Tag: Pearl Harbor

  • Remembering Pearl Harbor with John Duffy

    Remembering Pearl Harbor with John Duffy

    In 1997, I was sitting behind the desk in my bookshop in Philadelphia, when an older couple wandered in. The man was evidently careful about his movements, understandable, even under the best of circumstances, since one had to navigate a foyer with some stairs and then usually a dog when entering the space.

    After some time browsing, they approached the desk, and the man asked to see a piece of ephemera he noticed, a booklet on the composer and critic Virgil Thomson, that I had on low shelf beside me, waiting to be priced. This started a conversation, in the course of which it was revealed that he himself was a composer. When he told me his name, he seemed especially gratified that I knew who he was.

    But John Duffy’s Emmy Award-winning music for the PBS television documentary “Heritage: Civilization and the Jews” was played quite often on the local classical music station, especially around the Jewish holidays. (Duffy himself was Irish Catholic.) He and I had a lovely exchange, and when he asked me how much I wanted for the book, I told him it was on the house.

    The Duffys were in Philadelphia for the premiere of his new opera, “Black Water” (on a libretto by Princeton writer Joyce Carol Oates), at Plays and Players Theater, which was two blocks away from the shop. Perhaps in reciprocation for my generosity, he offered to comp me into the show.

    This was on a weekday. At the time, I was working the weekend mornings at WWFM in Trenton-Princeton, so it would be around 1:30 or 2:00 by the time I got back to Philadelphia and found parking on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon.

    That Saturday, I returned, and a friend of mine, who regularly sat the store in my absence, said that a kindly old gentleman had stopped by and dropped off something for me. John Duffy had gone to Tower Records and picked me up a copy of his CD “Freedom Works.” It was the only disc in stock that had selections from “Heritage.”


    With the CD he left the following note, rendered in a shaky hand:

    “Dear Ross: I wanted you to have a copy of FREEDOM WORKS. Tracks 6, 7 & 8 are based on my HERITAGE score. All best, John Duffy

    “P.S. I hope you found BLACK WATER absorbing. Thank you for the Thomson book.”


    Duffy already appeared unsteady when I met him, when he was only in his early 70s. He suffered from ill health later in life, but he held on until the 2015, reaching the ripe age of 89. He impressed me as an optimistic and gentle soul. In addition to his work as a creative artist, he went out of his way to help others in his field. He was founder and president of Meet the Composer, an organization that initiated countless programs to advance American music, from creation to performance and recordings.

    On the same CD he left, with “Three Jewish Portraits” (from “Heritage”), was his Symphony No. 1 and “A Time for Remembrance” – a “peace cantata,” as he subtitled it – commissioned in 1991 by the U.S. government to mark the 50th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor that killed 2,403 Americans, wounded 1,178 others – sailors, soldiers, airmen, marines, and civilians – and precipitated the United States’ entry into World War II. After listening to the music, I promptly added it to my regular repertoire for radio broadcast on December 7.

    In his booklet notes, the composer writes that it is “Dedicated to my sister, Agnes Duffy, Ensign, U.S. Navy, Nurse, IN HER MEMORY: and in remembrance of all those who die in war: the men, women, and children killed and maimed at Pearl Harbor; my cousin, Edward Quirk, Machinist’s Mate, USS Shaw; the men entombed in the USS Arizona; those at Hiroshima, Normandy, Bergen-Belsen, and more. MAY PEACE PREVAIL IN THEIR NAMES.”

    The texts are taken from a poem by Rupert Brooke, a speech by Franklin Delano Roosevelt, an African American spiritual, and actual letters written by sailors aboard the USS Arizona. On the recording, the performance features James Earl Jones, narrator, Cynthia Clarey, mezzo-soprano, and the Milwaukee Symphony, conducted by Zdenek Macal.

    I would love to share it with you here, but the audio comes and goes online. Occasionally somebody will post it somewhere, but after a little while, it will get taken down. I can’t find it streaming anywhere, but perhaps you will have more success, if you really dig. John Duffy is a fairly common name!

    Duffy himself lied about his age when enlisting during the war. He became part of the Amphibious Scouts and Raiders, forerunners to the Navy SEALs, before deploying on the USS Hopping, a destroyer escort in the Pacific. His duties included detonating Japanese mines by shooting them from ship deck. When his ship took fire from shore batteries at Okinawa, the sailor standing next to him was killed. Duffy had to stand guard over the dead man’s body until burial at sea in the morning. That night watch determined the course of his life. “Since our time is so fleeting and unpredictable,” he later commented, “I knew I had to dedicate my life to music.”

    John Duffy on his own war experiences and his decision to become a composer:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BBerCcmUyw4


  • Pearl Harbor: Weill, Schoenberg, and Remembrance

    Pearl Harbor: Weill, Schoenberg, and Remembrance

    December 7, FDR’s “day of infamy.”

