The Lighter Classics in Music by David Ewen
introduction and the coda came the succession of lilting, lovable,
6829 words | Chapter 38
heart-warming waltz-melodies so remarkable for their grace, elegance,
freshness and poignancy that Lanner has sometimes been described as “the
Mozart of the dance.” Nevertheless, Lanner always emphasized soaring
lyricism where the elder Strauss was more partial to rhythm. The
Viennese used to say: “With Lanner, it’s ‘Pray dance, I beg you.’ With
Strauss it’s ‘You must dance, I command you!’”
The form which Lanner finally crystallized, and the style with which his
waltz music unfolded, were adopted by the two Johann Strausses, father
and son, who were destined to bring this type of Viennese music to its
ultimate development. Thus Lanner was the opening chapter of a musical
epoch. He was the dawn of Vienna’s golden age of waltz music.
Lanner’s most famous waltz is _Die Schoenbrunner_, op. 200, his swan
song. Other outstanding Lanner waltzes are: _Die Pesther_, op. 93, _Die
Werber_, op. 103, _Hofballtaenze_, op. 161, _Die Romantiker_, op. 167,
and _Abendsterne_, op. 180. “With Lanner,” wrote H. E. Jacob, “the
romantic epoch began for the waltz, and the flower-gardens and green
leaves of Spring penetrated into the ballroom. Lanner’s compositions are
unsophisticated and unpretentious, but his waltzes could no more be
commonplace than could a flower.”
Charles Lecocq
Charles Lecocq was born in Paris on June 3, 1832. For four years he
attended the Paris Conservatory where, as a pupil of Bazin and Halévy,
he received prizes in harmony and fugue. For a while he earned his
living teaching the piano and writing church music. In 1857 he shared
with Bizet the first prize in a competition for one-act operettas
sponsored by Offenbach. This winning work, _Le Docteur miracle_, was
successfully introduced in Paris that year. After that Lecocq wrote
several light operas which were failures, before he enjoyed a major
success with _Fleur de thé_ in 1868, first in Paris and subsequently in
England and Germany. His greatest successes came with two crowning works
in the French light-opera repertory: _La Fille de_ _Mme. Angot_ in 1872,
and _Giroflé-Girofla_, in 1874. Between 1874 and 1900 he wrote over
thirty more operettas. He died in Paris on October 24, 1918 after
enjoying for almost half a century a place of signal honor among
France’s composers for the popular theater.
Lecocq is remembered today mainly for _La Fille de Mme. Angot_ and
_Giroflé-Girofla_. The first of these was introduced in Brussels on
December 4, 1872. In Paris, where it was given on February 23, 1873, it
enjoyed the formidable run of more than five hundred consecutive
performances. The book—by Siraudin, Clairville and Koning—was set in
Paris during the French Revolution. Clairette, daughter of Mme. Angot,
must marry the barber Pomponnet even though she loves the poet, Pitou.
To avoid an undesirable marriage, even at the risk of arrest, Clairette
sings a daring song by Pitou about an illicit affair between Mlle. Lange
(reputed a favorite of Barras, head of the Directory) and a young lover.
When Pitou proves fickle, and is discovered in the boudoir of Mlle.
Lange, Clairette stands ready to forget him completely and to take
Pomponnet as her husband.
The sprightly overture, filled with vivacious tunes and dramatized by
energetic rhythms, is a favorite of semi-classical orchestras. So are
several dances from the operetta, including an electrifying Can-Can, and
a sweeping _Grand Valse_ with which the second act comes to an exciting
close. The main vocal excerpts are Pomponnet’s passionate avowal of
Clairette’s innocence, “_Elle est tellement innocente_” and the duet of
Mlle. Lange and Clairette, “_Jours fortunés de notre enfance_” both from
Act 2.
_Giroflé-Girofla_—book by Vanloo and Leterrier—was introduced in
Brussels on March 21, 1874. Giroflé and Girofla are twin sisters.
Giroflé is pressured by her parents to marry the banker, Marasquin;
Girofla is in love with an impoverished fire-eating Moor, Mourzouk. When
Girofla is secretly abducted by pirates, the Moor comes to her home
demanding to see her, only to mistake Giroflé for Girofla. The
complicated situation ensuing becomes resolved only after Girofla is
rescued and brought back home.
