Tag: Samuel Barber

  • Ormandy’s Lost Chord American Music

    Ormandy’s Lost Chord American Music

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” for Eugene Ormandy’s birthday, it’s the second installment in a three-part series of Ormandy conducting the Philadelphia Orchestra in rarely-heard recordings of American music.

    Samuel Barber was born in West Chester, Pa., not far from Philly, in 1910. He attended Philadelphia’s Curtis Institute of Music and had his first orchestral work, the “School for Scandal Overture,” performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1931, when he was 21 years-old.

    His “First Essay for Orchestra” was sent to Arturo Toscanini in the same mail as his “Adagio for Strings.” Toscanini performed both works with the NBC Symphony in 1938, but it was Eugene Ormandy who made the first recording of “Essay,” with the Philadelphians, in 1940.

    Vincent Persichetti was born in Philadelphia in 1915, and he died there in 1987. In between, he attended Combs College of Music, the Curtis Institute (where he studied conducting with Fritz Reiner) and the Philadelphia Conservatory. He taught at Combs and the Philly Conservatory. Then he received an invitation from William Schuman (some of whose music we heard last week) to take up a professorship at Juilliard.

    Persichetti was one of our great composers, but to this day he remains underappreciated, more respected than loved. His Symphony No 4 of 1951 must be one of his most immediately attractive works.

    Finally, John Vincent may be the most undeservedly neglected composer in Ormandy’s entire discography. Ormandy described his recording of Vincent’s Symphony in D (“A Festival Piece in One Movement”) as “one of the best we have ever done,” and the piece itself as “one of the finest compositions created by an American composer in the past decade.” The 1954 work sounds at times like Sibelius gone to the rodeo, but my, is it good stuff!

    I hope you’ll join me for “All-American Ormandy II.” Ormandy recommends a visit to the Barber (pictured), then convinces with the Vincents, on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Happy birthday, Eugene Ormandy!


    Remember, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for the Trenton-Princeton area. Here are the respective air-times of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday on KWAX at 5:00 PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EST)

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday on KWAX at 4:00 PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EST)

    Stream them here!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    PLEASE NOTE: Ormandy’s recording of John Vincent’s Symphony in D was reissued yesterday, November 17, as part of Sony Classical’s new 88-CD box, “Eugene Ormandy/The Philadelphia Orchestra: The Columbia Stereo Collection.” I opened my set this morning with trembling hands!

    Persichetti’s Symphony No. 4 was reissued in 2021, as part of Sony’s laudable 120-CD box of Ormandy’s Philadelphia mono recordings, “Eugene Ormandy: The Columbia Legacy.”

    Both Sony releases are newly-remastered.

  • Samuel Barber’s Lost Symphony No. 2

    Samuel Barber’s Lost Symphony No. 2

    Just as KWAX allows for the continued broadcast of “The Lost Chord” – no longer affiliated with WWFM after twenty years, but still available in syndication – Howard Pollack’s biography, “Samuel Barber: His Life and Legacy,” preserves the story behind the composer’s Symphony No. 2.

    Barber’s music will be among my featured works this week on a program devoted to works conceived for the U.S. armed forces. Barber was serving in the U.S. Army Air Force when he was approached to write a symphony in 1943.

    Every two weeks, he would report to a colonel at West Point to demonstrate his progress. Here’s a passage from Pollack’s book, with a nice Princeton connection on p. 236.

    “As it [the symphony] was one of my most complicated works, I had no idea what [the colonel] expected to hear. I rather thought it might be something like ‘You’re in the Army Now.’ So I was a little nervous when I reported to play for him on a battered-up piano in the back of the army theater. All he said was, “Well, corporal, it’s not quite what we expected from you. Since the air force uses all sorts of the most modern technical devices, I’d hoped you’d write this symphony in quarter-tones. But do what you can, do what you can, corporal.”

    Barber actually made some concession toward this general expectation by employing, in the second movement’s final section, an “electrical ‘tone generator’” constructed by Bell Telephone Laboratories in imitation of the low-frequency radio signals used to help pilots navigate during these years. The composer even traveled to the company’s Princeton location to investigate the matter. “In the end, it never did work right,” recalled Barber. “I remember [conductor Serge] Koussevitzky having a fit at rehearsal and shouting “Throw the damn thing out.” When Barber revised the work in 1946, he rewrote the small tone-generator part for E-flat clarinet.