    On this date in 1941, a Japanese strike force of 353 aircraft laid waste to the United States naval base on Oahu, Hawaii. Thousands of American servicemen and civilians were killed, precipitating the country’s entry into World War II.

    Although Europe, Russia, and the Far East were already at war, for the U.S. the attack on Pearl Harbor was an unanticipated catastrophe in peacetime. Days always start early in the service, but 7:48 on 12/7/41, a Sunday, will always be the wake-up call nobody wanted to get.

    In past years, I’ve written about American-born composers with connections to those caught in the attacks or who memorialized those who perished in them. This year, I direct your attention to two European refugees who proudly embraced their adopted country in its time of need. Both were Jewish. Both got out of Nazi Germany early, in 1933.

    Kurt Weill was denounced by the Nazis not only on racial grounds, but also for his leftist political leanings. After an interlude in Paris, he and his wife, Lotte Lenya, arrived in New York in 1935. There, he reinvented himself, embracing American popular song and stage music and finding success as a composer for Broadway. He became an American citizen in 1943.

    Three of Weill’s Walt Whitman songs – “Beat! Beat! Drums!,” “Oh Captain! My Captain!,” and “A Dirge for Two Veterans” – were written in response to the Pearl Harbor attack. He composed a fourth, “Come Up from the Fields, Father,” in 1947. Weill went on to orchestrate the first three of them. Carlos Surinach orchestrated the last, following the composer’s untimely death, three years later, at the age of 50.

    Arnold Schoenberg, who was actually Austrian, also left Germany in 1933. When the Nazis banned Jews from the universities, he lost his teaching position at the Prussian Academy of Arts. Furthermore, his music was branded “degenerate.” Schoenberg had actually converted to Lutheranism in 1898; but Nazi anti-Semitism caused him to swing back hard to Judaism, in defiance of Hitler. He became an American citizen in 1941.

    In contrast to Weill, Schoenberg found the vulgarity and vacuity of much of American culture frustrating. Yet he was clearly grateful to have been “driven into paradise,” as he described it, where “my head can be erect.”

    The attack on Pearl Harbor stirred him to reflect on his indebtedness to his adopted country. Leonard Stein, his assistant at the time, recollected a conversation they had had on December 7, following the bombing, which led him to believe that perhaps Schoenberg’s “Ode to Napoleon” was written in direct response to the event. More broadly, the composer’s setting of the poem by Lord Byron is a thrust in the face of tyranny that culminates in a commitment to the ideal of democracy as personified by George Washington.

    Not popular entertainment, perhaps – sprechstimme would be a hard-sell for the masses – but clearly Schoenberg had his heart in the right place.


    Weill, “Four Walt Whitman Songs” (orchestrated)

    Schoenberg, “Ode to Napoleon”


    PHOTOS: Schoenberg and family in the 1940s; Weill and Lenya at the piano

  • Pearl Harbor Remembrance & Reflections

    Pearl Harbor Remembrance & Reflections

    The years, they do fly by. It astonishes me how quickly important anniversaries make their laps. I don’t know if it’s because I’ve been doing this for nine years or because I’m now in my late 50s and time really does speed up when you’re older. Not OLD, mind you – for as nice as it would be to pass the days in a rocking chair on the front porch, I’m not collecting my Social Security benefits quite yet – but older.

    Furthermore, I have to say, increasingly I am a little intimidated to go back and look at my past posts. For Krampus, for St. Nicholas, and now for Pearl Harbor Day, I sincerely don’t know how I could improve on what I wrote last year, or even the year before. It is daunting to be in competition with oneself!

    Especially so, since I’ve been under the weather this week, and it’s difficult to do anything, so I hope you will excuse me for deferring to the more able-bodied Classic Ross Amico of yore for this day that has lived in infamy, as I do take it seriously, even as I puzzle over what has happened to my country in recent decades.

    Now is not the time to go too much into it, since the entire point is for me not to overextend myself in my weakened state, but it’s sad that we do not honor the countless Americans who sacrificed so much, both in the service and at home, by walking the walk. “Thank you for your service” is all well and good, but how about earning it by being civil to our neighbors, not treating domestic affairs like they’re a wrestling match, not glorifying violence, bullying, and vengeance, upholding fair-play, extending a helping hand, and doing our best to leave a positive imprint on our communities? We, as citizens of the United States, carry the seeds of our own salvation or destruction. Do we really want to be the ones to accomplish what the Axis could not?

    On December 7, 1941, a surprise strike by the Imperial Japanese Navy on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor resulted in 2,403 American deaths, 1,178 wounded, and the United States’ entry into World War II. Sailors, soldiers, airmen, marines, and civilians were among the casualties.