The most frequently heard excerpts from this gay score are the Pirates’
Chorus, “_Parmi les choses_”; the rousing drinking song, “_Le Punche
scintille_”; the ballad, “_Lorsque la journée est finie_”; and the love
duet, “_O Ciel!_”
Ernesto Lecuona
Ernesto Lecuona was born in Havana, Cuba, on August 7, 1896. As a boy of
eleven he published his first piece of music—an American two step still
popular with some Cuban bands. While attending the National Conservatory
in Cuba, from which he was graduated in 1911 with a gold medal in piano
playing, he earned his living as a pianist in cafés and movie theaters.
In 1917 he paid the first of several visits to the United States, at
that time making some records and giving a piano recital. He then made
concert tours throughout America and Europe playing the piano and
conducting semi-classical and popular orchestras. His performances were
largely responsible for popularizing in America both the conga and the
rumba in the 1920’s. He also made some successful appearances at the
Capitol Theater, in New York, where he introduced his own music,
including such outstanding successes as _Malagueña_, _Andalucía_, and
_Siboney_ (the last originally entitled _Canto Siboney_, which became an
American popular-song hit in 1929). These and similar pieces made
Lecuona one of the most successful exponents of Latin-American melodies
and dance rhythms in the United States. Lecuona has written over five
hundred songs, forty operettas, and numerous compositions both for
orchestra and for piano solo.
From a piano suite entitled _Andalucía_ come two of Lecuona’s best known
instrumental compositions. The first is also called _Andalucía_, a
haunting South American melody set against a compulsive rhythm. It was
made into an American popular song in 1955.
Another movement from _Andalucía_ is even more familiar: the
_Malagueña_. Since its publication as a piano solo in 1929, _Malagueña_
has sold annually over a hundred thousand copies of sheet music each
year; it has become a favorite of concert pianists; it is also often
performed by salon and pop orchestras everywhere in orchestral
transcriptions; and it has been adapted into a popular song, “At the
Crossroads.” It is in three sections, the first being in the malagueña
rhythm dynamically projected in slowing expanding sonorities; a contrast
comes in the middle part with a poignant Latin-American melody.
_Andalucía_, the single movement and not the suite as a whole, has been
given a brilliant orchestral dress by Morton Gould who has also
orchestrated two outstandingly popular Lecuona songs. One is “La
Comparasa,” a picture of a traditional parade during the Carnival season
in which Negroes and muleteers play their native instruments and sing
their sensual songs. The other is “Gitanerias,” haunting gypsy music.
Franz Lehár
Franz Lehár was born in Komorn, Hungary, on April 30, 1870. His father,
a bandmaster, was his first music teacher. When Franz was twelve, he
entered the Prague Conservatory where he remained six years specializing
in the violin with Bennewitz and theory with Foerster. His studies were
completed in 1888, after which he played the violin in the orchestra of
the Eberfeld Opera. He subsequently became an assistant bandleader of
his father’s ensemble and a director of Austria’s foremost Marine bands.
In 1896 he realized his first success as a composer of operettas with
_Kukuschka_, produced in Leipzig. In 1902 he became conductor of the
Theater-an-der-Wien, in Vienna, home of operettas. There, in the same
year, he had produced _Viennese Women_ (_Wiener Frauen_). The operetta
after that was _The Gypsy_ (_Der Rastelbinder_), seen in 1902 in one of
Vienna’s other theaters. With _The Merry Widow_ (_Die lustige Witwe_),
seen in 1905, Lehár achieved a triumph of such magnitude that from then
on he was one of Austria’s most celebrated operetta composers (and one
of the wealthiest) since Johann Strauss II. He wrote about thirty more
operettas (three of them in the single year of 1909-1910). The most
famous were _The Count of Luxembourg_ (_Der Graf von Luxemburg_) in
1909; _Gypsy Love_ (_Zigeunerliebe_) in 1910; _Frasquita_ in 1922;
_Paganini_ in 1925; _The Tsarevitch_ (_Der Zarewitsch_) in 1927; and
_The Land of Smiles_ (_Das Land des Laechelns_) in 1929. During World
War II Lehár lived in seclusion at his villa in Bad Ischl, Austria.
