Jacob Druckman (1928-1996) String Quartets Nos. 2 and 3 Reflections on the Nature of Water Dark Wind Jacob Druckman was born in Philadelphia on 26...
Jacob Druckman (1928-1996)
String Quartets Nos. 2 and 3 Reflections on the Nature of Water Dark Wind
Jacob Druckman was born in Philadelphia on 26 June 1928, the
son of a manufacturer with a strong amateur musical talent. He began playing
the piano at the age of three, and at the age of ten came to the notice of
Louis Gesensway, a leading musical figure in Philadelphia in his day and member
of the Philadelphia Orchestra, who taught him the violin and composition while
he was in his early teens. His early works failed to make an impact and at the age
of 21 he decided to abandon music altogether, but was saved from this course by
Aaron Copland who, having seen his work, invited him to Tanglewood as a
composition student. He studied at the Juilliard School in New York with Bernard
Wagenaar, Vincent Persichetti and Peter Mennin, and at the Ecole Normale de
Musique with Tony Aubin. Druckman produced a substantial list of works,
including orchestral, chamber, vocal and electronic music. Organisations that
commissioned his music included Radio France, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
the New York Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Baltimore Symphony,
the St Louis Symphony Orchestra, the Juilliard Quartet and IRCAM. Druckman was
Professor of Composition at Yale University, and also taught at Juilliard, Bard College, Tanglewood and Aspen. He served for four years as composer-in-residence at the
New York Philharmonic and as Artistic Director of the Horizons Festival.
Druckman's early mature pieces from the 1950s include a
Violin
Concerto (1956) and two ballets. His first major success was with
Four
Madrigals (1958), for a cappella chorus, in which he was drawn to texts by
the English metaphysical poets including Donne's 'Death, be not proud'. This
was soon followed by
Antiphonies I, II and III (1963), again for chorus,
on texts by Gerard Manley Hopkins. Druckman's music uses renaissance polyphony,
but in a contemporary and experimental context. He was already interested in
new spatial possibilities in vocal writing and the idea of "cross-fading"
so that sounds float and flash, antiphonally, across the musical spectrum. By
the mid-1980s he had begun his involvement with electronic music, and a series
of works entitled
Animus use the performer and instrument theatrically
as well as musically, in conjunction or competition with a pre-recorded tape. Despite
the wildness of some of these pieces, he continued to reach backwards to
earlier musical forms, and began to favour direct musical quotation.
Druckman was well into his forties before he felt ready to
face the ultimate challenge of the full symphony orchestra, but his first truly
large-scale work
Windows (1972) immediately won him the Pulitzer Prize.
The title aptly summarises one of the major facets of that piece and of the
series of highly successful and impressive orchestral works which followed it,
namely the perception of image and the contrast between light and dark, time
and space. Other titles take up these themes:
Chiaroscuro (1977),
Aureole
(1979),
Prism (1980) and
Mirage (1976), all of them huge
landscapes in which Druckman filters and sifts sounds and images in an almost
constellar fashion. Many of these works, too, contain quotations from earlier
music, especially from composers of the Italian baroque like Cavalli, and from
Cherubini (Druckman was fascinated by the Medea story and it is likely that had
he lived longer he would have completed his Medea opera). As the 1980s progressed,
he began to adopt a more linear and contrapuntal idiom of composition which,
while not exactly bringing his music through the full circle, marked an assimilation
of those elements of earlier musical form (which he had hitherto been inclined
to quote directly) into his own style of writing. This need for compactness
partly derived from a number of commissions for short occasional pieces like
Summer
Lightning (1991) and
Seraphic Games (1992). One of his last works,
Counterpoise
(1994), a song-cycle written for Dawn Upshaw and the Philadelphia Orchestra,
is almost post-romantic in its lyrical outpouring of texts by Emily Dickinson
and Guillaume Apollinaire.
Druckman's chamber music spans almost his entire career,
beginning with one of his earliest pieces, the
String Quartet No. 1 of
1948. The
Second Quartet dates from 1966, and was commissioned for the
Juilliard String Quartet by Lado, a philanthropic musical organization. It
belongs to the same period as the early
Animus pieces, when Druckman's
experimentalism was at its height. The work is cast in one continuous movement,
and is formally quite loosely constructed, although there are elements of
variation form in the treatment of the opening intervallic and metrical elements.