    Barber was very proud of the work when it was completed, thinking it one of his best pieces. However, with the passage of time, he came to feel embarrassed by it, perhaps because of its programmatic roots – although he always emphasized that the work was meant to reflect the emotional response to events rather than the events themselves – or perhaps because of the war itself, the ties to which he felt dated the piece. Whatever the case, after a few drinks one afternoon, he convinced his publisher to allow him back to the office to tear up the score. Of course, the piece had been published, so this was largely a symbolic gesture, and the Symphony No. 2 was revived after his death.

    Parenthetically, Barber did authorize the publication of the work’s Andante as a free-standing piece, called “Night Flight.” The score is prefaced by an epigraph by Antoine de Saint-Exupery (aviator and author of “The Little Prince”), from his novel of the same name, drawn from a passage depicting the final moments of a pilot’s doomed flight: “A single radio post still heard him. The only link between him and the world was a wave of music, a minor modulation. Not a lament, no cry, yet purest of sounds that ever spoke despair.”

    We’ll hear a recording of Barber’s complete, reconstituted symphony with Marin Alsop and the Royal Scottish National Orchestra.

    In addition, we’ll hear Morton Gould’s Symphony No. 4, his first large scale work for symphonic band. Gould’s symphony, composed in 1952 for the United States Military Academy at West Point, calls for a “marching machine,” but on the recording we’ll hear, a classic on the Mercury label, the feet will be those of the 120 musicians of the Eastman School Symphony Band. Frederick Fennell will direct the Eastman Wind Ensemble.

    Remember the sacrifice of Americans at war, while listening to “Orchestrated Maneuvers,” on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon. Stream it at the link below.


    Keep in mind, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour time difference – actually rather convenient for those of us located in the vicinity of WWFM. Here are the conversions of the respective air-times of my shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT – Fridays on KWAX at 5:00 PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EDT)

    THE LOST CHORD – Saturdays on KWAX at 4:00 PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EDT)

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    BONUS: Another of Barber’s wartime works, the “Commando March,” performed by “The President’s Own” U.S. Marine Band

    More info on Howard Pollack’s “Samuel Barber: His Life & Legacy”

    https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=c044908&fbclid=IwAR2xcgzDYdCzC0KFAlhyMOFt7S72RKmmnh_Nk4lsWPm9goNSUb1LHsSpDWg


    PHOTO: U.S. Army Air Force Corporal Samuel Barber

  • Samuel Barber Combed for Absorbing New Biography

    Samuel Barber Combed for Absorbing New Biography

    I do much of my reading in bed, in the hour or two before lights-out, frequently beneath drooping eyelids and interrupted by intervals of nodding; so it can take me a while sometimes to get through a book. In this case, it took me five or six weeks, probably, but they were unquestionably pleasurable ones, passed in the company of one of America’s greatest composers.

    If you’re at all interested in American art music of the mid-20th century, I’m confident you too will enjoy Howard Pollack’s exhaustive biography “Samuel Barber: His Life & Legacy,” issued last month by University of Illinois Press.

    The book has to be the culmination of years of research – of the 686 numbered pages, 118 are devoted to footnotes and index – yet the content is often astonishingly up-to-date, with references to performances, recordings, and even YouTube content so recent, it would seem as if it couldn’t possibly have been included by the time the book went to press.

    It’s also pleasant to find people I’ve known or worked with drifting in and out of the narrative. For instance, I had no idea that Karl Haas, longtime host of the radio series “Adventures in Good Music,” was responsible for commissioning Barber’s “Summer Music.” Nor did I realize the series began in 1959!

    Another radio personality, David Dubal, now host of “The Piano Matters,” but then music director of New York’s WNCN, preempted the station’s regularly-scheduled programming to broadcast an hour of Barber’s music in the afternoons during the composer’s final days, and Barber listened.

    And H. Paul Moon, who I have interviewed on the air a couple of times about his film projects, and now count among my concertgoing companions and friends, is acknowledged for his lovely, award-winning documentary, “Samuel Barber: Absolute Beauty.” Paul also receives credit for assisting the author in compiling the book’s photographs.

