,
studying composition with Nadia Boulanger, he returned to New York to start his
career as a composer, writer and champion of the contemporary American music
scene. He was instrumental in establishing in 1932 the Composers' Collective of
New York and in 1937 the American Composers Alliance. Siegmeister also immersed
himself in the expressive potential of the American folk-song. Over the next
decade, he produced much of his truly accessible music, characterized by
clarity and simplicity with a particular focus on uniquely American material.
Throughout the 1950s, American composition
turned towards the avant-garde. Although Siegmeister never considered this
trend truly worthy of his attention, his own style did undergo a transformation
towards one that was less accessible to the average listener. This change in
compositional direction culminated in his seasoned, mature style, beginning
around 1970, one that sought to express emotional drama as well as to retain
and absorb the earlier folk-song and jazz traditions. Throughout this period,
from 1949 to 1976, he served on the music faculty at Hofstra University, where
he enjoyed long-term financial security as well as abase from which to continue
his compositional growth.
Siegmeister's position as one of America's
pre-eminent composers is evidenced by the many prominent positions to which he
was elected. He served from 1960 to 1965 as vice-president of the American
Music Center, was chairman of the Council of Creative Artists, Libraries and
Museums in 1971, and was elected to the Board of Directors of the American
Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers in 1977. He died in 1991 in
Manhasset, New York.
Siegmeister completed his American Sonata in May 1944, after
resettling with his family in Brooklyn, New York. This was the first of five
major sonatas for solo piano and the only one that overtly represents, as he
wrote in the sonata's preface, "an American panorama, blending jazzy and
folk-like themes with purely classical form". At this point in his career,
he had enjoyed considerable success with several orchestral works also based on
American themes, namely, Ozark Set (1943)
and Western Suite (1945).
Constructed in straight-forward sonata-allegro form, the first movement opens
with an animated unison theme in D major. Accents are strategically placed
among the continuous stream of eighth-notes (quavers) to reflect a syncopated
rhythmic feeling of 3+3+2, similar to a rumba. This asymmetrical grouping
projects an infectious exuberance throughout this movement, whether the overall
musical character is energetic or lyric. The second movement, majestic and
expansive in tone, is unique in its thematic material, marking the only
occasion that Siegmeister incorporated quotations from authentic American
folk-songs in one of his piano works. The opening of the first section is based
on the African-American protest song, Sistern
and Brethren, and is the most prolonged melody of the movement.
Other, more fleeting references to two pioneer songs, The Saints's Delight and The Promised Land, are heard in the second
section. The third movement returns to the fierce rhythmic drive exhibited in
the first movement. Whereas that had relied on rhythm as a unifying device, the
final movement features a more varied thematic approach. An opening chordal
flourish quickly gives way to a syncopated "boogie" theme, which is
hammered out in the right hand and subsequently reiterated in a series of rapid
variations. The contrasting second theme is a beautiful melody in the style of
a leisurely cowboy song.
To the average listener, Siegmeister's On This Ground might seem to be a radical
change in direction. Indeed, by the time of this work's completion in 1971, his
style had taken a turn towards a more complex and subtle language. While the
five movements of On This Ground exhibit
a far less rigorous development and a distinctly atonal harmonic style,
Siegmeister nevertheless has here reached his mature style, a style that is
epitomized by thematic economy with a touch of Americana. The first piece of
this suite, Dream Freely, contains
spacious phrases and warm underlying harmonies, all freely developed in a
manner befitting its title. The second piece, Where?,
provides a striking contrast in its acutely dissonant concentration on
a single ascending major seventh. The third piece, Ariel, has a mercurial, quality that forms an ideal
compliment to the stern mood of the previous piece. Whereas the sevenths of Where? seem to struggle in their ascent,
those of A riel fall with ease, in
effect allowing natural gravity to take over. The fourth piece, Summer, paints a dreamy, peaceful
landscape. Its avoidance of any strong sense of underlying pulse clearly
projects a feeling of timelessness. The final piece, Mr. Henry's (Monday Night), is perhaps the most unusual of the suite.
It is an indulgence in contemporary ragtime style, which Siegmeister would
continue to explore throughout the remainder of his compositional life, as
ragtime was enjoying a strong resurgence in American popular culture.
