Howard Hanson (1896-1981): Orchestral Works, Vol. 1
Howard Hanson was born in Wahoo, Nebraska, on October 28th, 1896. He studied at the Institute of Musical Art, before graduating from Northwestern
University in 1916. He taught at the College of the Pacific, and the
Conservatory of Fine Arts, before winning the American Prix de Rome for his
ballet Californian Forest Play of 1920. His appointment as Director of
the Eastman School, Rochester, inaugurated a 40 year association, during which Hanson
taught many composers of the younger generation, as well as shaping its
orchestra, the Eastman Philharmonia, into a body of national standing. This is
reflected in the many recordings they made, particularly in the 1950s and '60s
for the Mercury label, covering a wide range of American music in addition to
Hanson's own. In 1964, Hanson founded the Institute of American Music of the Eastman
School, marking the culmination of his pioneering work into the study and
dissemination of American music across a broad range of genres. He received 36
American honorary degrees, a Pulitzer Prize for his Fourth Symphony, and
was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1935, and to the American
Academy of Arts and Institute of Arts and Letters in 1979. He died on February 26th, 1981.
As a composer, Hanson was an unashamed musical romantic.
Perhaps through his Swedish ancestry, he displayed an early and lifelong adherence
to North European symphonism - particularly Sibelius, whose influence he
transmuted in very specific and, in his view, specifically American ways. This
is nowhere more apparent than in his Nordic Symphony, Op. 21, the first
of the seven symphonies which would span the entirety of his composing career.
Completed in 1922 during his time in Rome, the influence of his then-teacher Respighi
can be detected in the powerfully evocative orchestral style. The fact,
however, that it shares the same key, E minor, as Sibelius's First Symphony cannot
be coincidental, as Hanson's freewheeling and often intuitive approach to form frequently
brings to mind the Finnish composer.
The opening movement begins with an earnest melody on
strings, quickly becoming more expansive and impulsive. A vivid panorama opens
out, with more than a hint of Bax's Tintagel in the vivid orchestral colouration.
After an evocative transition on horn and solo woodwind, the second theme (2:21)
alternates between upper and lower strings, before sounding forth imperiously
in full orchestra. Solo wind herald a return of the opening theme, as the movement's
material is not so much developed as animated by skilful harmonic eleboration.
Increasing intensity is gained (6:46), and the mood darkens, before a
heightened restatement of the opening theme. The second theme now maintains the
momentum, as a rhythmically-incisive figure in the horns presages the main
climax (beginning 10:35). This is snatched short, however, and the movement
ends with a plangent reminiscence of the opening mood.
The slow movement opens with expressive string gestures,
solo oboe and flute contributing evocatively, to this musical seascape. A brief
climax heightens the pictorially-inclined mood, before strings usher in a more
robust version of the opening theme (4:02). Solo horn comments resignedly on
the idea, and clarinets wind the music down to its restful close. The Finale
breaks out impulsively with a rhythmically-agitated theme on full
orchestra, clearly related to the opening theme of the first movement. Oboes
and upper strings introduce a more wistful melody, abruptly cut short by strokes
on the bass drum (3:50). A starkly tragic theme now emerges over a heavy tread
in the lower strings, an well-defined episode in place of the expected development,
before the opening agitation reasserts itself. The second theme now expands directly
into the movement's clinching climax - a heady peroration (from 8:15), after
which the surging rhythmic energy sees the symphony through to a powerful
conclusion. Its E minor tonality stated forcefully and unequivocally.
Completed in 1933, Merry Mount was to be Hanson's
only opera. With a libretto by R. L. Stokes after the novel by Nathanial
Hawthorne, the premiere, under Tullio Serafin, took place at the Metropolitan Opera,
New York on February 10th, 1934 (a recording taken from the New York run is
available on Naxos Historical 8.110024/5). The scenario, concerning witchcraft
and sexual obsession in seventeenth century New England, offered unlimited
scope to the composer's full-bodied orchestration and lush harmonic manner.
Despite initial sucess, however, the opera was not revived until 1964 and
seldom thereafter. Hanson compiled the present five-movement suite in 1938 and
recorded it in 1940. The Overture begins with a brass chorale, which
sounds forbodingly over tolling timpani and gongs, gaining in passion as the
music emerges into focus. A heightened turn to the major, replete with pealing
bells, indicates the powerfully emotive nature of the story about to unfold.
Children's Dance is a witty and rhythmically agile
scherzo, bounding forward with uninhibited zest. Ironically, it depicts
the presence in the town of pleasure-seeking cavaliers. Love Duet is
warm and lilting, the melodic material intensifying by degree, before it
reaches a purposeful climax over a measured timpani tread, and closes in a
suddenly ominous mood, reflecting the doomed desire of Pastor Bradford for Lady
Marigold Sandys. The Prelude to Act II opens pastorally, becoming
rhythmically animated as the music moves forward impulsively into the Maypole
Dances. This vividly descriptive sequence, complete with modal inflections
and offbeat percussion touches, heads relentlessly to its whirlwind conclusion;
a graphic image for the conflict between hedonism and puritanism which
underlies the opera's fateful conclusion.
Written during 1925-6, Pan and the Priest is an intriguing
symphonic poem, which introduces a new rhythmic clarity to Hanson's
compositional armoury. The opening idea sounds out mournfully, and appropriately,
on cor anglais, soon joined by clarinet and oboe, before strings add an
atmospheric backdrop. The music grows more animated over a steady pulse, reaching
a short-lived climax, before solo wind effect a brooding return to the opening.
Suddenly a piano, marked obligato in the score, brings about a new impulsiveness,
the music striding forward vigorously. Lower strings introduce a new theme (6:28),
which grows quickly in expressive ardour, while not neglecting the more pensive
mood heard earlier. The reappearance of the first idea presages the main
climax, with both themes passed excitedly around the full orchestra. The work
closes in a mood of full-throated eloquence.
Rhythmic Variations on Two Ancient Hymns is one of
Hanson's least known works, and was thought to be lost until quite recently.
The first hymn emerges sombrely and spaciously, before a solo violin (1:29) sounds
forth its successor, melancholy and with just a hint of the archaic, over a
halting accompaniment. This is combined in canon on full strings, before the
texture opens out and the hymns combine to draw this short, evocative piece to
its expressive conclusion.
Richard Whitehouse