After the war he became embittered by the widely publicized accusation
that he had been pro Nazi, arising no doubt from the well-known fact
that _The Merry Widow_ was Hitler’s favorite operetta. What was
forgotten in this attack against Lehár was the fact that his wife had
been classified by Nazis as non-Aryan and that on one occasion both and
he and his wife were subjected by the Gestapo to house arrest. Lehár
died in Bad Ischl, Austria, on October 24, 1948. He is one of the few
composers to outlive the copyrights of some of his most famous works.
Lehár’s popularity in the early part of this century gave the Viennese
operetta a new lease on life at a time when its heyday was believed
over. It was through the influence of Lehár’s immense popularity and
success that composers like Oscar Straus, Emmerich Kálmán, and Leo Fall
began writing their own operettas. Lehár’s best stage works have been
described as “dance operettas” because of the emphasis placed on dance
music, the waltz specifically. The dance usually becomes the climax, the
focal point, of the production. Stan Czech further points out that
Lehár’s waltzes are “slower and sweeter than those of Johann Strauss,
were definite prototypes of the modern slow waltz, and their Slav
atmosphere gave them an exciting and individual character.”
_The Count of Luxembourg_ (_Der Graf von Luxemburg_)—text by Willner and
Robert Bodanzky—was first given in Vienna on November 12, 1909. This
operetta opens in an artist’s studio in Paris where René, the
impoverished Count of Luxembourg, is offered five hundred thousand
francs by Prince Basil if René is willing to marry the singer Angele and
let her share his title. The reason for this peculiar arrangement is
that the Prince is himself in love with Angele, wants to marry her, but
prefers that his wife have a title. After they get married, René and
Angele discover they are in love with each other, a fact which
eventually the Prince is willing to accept since he is ordered by the
Czar to marry a legitimate Countess. As in most Lehár’s operettas, the
high musical moment comes with a waltz—the infectious duet of René and
Angele, “_Bist du’s, lachendes Glueck_,” which is also extremely popular
in orchestral adaptations. Other appealing numbers are the second act
duet, “_Lieber Freund, man greift nicht_” and the tenor aria, “_Maedel
klein, Maedel fein_.”
_Frasquita_, produced in Vienna on May 12, 1922, is remembered most
often for one of Lehár’s most beautiful vocal numbers, the nostalgic and
romantic _Frasquita Serenade_, “_Hab ein blaues Himmelbett_.” Fritz
Kreisler made a fine transcription for violin and piano, and Sigmund
Spaeth provided the melody with American lyrics.
_Gypsy Love_ (_Zigeunerliebe_), had its world première in Vienna on
January 8, 1910. The librettists (Willner and Bodanzky) provided a
romantic storybook setting of Rumania, and a romantic central character
in the form of the gypsy violinist, Jozsi. Zorika is ineluctably drawn
to Jozsi though she is actually betrothed to his half-brother, Jonel. In
a dream, she gets a foretaste of what her life would be with one so
irresponsible and fickle as a gypsy violinist, with the result that she
is more than happy to marry Jonel. The main waltz melody (one of Lehár’s
greatest) is “_Nur der Liebe macht uns jung_” and the most infectious
Hungarian tune is Jozsi’s soaring entrance gypsy melody to the
accompaniment of his violin, “_Ich bin ein Zigeunerkind_.”
From _The Land of Smiles_ (_Das Land des Laechelns_) comes what is
probably the best loved and most widely sung of all of Lehár’s vocal
numbers, “Dein ist mein ganzes Herz” (“Thine Is My Heart Alone”) which
opened not in Vienna but in Berlin, on October 10, 1929. This was
actually a new version of an old Lehár operetta, originally called _The
Yellow Jacket_ (_Die gelbe Jacke_) which had been introduced in Vienna
in 1923. The romantic plot of both operettas involved a Chinese
diplomat, Prince Sou-Chong, and Lisa, daughter of an Austrian Count.
They marry and settle in Peking in whose strange setting, Lisa’s love
for the Prince soon turns to hate. With great magnanimity—even though
this is in violation of ancient Chinese traditions and customs—he allows
Lisa to leave him and return home.