    Here is last year’s remembrance of composer John Duffy, who served in the U.S. Navy and had family at Pearl Harbor:

    And, from two years ago, my reflections on American Christmas in 1941:

    Hopefully, next year I will have the strength, the focus, the fire, and the time to pound out another mini-masterpiece. For today, I’m still getting over a flu and I’ve got a deadline looming.

    Dona nobis pacem. Peace on earth, goodwill toward men.

  • Pearl Harbor Christmas 1941 Anxious Holiday

    Pearl Harbor Christmas 1941 Anxious Holiday

    I was reflecting this morning that the events of December 7, 1941, would have made Christmas an anxious time for millions of Americans.

    It was on this date 80 years ago that the Imperial Japanese Navy launched a surprise strike on the United States naval base at Pearl Harbor, precipitating the U.S.’ entry into World War II. Sailors, soldiers, airmen, marines, and civilians were caught in the attack. In all, 2,403 Americans were killed and 1,178 wounded.

    A stunning blow, by any measure. Yet, from what I gather, though surely shadows must have flitted across the consciousness of any rational celebrant that year, Christmas in the U.S. proceeded pretty much as it always had.

    Of course, it wouldn’t be long before the war turned everyone’s lives upside down. There was the need to organize, train, and outfit an enormous influx of civilians into the armed forces. Means of production would be adapted to meet the necessities of defense. For those who remained at home, there would be restrictions on many facets of American life. It would be a time of enormous personal sacrifice, and of course concern for loved ones deployed around the globe.

    It’s hardly conceivable today, when so many Americans are affronted by the slightest suggestion that there is a world outside of themselves, that our citizenry would be up to such a challenge. Not when people become apoplectic if they have to wear a mask or endure a Columbus Day parade. I shudder to think what would be the reaction when the butter, bacon, and sugar disappeared.

    Christmas 1942 was really the era’s first “wartime Christmas.” In 1941, aside from any psychological discomfort, there were few deprivations for Americans. Gas rationing would begin in December 1942, and a 35 mph “Victory Speed Limit” imposed. By 1943, metal would disappear from kids’ toys and copper from pennies. In the coming years, fathers, sons, and brothers would be in short supply, as they spent Christmas abroad with Uncle Sam.

    Wartime Christmas was not merry for all, by any means. During the conflict, some of our fighting men were lucky enough to get turkey. Others were fortunate to get an apple or even a potato. All would have been thankful for their lives.

    Here’s an interesting article on American Christmases during World War II. I never realized that the nylon shortage was because the material was needed to make parachutes. I guess the dream was kept alive through pin-ups. At least Artur Rodzinski’s recording of the “1812 Overture” was selling well.

    https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2018/12/18/christmas-in-wartime/

    It’s not difficult to understand why wartime favorites like “White Christmas” and “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” were embraced in their poignancy. While family celebrations would continue during those lean years, for most servicemen, attendance would be only in their dreams.


    Newsreel of Pearl Harbor devastation

    FDR’s declaration of war

    “I’ll Be Home for Christmas”

    Rodzinski’s “1812”

  • Remembering Pearl Harbor & Seeking Unity

    Remembering Pearl Harbor & Seeking Unity

    Perhaps if we reflected more on all we’ve been through as a country, and the trials of our forebears, we would be more inclined to honor their sacrifices with less division, more public mindedness, and a little kindness.

    It was on this date in 1941 that the Imperial Japanese Navy launched a surprise military strike against the United States naval base at Pearl Harbor, awakening Yamamoto’s “sleeping giant” and precipitating the U.S.’s entry into World War II. Ultimately, that probably turned out to be a good thing, but tell that to the 2,403 Americans killed and the 1,178 wounded. Sailors, soldiers, airmen, marines, and civilians were caught in the attack.

    In 1991, American composer John Duffy was commissioned by the U.S. government to mark the 50th anniversary of the strike. The result was “A Time for Remembrance: A Peace Cantata.” Duffy dedicated the work to the memory of the victims of Pearl Harbor. Among them were the composer’s sister, brother, and cousin. The texts are taken from a poem by Rupert Brooke, a speech by Franklin Delano Roosevelt, an African American spiritual, and actual letters written by sailors aboard the USS Arizona.

    James Earl Jones is the narrator on the only recording of the piece, with the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra conducted by Zdenek Macal, which I am very sorry to see has not been posted online, though you’ll find a few audio clips when you click on the link. The relevant files are titled “The Dead,” “Letters Home,” “I Want to Die Easy,” “An End to War,” and “Blow out you bugles, over the rich Dead.”

    http://www.johnduffy.com/freedomworks.html

    Grant us peace – internationally and at home.

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