In 1967, 35 years after his Theme and Variations No. 1, Siegmeister
composed his Theme and Variations No.2. Dedicated
to his daughter and son-in-law, Nancy and Alan Mandel, this sophisticated work
is remarkable in its efficient use of motivic material and dramatic impact. It
also shows the extent to which his command of this form had grown. Impressively
enough, the core of the entire set of fifteen variations is based on just four
notes: D flat-E flat-C-E. Siegmeister reveals his keen sense of resourcefulness
and creativity in the embellishment and disguise of this four-note motif
throughout, a motif comparable to the famous E-A-C-H motif, but without the
latter's extramusical or programmatic significance.
In 1980, a year after the completion of Piano Sonata No.3, Siegmeister produced
his Piano Sonata No.4, subtitled Prelude, Blues and Toccata. This sonata
was commissioned by The American University, in Washington, D.C., to honour the
inauguration of its new president, Dr. Richard Eerendzen. As its title
suggests, Siegmeister employed a more overt reflection of his own earlier
"Americana" period, thus continuing his musical maturation first
signalled in On This Ground. He
again uses the element of ragtime in the final movement, while also including a
"blues" theme and variations for the second movement, in a work that
represents perhaps his most idiomatic treatment of the piano of any of his solo
piano compositions. The first movement, Prelude,
employs an extremely compact sonata-allegro structure, with two
clearly distinct principal themes. The first uses elements of the opening
falling four-note motif, developed in alternating percussive eighth-note
(quaver) figures and arpeggiated flourishes. The second theme is a gentle,
folk-like melody that is initially presented in the form of a chorale. The
theme and variation structure of the second movement is based on a simple
blues-style melody, which is freely explored and developed in the seven
variations that follow. As with his other variation sets, Siegmeister quickly
launches into a radical dissection of the theme. Over the course of the
variations, the integrity of the original musical idea becomes irrelevant, to
the point where it appears merely as veiled fragments, freely interwoven into a
richly chromatic, dense texture. The third movement, Toccata, is a loose sonata-allegro structure. This movement
is unique among Siegmeister's toccata-like pieces in that it rarely makes use
of the typical staccato articulation. Rather, he seeks to project a
"jazzy" feeling by frequently emphasizing short, slurred groupings of
eighth notes (quavers), often derived from a 3+ 3+ 2 subdivision. In addition,
the climax of the development section occurs with a sudden intrusion of a
raucous ragtime passage.
Siegmeister's Piano Sonata No.5, his final work for piano solo, was
completed in 1987. A fitting conclusion to his extensive catalogue of solo
compositions for this instrument, the fifth sonata embodies many elements from
his past achievements. As with the fourth sonata, Siegmeister drew much
inspiration from his love of American blues and jazz. This sonata also reflects
his often extreme sense of emotional drama and turbulence. Many passages are
unparalleled in their overall density and technical difficulty. The first movement's
form is a departure from his earlier sonata structures, with no visible
evidence of a traditional sonata-allegro design. Rather, he appears to be
rejoicing in the principle of thematic contrast for its own sake. The movement
consists of nothing more than four distinct sections patched together and
immediately repeated with slight variations. The result is a kind of musical
mosaic, alternating between serene lyricism and explosive rhythmic energy. The
second movement is closely allied to the second movement of the fourth sonata
in its style and design. In the fifth, a set of seven variations develops from
a blues-style theme, differing from its predecessor in its use of a more lush
theme. Here Siegmeister pursues a free and unstructured mode of variation
technique. With the third and final movement, he returns to a clear
sonata-allegro structure. The two contrasting themes are characteristic of his
two sides: virtuosic, driving energy balanced with lyric radiance.
Kenneth O. Boulton
Kenneth Boulton
Throughout a varied career as soloist and
chamber musician, the pianist Kenneth Boulton has developed a special interest
in contemporary American piano music. This has led not only to extensive
performance projects based on or around the music of Aaron Copland and Elie
Siegmeister, but also to lecture-demonstrations on works by twentieth-century
American composers that are appropriate for students. A native of Seattle,
Washington, Kenneth Boulton completed undergraduate studies in piano at
Washington State University, and was awarded the Doctor of Musical Arts from
the University of Maryland. Past awards, among others, have led to appearances
with the Seattle Philharmonic Orchestra and the Washington-Idaho Symphony. He
maintains an active teaching schedule, currently serving on the piano faculties
of the Wilmington Music School, Delaware, and West Chester University,
Pennsylvania.