Much greater is the emphasis on contrasts in the relationship between pitch and
timbre, mood and dynamic, achieved through the use of devices such as
ricochet
legno (allowing the back of the bow to bounce off the strings whilst
altering the pitch on the fingerboard),
sordini (mutes)
ponticello,
and exaggerated
ponticello, where the bow presses against the mute
almost totally obscuring the pitch. At times the player is required to choke
the note on the string by dragging the bow too slowly to produce identifiable
pitch. Although the thematic material receives quite liberal treatment, there
is much dialogue and imitation between the voices, evident from the very
opening G on the first violin, taken up in echo by the other instruments. Sometimes
the parts follow one another, at other times they go in the opposite direction
and end up in open conflict. If structure and form are elastic, metrical
patterns are very precise and the aleatoric element is surprisingly small, and usually
only affords the players limited freedom within prescribed intervals or
parameters. As the work progresses, the mood becomes more intense as ideas
briefly encountered earlier return almost falling over one another to be heard.
The piece ends calmly, as it began, on a single note.
The
Third Quartet (1981) was a commission from the Fromm
Music Foundation for the Concord Quartet. It is, altogether, a much more
classical affair in structural terms. As the composer comments in the score; "There
are two insistent, inexorable subjects running through the entire work. The
first, presented simply at the opening, moves through violent and complex transformations
in the variations and recedes to a shadowy structural skeleton in the two
scherzi. The second, that of the
marcia-ritornelli, remains almost
untouched, obstinately retaining its character". The work opens on a
single note (D) and gradually unfolds in a sort of wedge pattern, the intervals
steadily widening, culminating in a short tremolo interlude. Dramatic gesture
soon appears in the form of demisemiquaver runs, and ostinati figurations which
imitate and affirm intervallic elements. Soon the viola takes up a repeated
note sequence (D again) and so the variation process proper starts
. The
variations come in continuous groups of three, the first being followed by two
marcia-ritornelli
(themselves divided by a scherzo) and which introduce a strongly rhythmical
dimension to the music, giving it further dramatic impetus and providing a springboard
for new variations. In the first scherzo, the repeated note idea returns, but
with variation of pitch, timbre and dynamic, and intervals being linked and closed
by glissandi and portamenti. Sudden lush chords herald the return of the
marcia
which closes the first movement. The second movement (Variations 4, 5 and
6) sees dramatic tension increasing with earlier elements receiving more concentrated
and simultaneous development. In the sixth variation there is a fragment of
what may be a romantic quotation. The third return of the
marcia at the
beginning of the third movement is also the most clearly defined rhythmically,
and from then on the tempi gradually become opaque and distorted, especially in
the succeeding seventh variation. There is also a marked decline in tension as
the mood quietens in the final two variations and the music returns to its
little bubble of a sustained D. The quartet ends with the bursting of this
bubble in a shower of semiquavers.
Reflections on the Nature of Water (1986) was commissioned by the
marimba player William Moersch and first heard at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. in November of that year. It is, in essence, a series of etudes and
one is immediately struck by the oriental, even Japanese, mood so often
associated with the instrument. The music perfectly captures the marimba's
reflective character, and is overlaid with a shimmering tonal texture. Each of
the six movements reflects a different physical property of water, and Druckman
uses his favoured intervals, the second and augmented fourth or tritone, studiously
avoiding consonant intervals such as thirds and fifths. Rapid repeated note
patterns and figurations appear, especially in the second and last movements.
The meditative third movement (marked
Tranquil) could almost be a
Japanese woodprint. The fourth (marked
Gently swelling) is the most
complex rhythmically, with irregular, almost calypso-like dance patterns between
the two hands. The ferocious last movement is a sort of joust. The composer
writes: "
Reflections on the Nature of Water is a small payment
towards a very large debt. There were primarily two composers, Debussy and
Stravinsky, whose music affected me so profoundly during my tender formative
years that I had no choice but to become a composer. It is to Debussy that I
doff my hat with these reflections of his magical preludes."
Druckman's music had been moving into a more established,
romantic pattern in his final decade and
Reflections is a clear instance
of this trend.
Dark Wind for violin and cello (1994) was one of his last
works, and is both remarkably concentrated and concise throughout its six minute
span. Elements from the earlier quartets may be readily discerned, (concern
with folding and unfolding intervallic elements, timbre, repeated note patterns
etc.), but the leanness of texture and terseness of utterance suggest a new
sense of urgency. The piece is a brief essay (again in quasi-variation form) on
the material heard at the beginning, and is a fitting summation of all that is
finest and most distinctive in Druckman's mature style.
Jacob Druckman died in May 1996. Shortly before he died, he
was able to be present at some of the recording sessions for this disc, and
made known his delight and enthusiasm with the results.
Bret Johnson