    Of course, Barber had many important connections to the Philadelphia area, having attended and taught at the Curtis Institute of Music and had many of his works, including a few premieres, played by the Philadelphia Orchestra. He also exhibited a lifelong affection for his birthplace of West Chester, PA – which, as a small-town Pennsylvania boy myself, I find relatable and touching.

    Barber was buried in West Chester in 1981, next to a gravesite held vacant for Gian Carlo Menotti, his friend, frequent collaborator, and romantic partner of decades. The two met during their student days at Curtis. Menotti would be buried in Scotland, but the West Chester would-be grave is marked by a headstone that reads, as per Barber’s request, “To the Memory of Two Friends.”

    Pollack’s biography is successful not only in expanding the reader’s knowledge of the composer’s sizeable and varied output – more varied than one might suspect on the evidence of his most frequently played works – but also in conveying a real sense of the man, who could be patrician and impeccably turned out, often aloof in public, with a waspish sense of humor, but also warm and supportive to his friends. And even, on occasion, unexpectedly whimsical. He once remarked that because of his fondness for soup, his coffin should be pelted with croutons. At his burial service, his friends took him up on it.

    There is also a charming anecdote earlier in the book, about how once Barber was attempting to get something straightened out with a utility company. In an unorthodox method of identity confirmation, the phone representative asked the composer to sing a few bars of his “Sure on This Shining Night.” Barber later remarked, “I’m afraid I sounded nervous. I had never sung for the telephone company before.”

    Pollack’s writing is everything it should be: lucid, informative, and engrossing. There’s nothing to jerk a reader out of the narrative (save perhaps the frequent use of “tellingly,” which after a while becomes endearing). One doesn’t have to be a specialist to get something out of the book, and it is frequently an enjoyable read, though I grant that some chapters will be more compelling than others, depending on the depth of one’s devotion to Barber’s music. The chapters of purely biographical and historical interest are especially absorbing. One will learn a lot, unquestionably, as even I have.

    With so many interviews and so much information to assimilate, I really don’t know how Pollack does it. I only just finally got around to reading his Copland bio, “Aaron Copland: The Life and Work of an Uncommon Man,” this past November, and the book, which was released over twenty years ago, is equally praiseworthy. And he’s done similar service for Marc Blitzstein, John Alden Carpenter, George Gershwin, Walter Piston, and lyricist John LaTouche. This guy deserves every award he’s ever received.

    You’ll find more about Pollack’s latest here:

    https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=c044908&fbclid=IwAR0SmvR30-NX6u9uOQ3pLmGMGmj-5VdJfCmN4vacoghLqEpZrRl1FSg_-IY


    80 years ago today, Barber’s “Commando March,” written while he was serving in the U.S. Army Air Force, received its first performance in Atlantic City, with the Army Air Force Technical Training Command Band under the direction of the composer. Hear it performed at the link by “The President’s Own” U.S. Marine Band:

    Barber’s final work, and one of his loveliest – the trunk of an oboe concerto he was too ill to complete – the “Canzonetta,” first performed posthumously in 1981:

    “Sure on This Shining Night,” frequently heard in an arrangement for choir, here sung by a baritone, as it would have been by Barber himself to the telephone company:

    “Summer Music,” commissioned on the recommendation of Karl Haas:

    “Samuel Barber: Absolute Beauty”

    https://samuelbarberfilm.com/

  • Samuel Barber Rediscovered New Music

    Samuel Barber Rediscovered New Music

    I’m only perhaps one sitting away from completing Howard Pollack’s biographical doorstop (at some 700 pages) “Samuel Barber: His Life & Legacy,” issued last month by University of Illinois Press. Barber was one of America’s greatest concert composers. Surely, you recognize him, at the very least, for his ubiquitous “Adagio for Strings.”

    Pollack’s book is praiseworthy for a number of reasons, not least of which is that it kindles a desire in the reader to listen to Barber’s music, but also to revisit those pieces one may not have encountered in a very long time. Furthermore, it exposes even a fairly conversant Barberophile like myself to a number of works I never even knew existed.

    One of these is the “Chorale for Ascension Day,” which Barber composed between “Antony and Cleopatra,” the opera that opened the Met at its new location in Lincoln Center in 1966, and “The Lovers,” his choral settings of poems by Pablo Neruda, given its premiere by the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1970.

