L’shana tova! Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown. The Jewish New Year marks the traditional anniversary of the creation of Adam and Eve.
This Thursday morning, though the observant will likely be in synagogue as I present my weekly show on WPRB, I thought I would try to tie in loosely with the celebrations by assembling a playlist of music about the creation of the world. We’ll hear Aaron Copland’s “In the Beginning,” the Adam and Eve duet from Franz Joseph Haydn’s oratorio “The Creation,” Jerome Moross’ Adam and Eve ballet “The Last Judgment,” and the “Creation Symphony” by Scottish composer William Wallace.
Not all of the selections will derive from the Judeo-Christian tradition. We’ll also hear Alberto Ginastera’s “Popol Vuh,” after the Mayan creation story; Darius Milhaud’s “La Création du monde,” inspired by African creation myths; “The Creation of the World” from the “Edda Oratorio” by Icelandic composer Jon Leifs; and Jean Sibelius’ “Luonnotar,” after a passage from the Finnish national epic, the Kalevala.
Some of the music will tie in very loosely indeed. Sir Arthur Bliss’ ballet “Adam Zero” begins with the birth of Adam, then sets him on an allegorical journey through the cycle of life. Romeo Cascarino’s “Pygmalion” is a beautiful metaphor for the artist who falls in love with his own creation.
One of the morning’s true curiosities will be a collaborative effort organized by composer and conductor Nathaniel Shilkret, who managed to cajole a number of the day’s greatest talents, then living in California, into contributing to a seven movement piece for narrator, chorus and orchestra. The individual movements of the “Genesis Suite” were composed by Arnold Schoenberg, Alexandre Tansman, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Ernst Toch, Igor Stravinsky, Milhaud and Shilkret himself.
The creation of the heavens and the earth may have taken six days, but we’ve got only five hours this Thursday morning, from 6 to 11 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and wprb.com. I’ll be sending you best wishes for a sweet new year, from Classic Ross Amico.
IMAGE: Adam and Eve (1526) by Lucas Cranach the Elder
“Is there any honey on that apple?”