In _The Yellow Jacket_, “Thine Is My Heart Alone” is sung by Lisa, and
at that time this number made little impression. The famous tenor,
Richard Tauber, fell in love with it, and performed it so extensively in
his recitals everywhere that he and the song became inextricably
identified. When Lehár revised his operetta and renamed it _The Land of
Smiles_, he cast the song “Thine Is My Heart Alone” as a major
second-act aria for Prince Sou-Chong, Richard Tauber playing the part of
the Prince. _The Land of Smiles_ was a personal triumph for Tauber who
appeared in it over 2,500 times all over the world. “Thine Is My Heart
Alone” became with him something of a theme song. He rarely gave a
concert anywhere without singing it either on the program itself or as
an encore. When _The Land of Smiles_ was given in New York City in 1946,
with Tauber as the star, the operetta was renamed _Yours Is My Heart_;
in this production Tauber sang the song four times in four different
languages, French, Italian, German, and English.
There can be little question but that _The Merry Widow_ (_Die lustige
Witwe_) is one of the most famous operettas ever written. It was a
sensation when first performed, in Vienna on December 28, 1905. It came
both to London and New York in 1907, a major success in both places. In
Buenos Aires it was performed simultaneously in five theaters in five
different languages. Since 1907 there was hardly a time when _The Merry
Widow_ was not being performed in some part of the world. It has enjoyed
in excess of six thousand performances, a thousand of these in Vienna
alone. On several occasions it has been adapted for the screen.
Victor Léon and Leo Stein wrote the text. This is the usual operetta
material involving a beautiful heiress from a mythical kingdom. She is
Sonia from Marsovia, who is leading a gay life in Paris. Beautiful and
wealthy, she is inevitably sought out by the most handsome men of Paris.
The government of Marsovia is eager to get her to marry one of its
native sons, the dashing Prince Danilo, thereby keeping her fortune at
home. As she conducts her vivacious night life she is zealously watched
over by the Marsovian Ambassador, Baron Popoff, who never loses an
opportunity to further the interests of Danilo. Eventually, Sonia has
had her fling and is ready to settle down with the Prince.
The _Merry Widow Waltz_, “_S’fluestern Geigen, Lippen schweigen_,” an
eye-filling climax to the third act, is not only the most popular
excerpt from this operetta but also one of the most celebrated waltzes
ever written. A secondary waltz, “Vilia” is also highly beguiling, while
a third musical favorite from this score is “_Da geh’ ich zu Maxim_”
(“_The Girl at Maxim’s_”).
What is one of Lehár’s best waltzes, second in popularity only to that
of _The Merry Widow_, does not come from any operetta. It is the _Gold
and Silver Waltzes_ (_Gold und Silber Waelzer_), op. 79 which he wrote
as a concert number.
Ruggiero Leoncavallo
Ruggiero Leoncavallo was born in Naples, Italy, on March 8, 1858. He was
graduated from the Bologna Conservatory, then spent several years
traveling. He finally came to Paris where he earned his living playing
the piano, singing, and writing music-hall songs. The powerful Italian
publisher, Ricordi, commissioned him to write a trilogy of operas set in
the Renaissance. Leoncavallo completed the first of these operas, _I
Medici_, but it proved too expensive to mount and was shelved. This
experience convinced him that he ought to write an opera of slighter
dimensions, one which would not cost too much to produce, and which
would be in the realistic style (“_Verismo_”) just made so popular by
Mascagni’s _Cavalleria Rusticana_. In four months’ time, Leoncavallo
completed _Pagliacci_, the opera through which his name survives. It
received a triumphant première in Milan in 1892, with Toscanini
conducting. Though Leoncavallo wrote many operas after that he never
wrote one as good or as popular as the one that made him world famous.
Only one of these later operas has retained interest, _Zaza_, introduced
in 1900. A third opera, _La Bohème_, was well received when introduced
in Venice in 1897, but was soon thrown into complete obscurity by a
rival opera on the same subject, that of Puccini. In 1906 Leoncavallo
toured the United States in performances of _Pagliacci_. The failures of
his last operas made him a bitter, broken man in the last years of his
life. He died in Montecatini, Italy, on August 9, 1919.
