KIM: Violin Concerto / Dialogues / Cornet
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Earl Kim (1920-1998) Violin Concerto Dialogues Cornet Earl Kim was born in 1920 in Dinuba, California and studied with Arnold Schoenberg, Ernst Bloch, and...
Earl Kim (1920-1998)
Violin Concerto Dialogues Cornet
Earl Kim was born in 1920 in Dinuba, California and
studied with Arnold Schoenberg, Ernst Bloch, and
Roger Sessions. He was a professor at Princeton from
1952 to 1967 and at Harvard from then until 1998, and
was the recipient of numerous awards and commissions.
He died of lung cancer in 1998.
As a composer Earl Kim was a master craftsman
and an unabashed romantic. He had a deep familiarity
with the language of Western classical music but also
found inspiration elsewhere in Korean folk-song, a
Japanese rock garden, the Javanese gamelan, a musicbox
lullaby, the whirling dervishes. Despite the variety
of his sources his pointed and economical voice is
always unique and recognisable, his music always
beautifully made and immediately appealing.
Kim was never one to accept the ordinary. For
instance he adapts the serialism invented by his teacher
Arnold Schoenberg to suit his affective or dramatic
purposes. In Enough, a melodrama from Kim's second
evening-length music/theatre piece on texts by Samuel
Beckett (Narratives, 1979), Kim attaches two-note
figures to each new important pronoun or noun in the
narrated text until the crucial word 'enough' is reached.
At that point in this bleak landscape, he has completed a
twelve-tone row. The first six notes of that row are then
used in the instrumental interludes between each section
of text. That same six-note array (hexachord) appears in
other pieces in Narratives helping to unify the entire
evening; it is also the pitch collection found most
frequently in Schoenberg's diatribe against tyranny, the
Ode to Napoleon Bonaparte.
In several of his best-known pieces Kim refines this
technique even further by constructing the discourse out
of a series of musical palindromes (mirror images).
Dead Calm from Exercises en Route, Kim's first
music/theatre piece on Beckett texts, is the most famous
example of this technique. In the Violin Concerto,
written for Itzhak Perlman in 1979, the opening's
heavily muted string chords are palindromic. The first
chord of that series provides the three notes for the
opening solo melody which itself is palindromic. The
ensuing section has three parts, a rhythmically vigorous
exchange between solo violin and orchestra with pitches
drawn from successive six-note groups, a gamelan-like
orchestral interlude that employs an inversion of the
opening three notes, and finally a return to the exchange
section with the pitch groups in reverse order, all of
which yields another large-scale palindrome. Rigorous
as these structural underpinnings are the musical surface
it supports - still, pulsating, pale, colourful, lonely,
crowded - is beguiling in its variety.
As Milan Kundera says about one of the characters
from his novel The Joke, 'he was never satisfied with
reaching the mind, he had to get at the emotions...' In
the Violin Concerto, the Episode in Part 2 features an
extraordinarily touching arioso violin line over an
undulating two-note accompaniment. It is a reflection
on the opening gesture of the piece, but here
transformed into a tender, soaring lullaby, an adoring
father's song for a newborn daughter. (Kim's second
daughter was born in 1978.) The hexachord at work in
this melody (three major thirds separated by a half step)
is often heard in Kim's music, making consistent
appearances at kind, affirming moments in the
emotional narrative of his pieces. As Kim is bold with
sentiment in the Concerto, he is bold with instrumental
virtuosity. The solo violin's relationship with the
orchestra shifts constantly between modernistic equal
partner and traditional virtuoso acrobat. That virtuoso
rôle is especially prominent in the scalar passages in
Variation 2 (in thirds, octaves, and tenths), in the fierce
cadenza at the end of Part I, and in the final exciting
scalar passages of the piece. Married to a violinist, Kim
knew his Paganini.
Juxtaposed lyrical and angular stretches also
populate Kim's much earlier concertante piece,
Dialogues for piano and orchestra, a composition
written in 1959 as a result of a Fromm Foundation
commission. The notion of dialogue is apparent from
the first moment; an opening melodic figure built on
two alternating intervals is subsequently heard in
alternating appearances between the solo piano and the
orchestra. Variations on this opening figure expand the
underlying interval to a major third. At that point a
diatonic scale in the upper strings introduces a
charmingly innocent piano passage built on the same
six-note array later used in the 'arioso' section of the
Violin Concerto. Given the freely atonal ambience of
the previous music, this diatonic passage, however
logically prepared, is a surprise. Here the notion of
dialogue has expanded to include a dialogue between
styles.