    The chorale may not stand as one of Barber’s major works, but since I only just discovered it in time for Ascension Day, today, I figured I’d take the opportunity to give another plug to Pollack’s book, which goes into exhaustive detail about virtually everything Barber ever wrote, and to share a link to this, for me, until-now unknown music.

    The work was originally composed for brass choir for the dedication of the new Gloria in Excelsis Tower at the Washington National Cathedral in 1964. The cathedral’s organist and choral director, Paul Callaway, had premiered Barber’s “Toccata Festiva” with the Philadelphia Orchestra to inaugurate the Academy of Music’s new Aeolian-Skinner organ in 1960.

    Callaway likely saw to it that new works for the tower dedication were also commissioned from the likes of Lee Hoiby, John LaMontaine, Ned Rorem, and Stanley Hollingsworth. Soon after the premiere of Barber’s brass chorale, the composer provided Callaway with a setting of the piece for chorus, in this case employing a text by Robert Pack Browning.

    The piece is also sometimes identified as “Easter Chorale.” On the basis of what I can find on YouTube, it appears that the choral version is much more common. All the brass ensembles, it seems, would rather play arrangements of “Adagio for Strings!”


    “Chorale for Ascension Day”

    Dedication of the Gloria in Excelsis Tower

    1964 Dedication of the Gloria in Excelsis Tower

    “Toccata Festiva”

    “Adagio for Strings”

    Learn more about Pollack’s book here:

    https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=c044908&fbclid=IwAR1fG43rZrI31sNgSwMb7PJO05xooQ-Rke4YODIe1M2_xgTiFF7lVxA6k80

  • Samuel Barber Patrick Swayze Surprising Link

    Samuel Barber Patrick Swayze Surprising Link

    I’ve been remiss in not posting about it for a little while, but I’m still having a blast making my way through Howard Pollack’s 700-page Samuel Barber biography. Lots of great stuff in there, for music geeks, for anyone interested in local history (by local, I mean if you happen to live in the Pennsylvania/New Jersey/New York area or have been to Tanglewood), and more broadly, for anyone interested in the cultural and social history of 20th century America.

    There are too many amusing or even startling connections to itemize, but surely one of the most surprising is that actor Patrick Swayze, who I think most people are aware was a dancer as well as an actor, once appeared in a ballet choreographed to Barber’s solo piano work “Excursions.”

    Swayze, a principal with the Eliot Feld Ballet, was one of an ensemble of six who danced in the premiere of Felds’ “Excursions” at New York Public Theater in October 1975.

    “Excursions” is distinguished in Barber’s output as one of his few works evidently touched by American popular idioms (“Souvenirs” is another), with the influence of blues, folk ballads, and fiddle tunes. In its breezier moments, it almost seems as if the composer had been listening to Vince Guaraldi – which couldn’t possibly be the case, since the four movements were written between 1942 and 1944. The last movement is a barn dance, which inevitably calls to mind Aaron Copland (“Rodeo” was first performed in 1942), but Barber approaches the material very differently.

    The first movement was written for Jeanne Behrend, the composer’s friend and former classmate at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. Then Vladimir Horowitz took an interest. He gave the debut of movements I, II and IV at Philadelphia’s Academy of Music. Subsequently, he took them to Carnegie Hall. The third movement was yet to be written. The official premiere of the complete set was given by Behrend, who performed all four movements in December 1948. Personally, I like the third movement best. It just makes me happy.

    I’m not sure that Barber ever did any dirty dancing, but clearly he’s having the time of his life. Nobody puts Barber in a corner!

    Listen to “Excursions” here, performed by John Browning, the pianist for whom the composer wrote his Pulitzer Prize winning Piano Concerto:

    You’ll find more information about Howard Pollack’s “Samuel Barber: His Life and Legacy,” released earlier this month by University of Illinois Press, by following the link. Highly recommended, if you’re at all interested in classical music of the 20th century. (Barber lived from 1910 to 1981.) What a life, and how much the country has changed!

    https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=c044908&fbclid=IwAR0FtgkjO_EeSqjbfWEJB-0Wlh7eSldgHy1PqBSG200sXh_SdOBrSP5ntbQ

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