The composer prepared his own libretto for _Pagliacci_, a play within a
play. A troupe of strolling players headed by Canio arrives for
performances in a Calabrian village. Canio’s wife, Nedda, falls in love
with Silvio, one of the villagers, and she in turn is being pursued by
the pathetic clown of the troupe, Tonio. Through Tonio, Canio discovers
his wife has been unfaithful to him, but fails to learn the identity of
his rival. At the troupe’s evening performance—and in a play that
closely resembles the actual happenings within the company—Canio kills
Nedda when she fails to tell him who her lover is. But Silvio, in the
audience, reveals himself by rushing on the stage to help Nedda. There
Canio kills him.
Many of the selections from this opera are famous, but the most famous
of all is the tenor aria, in which Canio speaks his immense grief on
discovering that his wife has a lover, “_Vesti la giubba_.”
The other familiar excerpts include the baritone prologue, “_Si può_,”
in which Tonio explains to his audience that the incidents in the play
about to be presented are true to life and that the players are not
performers but human beings; Nedda’s delightful ballatella, “The Bird
Song” (“_Stridono lassù_”) where she tries to forget about Tonio’s
initial response of jealousy by watching and describing the casual and
carefree flight of birds overhead; the “Harlequin’s Serenade” in the
play within the play sequence in the second act, “_O Columbina!_”; and a
melodious orchestral Intermezzo which separates the first and second
acts, music which hints darkly at impending tragedy through a poignant
recall of Tonio’s prologue.
Anatol Liadov
Anatol Liadov was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, on May 10, 1855, the
son and grandson of eminent Russian conductors. He was a pupil of
Rimsky-Korsakov at the St. Petersburg Conservatory, but was so derelict
about attending classes that in 1876 he was expelled. Reinstated two
years later he now became fired with both ambition and industry, proved
a brilliant student, and was graduated with highest honors. He was then
appointed teacher of theory there, eventually becoming a renowned
professor, a post he retained until the end of his life. He died in
Novgorod, Russia, on August 28, 1914.
Liadov was at his best in his fairy tales for orchestra (_The Enchanted
Lake_, _Baba Yaga_ and _Kikimora_); in songs; and in smaller pieces for
the piano. He was a student of Russian folk music of which he made
numerous adaptations, and whose styles and idioms percolated into many
of his compositions.
The _Eight Russian Folksongs_, a suite for orchestra, op. 58 (1906) is
one of Liadov’s adaptations. There are eight movements. In the first,
“Religious Chant,” the main song is that chanted by children in
religious processions; it is heard in English horn and bassoons. This is
followed by “Christmas Carol,” its main theme presented by oboes and
clarinets. “Plaintive Melody” is a village song, and “I Danced With a
Mosquito,” a humorous scherzo in which muted strings simulated buzzing
mosquitoes. The fifth movement is “Legend of the Birds” where the bird
song is presented by the woodwind. “Cradle Song” is a tender melody for
strings. This is followed by a lively rhythmic section, “Round Dance.”
The suite ends with the “Village Dance Song,” music that usually
accompanies the crowning of the May Queen.
Liadov is also the composer of a delightful trifle called _The Music
Box_ in which the delicate little tune is the kind that lends itself
gratefully to the tinkle of a music box. Liadov wrote this piece for the
piano, op. 32, but it is better known in orchestral transcriptions.
Paul Lincke
Paul Lincke was born in Berlin, Germany, on November 7, 1866. After
completing his music study he played the violin and bassoon in numerous
theater orchestras. He later distinguished himself as a theater
conductor. In 1897 he had his first operetta produced in Berlin.
Thereafter he wrote many operettas, all originally given in Berlin; he
became one of the foremost exponents of the light musical theater in
Germany of his time. The most famous were _Frau Luna_ (1899), _Fraeulein
Loreley_ (1900), _Lysistrata_ (1902), _Prinzessin Rosine_ (1905), and
_Casanova_ (1914). His last operetta was _Ein Liebestraum_, produced in
Hamburg in 1940. From 1918 to 1920 he was conductor at the
Folies-Bergère in Paris. He died in Klausthal-Zellernfeld, Germany, on
September 3, 1946.