In Dialogues, as in all his music, Kim reaches
beyond intellectual satisfactions to the real and the
emotional. At the climax of the piece the orchestra
convincingly mimics the alternating drone of an
ambulance siren, a sound that for Kim embodied the
insecurity and horror of war. (Kim was a combat
intelligence officer in the Army Air Force, one of the
first Americans to fly over Nagasaki after the bombing.)
In retrospect the listener realises that the abstract
opening material was simply the seed that would grow
into the very tangible and menacing image at the centre
of the piece.
Kim's ability to manoeuvre between stances and
styles while maintaining the integrity of his voice is
remarkable. He often asserted that Mozart's great
strength as a composer was that he could go anywhere,
any time. One of the most compelling scenes in Kim's
evocative setting of Rilke's poem of love and war,
Cornet (1983), describes a feast that turns into an
evening of dance and allure. The six-note serial array
common to both Kim's Narratives and Schoenberg's
Ode provides the initial material for a supple Viennese
waltz that whirls about until it cadences miraculously in
E, the underlying tonic of the entire piece. That cadence
supports one of the most romantic lines in the narrative:
'From darkling wine and thousand roses the hour flows
foaming into the dream of night'. In this episode, one of
the sixteen episodes Kim chose from the original
poem's 24, Kim manages to dovetail the essential antiwar
message of the piece with a vivid description of the
beauty and heartbreak of adolescent eroticism.
Cornet is somewhat of a departure for Kim. All of
his work from the mid-1960s until the late 1970s sets, or
is influenced by, texts of Samuel Beckett. Beckett even
lurks beneath the surface of the Violin Concerto; the
rhythm and ethos of Part 2 of the Concerto are inspired
by Beckett's play Cascando. Rilke, dreamy and oblique
at times, is nonetheless more immediate and direct than
Beckett. Where Kim might have held back a central
concrete musical image in earlier work, he begins
Cornet with one of the authentic seventeenth-century
bugle calls that generate much of Cornet's material.
Similarly direct is the clanging, hair-raising music for
the military scenes. Throughout this later period of
Kim's compositional life, his music is instantly
communicative. It almost seems as if the trajectory of
his earlier forms (abstract beginnings leading to more
tangible images) is recapitulated in the trajectory of his
career.
Since Kim is best known for his music for voice,
such as Where grief slumbers, Now and Then,
Earthlight, finding a recording of his music without
singing is rare. His fixations on voice and narrative grew
out of Kim's initial musical experiences, learning the
poetry and folk-songs of his immigrant Korean parents
and joining his mother in listening to radio broadcasts of
operas. He has said that hearing a performance of Un bel
dě at the Hollywood Bowl was what finally convinced
him that music would be his life's work. Without a
single sung note, Kim still manages to sing from the
heart in each of the three pieces presented here. He
demonstrates the sure command of language,
instrumental colour, and form one would expect from a
master composer while stepping outside and beyond
those competencies to produce a music that movingly
addresses the human condition.
Paul Salerni
Violin Concerto (more info)
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Part I: Adagio molto sostenuto - 3:45
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Part I: Variation 1 - 1:44
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Part I: Variation 2: poco scherzando - 1:24
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Part I: Episode 1 - 1:28
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Part I: Episode 2: cadenza - 3:24
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Part II: Introduction - 2:56
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Part II: Episode: Adagio, ma non troppo/con affetto - 2:37
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Part II: Finale: Allegro molto - 5:03
Dialogues (more info)
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Dialogues - 9:12
Cornet (more info)
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Cornet - 25:43:00
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II. Von Langenau stirs in his saddle and says: "My Lord Marquis..." - 1:34
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III. Camp-fire. They sit round it and wait - 1:30
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IV. The little Marquis says, "You are very young, Sir?" - 1:34
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V. One day, in the morning, a horseman appears... - 1:53
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VI. A day's ride with the Army - 1:00
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VII. Von Langenau is writing a letter, deep in thought - 1:16
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VIII. They ride over a slain peasant - 1:56
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IX. It began as a feast. Then it became a festival, one hardly knows how - 1:56
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X. And there is one who stands and gazes with wonder upon this splendour - 1:59
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XI. "Have you forgotten that you are my page for this day?" - 0:53
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XII. Slowly the castle lights go out - 1:50
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XIII. Was a window open? Is the storm in the house? - 1:35
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XIV. He races to out-strip the blazing corridors, through the burning embrace of red-hot doors... - 1:00
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XV. Count von Langenau is right in the midst of the enemy, but quite alone - 1:34
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XVI. The tunic was burnt in the castle, the letter and the rose-leaf of a lady unknown - 1:12