SCHUMAN: Symphonies Nos. 7 and 10
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William Schuman (1910-1992) Symphonies Nos. 7 and 10 Born on 4th August, 1910, in New York City, William Schuman's first musical studies centered on the...
William Schuman (1910-1992)
Symphonies Nos. 7 and 10
Born on 4th August, 1910, in New York City, William
Schuman's first musical studies centered on the violin,
though a passion for jazz and popular music led him to
teach himself a variety of instruments. On hearing Arturo
Toscanini conduct the New York Philharmonic in 1930,
Schuman withdrew from the School of Commerce at New
York University after a two-year stint there and embarked
upon private studies in harmony with Max Persin and
counterpoint with Charles Haubiel.
Following studies at Columbia University (B.A. from
Teachers College, 1935) and at Juilliard with Roy Harris
he joined the faculty of Sarah Lawrence College and in
1943 won the first Pulitzer Prize in music for his cantata, A
Free Song. Two years later he left academe to assume dual
rôles as director of publications of G. Schirmer, Inc. and
president of the Juilliard School of Music. From 1962 to
1969 he served as president of Lincoln Center for the
Performing Arts.
Balancing multiple careers as teacher and
administrator, he was able to write a large amount of
music. His Second Symphony (1937) caught the collective
attention of the musical world when it was performed the
following year in New York City. His best-known works
are New England Triptych, based on music written by the
eighteenth-century American composer William Billings,
and his orchestration of Charles Ives's wittily irreverent
Variations on "America." He died on 15th February,
1992, in New York City.
A dozen years elapsed between the completion of
Schuman's Sixth and Seventh Symphonies. The Seventh,
dating from 1960, resulted from a commission from the
Koussevitzky Music Foundation in the Library of
Congress to commemorate both the 75th anniversary of
the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the memory of Serge
and Natalie Koussevitzsky. Charles Munch led the
première with the Boston Symphony Orchestra on 21st
October 1960.
Though laid out in the traditional four-movement
classical symphonic format, the work is played without
pause as a single continuous entity. Striking contrasts in
mood and sonority among the movements ensure a sense
of both contrast and continuity. Throughout the Seventh
Symphony one notes a balance between the composer's
penchant for relentless energy and ripening Romantic
utterance that in retrospect may be seen as a harbinger for
the emergence of the post-serialism of the 1970s and
onward among a younger generation of composers.
The initial movement, Largo assai, begins with stark,
intensely focused chords. The prevailing mood is stern,
even threatening. Chordal strings alternate with ominous
interjections by winds, darkened further by the bass
clarinet. No percussion is used. As in much of Schuman's
music, a strong rhythmic undertow (strongly dotted
"packets" of energy) leads us irresistibly forward, creating
a state of anxiety reinforced by chromatic and dissonant
harmonies. Psychologically dark sonorities are created by
dialogue between the bass clarinet and other instruments,
especially the movement-ending cadenza for clarinet and
bass clarinet that acts as bridge to the second movement.
Marked Vigoroso, this begins with a brass fanfare that
recalls Copland's Fanfare for the Common Man. Though
the harmonies retain their forceful dissonance, the mood is
increasingly festive and bright, providing great contrast
with the dark musings of the opening movement. Added
contrast comes through the prominent use of timpani and
percussion, including piano and xylophone. The aptly
termed Cantabile intensamente third movement, for
strings only, is quieter and calmer though tinged with
mystery. The endlessly unfolding melody, in an arch-like
structure, creates an atmosphere of continuous yearning
that finally relaxes into a state of serenity. The concluding
Scherzando brioso begins with punching energy and uses
the full resources of the orchestral palette, in bold contrast
to the strings-only sonority of the previous movement.
Dance-like, with echoes of jazz, the composer's earliest
love, the movement is bright and festive, reflecting the
score's character as a celebration of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra's glorious history.
In anticipation of the nation's bicentennial celebration
in 1976, the National Symphony commissioned Schuman
to compose a suitable orchestral work to reflect two
centuries of American experience. He accommodated the
request with his Symphony No. 10, subtitled "American
Muse," which reflected the composer's dedication "to the
country's creative artists, past, present and future". Antal
Dorati led the National Symphony in the work's première
on 6th April, 1976.
It was Schuman's wife who suggested that he revisit
the opening music he had written four decades earlier, a
choral setting of Walt Whitman's Pioneers! O Pioneers!
The composer reflected: "My wife's instinct proved
fortuitous, for recalling Pioneers and experiencing again
its optimism was precisely what I needed to get me started
on the Symphony. Optimism is, after all, an essential
ingredient in understanding America's beginnings."
The first movement, Con fuoco (with fire), gets
straight to the point, using drum rolls, percussion and brass
instruments to suggest the brash and assertive spirit of the
nation's origins in revolution. Using a tonal vocabulary
intensified with pithy dissonance, the music is emphatic,
angular, lean-textured and propelled by packets of
energizing clipped notes. A long-breathed theme from
violins and horns enters and is underpinned by strongly
insistent rhythmic prodding from mixed brass, winds and
percussion. A highly contrasted Larghissimo second
movement begins close to inaudibility with pianississimo
muted high strings supported by woodwinds. Out of gently
insistent soft, repeated string chords a low melody begins
to unfold in cellos augmented by basses. High in the first
violins, a Romantic melody unfolds, marked cantabile
dolce, quasi parlando. The prevailing harmonies are
modestly dissonant. The music has a quiet, haunting,
reflective quality that is frequently nocturnal, both
beautiful and somewhat anxious. Gradually the dynamic
level rises as winds and French horns add punctuating
rhythmic figures. Halfway through the movement, a flute
melody enters with a scintillating theme floating over
trumpets. The flutes continue as dynamics rise and
stressful sonorities emerge from brass and strings below.
After a portentous climax, the dynamics drop suddenly;
anxiety abates immediately, replaced by a return to the
spirit and letter of a cantabile indication, ending the
movement quietly and with notable consonance. The
finale, Presto, begins with pizzicato in strings and a piano
in unison. Quirky dialogue evolves between plucked
strings and mixed winds. The strings assume a legato
articulation in unfolding a long melody surrounded by
chirping winds. Xylophone, glockenspiel and other
percussion enter in alternating conversation with winds
and/or strings. Further contrast in timbre is achieved
through dense, dissonant brass chords. About halfway
through, the mood and sonority change; light-hearted
strings play an animated and syncopated melody against
long-held notes in violins. Trumpet and other instruments
enter with equal animation and rhythmic playfulness. The
symphony ends on an exuberant blast of triple forte energy
from stratospheric piccolos to deeply resonant string
basses.
Steven Lowe © 2005 Seattle Symphony
Symphony No. 7 (more info)
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I. Largo assai - - 11:00
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II. Vigoroso - - 2:52
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III. Cantabile intensamente - - 9:14
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IV. Scherzando brioso - 5:52
Symphony No. 10, “American Muse” (more info)
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I. Con fuoco - 6:03
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II. Larghissimo - 13:25
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III. Presto - Andantino - Leggiero - Pesante - Presto possible - 12:22