His most famous composition is a song from _Lysistrata_ (1902): “The
Glow Worm” (“_Gluehwuermchen_”), which achieved phenomenal popularity
throughout the world independent of the operetta. It is still famous
both as a vocal composition and in orchestral transcriptions. A new
vocal version, with amusing lyrics by Johnny Mercer, was published and
popularized in the United States in 1952.
Franz Liszt
Franz Liszt was born in Raiding, Hungary, on October 22, 1811. A prodigy
pianist who made an impressive debut in Hungary when he was nine, Liszt
was financed by several Hungarian noblemen to study the piano with
Czerny in Vienna. In 1822, Liszt made a sensational debut in that city,
and in 1824, after a period of additional study in Paris, an equally
momentous appearance in the French capital. For the next three years
Liszt concertized throughout Europe, becoming an idol of music audiences
everywhere. Then, in 1827, he decided to abandon music for what he
regarded as nobler pursuits. He devoted himself in turn to religion,
politics, literature, and philosophy without finding the satisfaction he
sought. Then, in 1830, he went back to music. For about two years he
worked industriously on his piano technique, reassuming an imperial
position among the virtuosos of his generation beginning with 1833. He
combined profound musicianship and a phenomenal technique with such a
flair for showmanship and self-aggrandizement, that it can be said that
the modern piano virtuoso (both in the best and worst sense of that
term) was born with him.
In 1848, Liszt came to Weimar to fulfill duties as Kapellmeister to the
Grand Duke. The eleven-year period of this office represented
music-making of the highest order, as Liszt devoted himself to
presenting the foremost operatic and symphonic music in the best
possible performances. He was indefatigable in propagandizing the music
of the avant-garde composers of his day, reviving Wagner’s _Tannhaeuser_
and presenting the world première of that master’s _Lohengrin_ at a time
when Wagner was in disrepute in Germany because of his revolutionary
activities.
Finding himself incapable of maintaining the high standards he had set,
and disturbed by the prevailing antagonism to his espousal of new music,
Liszt left Weimar in 1859. Once again he sought refuge in a career
outside music. In 1865 he submitted to the tonsure and entered the Third
Order of St. Francis of Assisi as abbé. But music was not abandoned. He
taught the piano to gifted pupils who came to him from all parts of the
world; and he wrote an abundant amount of music, mainly for the piano.
He died in Bayreuth, Bavaria, on July 31, 1886, still at the height of
his powers and fame as composer, pianist and teacher.
Liszt left a vast repertory of music, including tone poems, symphonies,
piano concertos, songs, and a library of works for the piano. At his
best he was a great innovator, and a creator of vast dramatic and poetic
concepts. At worst, he was a showman shamelessly wooing his public with
superficial effects and trivial material. Most of his works belong to
the concert hall, but some of it has enormous popular appeal as salon
music.
The most famous of the latter is the _Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2_ in
C-sharp minor (1847), originally for piano solo but subsequently
orchestrated by the composer himself. This was one of nineteen
compositions in which Liszt developed the form of the rhapsody and
helped to make it popular; which he filled with strong national feelings
and the individual traits of Hungarian folk music. One of the features
of all these rhapsodies is their dynamic alternation of slow and sensual
music (called _lassan_) with fast, dramatic, exciting passages (called
_friskan_). The second _Hungarian Rhapsody_ opens with a _lassan_, a
slow, stately declamation. Then, after a clarinet cadenza, the _friskan_
appears, a spirited melody for violins and woodwind. After that fast and
slow passages, soft and loud dynamics, and rapidly changing meters and
rhythm help to generate excitement and create drama. The drama and the
excitement of this music never seem to lose their impact however many
times this rhapsody is listened to.
Of Liszt’s twelve tone poems for orchestra the most famous is _Les
Préludes_ (1850). The tone poem, or symphonic poem, is Liszt’s creation
in an attempt to bring to orchestral music the pictorial, dramatic and
programmatic qualities of Wagner’s music dramas. Thus Liszt conceived a
one-movement composition, flexible in form, in which a story is told,
picture described, or poem interpreted. The inspiration for _Les
Préludes_ is the _Méditations poétiques_ of Lamartine, from which
several lines are quoted in the published score to provide the music
with its program:
“What is life but a series of Preludes to that unknown song of which
death strikes the first solemn note? Love is the magic dawn of every
existence; but where is the life in which the first enjoyment of bliss
is not dispelled by some tempest; its illusions scattered by some fatal
breath; its altar consumed as by a thunderbolt? What soul, this cruelly
hurt, but seeks to repose with its memories in the sweet calm of
pastoral life? Yet no man is content to resign himself for long to the
mild, beneficent charms of Nature, and when the trumpet gives the alarm
he hastens to the post of danger, on whatever field he may be called to
fight, so that once more he may find in action full consciousness of
himself and the possession of all his powers.”
_Les Préludes_ opens with a dignified subject in the basses which is
subjected to considerable change and amplification before the main
melody is introduced. This melody is an elegiac song expressing the
happiness of love; its first entrance comes in four horns, strings, and
harp. The music is carried to a climactic point, after which a frenetic
mood is projected. Plaintively the oboe recalls the main melody; a
country dance tune is offered by the horn; and the main melody reappears
with opulent treatment. Another section of storm and stress follows
before the final majestic statement of the main melody.
Of Liszt’s voluminous writings for the piano, one composition above all
others has won favor throughout the music world as a tender, and
sentimental expression of love. It is the _Liebestraum_, “Love’s Dream.”
Liszt actually wrote three _Liebesträume_, but it is the third of this
set—in A-flat major (1850)—which is considered when we speak or hear of
the _Liebestraum_. All of these three piano compositions are adaptations
of songs by the same composer; the third _Liebestraum_ originated as “_O
Lieb’, so lang du lieben kannst_,” words by Freiligrath.
Frederick Loewe
Frederick Loewe was born in Vienna, Austria, on June 10, 1904. A musical
prodigy, he began to study the piano when he was five; started
composition at seven; at thirteen made a successful appearance as
pianist with the Berlin Symphony; and at fifteen was the composer of a
hit song, “Katrina,” that sold over a million copies of sheet music in
Europe. He received a thorough musical training from Busoni, Eugène
d’Albert, and Emil Nikolaus Rezniček, winning the Hollander Medal for
piano playing in 1923. One year after that he came to the United States.
Unable to make any progress in his musical career, he spent the next
decade traveling around the country and filling all sorts of odd jobs.
He punched cattle, mined gold, served as a riding instructor, and even
boxed professionally. Eventually he came back to New York where he found
a job in a Greenwich Village café playing the piano. In 1938 four of his
songs were heard in a Broadway musical, _Great Lady_, a failure. A
meeting with Alan Jay Lerner, a young lyricist and librettist, brought
him a gifted collaborator. They wrote a musical comedy that was produced
by a stock company in Detroit, and another called _What’s Up_ that was
seen on Broadway. Their first major success came with the Broadway
musical, _Brigadoon_, in 1947. _My Fair Lady_, in 1956, was one of the
greatest successes of the Broadway theater. They also helped make
entertainment history further by writing songs for the motion picture
musical, _Gigi_, the first to win nine Academy Awards, including one for
Lerner and Loewe for the title song. In 1960, Lerner and Loewe wrote the
Broadway musical _Camelot_ based on King Arthur and the Knights of the
Round Table.
_Brigadoon_ was a whimsical Scottish fantasy which came to Broadway on
March 13, 1947, book and lyrics by Lerner. Brigadoon is a mythical town
in Scotland which comes to life for a single day once every hundred
years. Two American tourists happen to come to Brigadoon during its one
day of existence. They become a part of its quaint life, and one of them
falls in love with a Scottish lass. The musical highlights include a
song that became a hit in 1947, “Almost Like Being In Love,” and several
that have a charming Scottish flavor, including “Come to Me, Bend to
Me,” “The Heather on the Hill,” and “I’ll Come Home With Bonnie Jean.”
_My Fair Lady_, produced on March 15, 1956, was Lerner’s adaptation for
the popular musical theater of Bernard Shaw’s _Pygmalion_. Eliza
Doolittle, an ignorant flower girl and daughter of a cockney, is
transformed by the phonetician, Professor Henry Higgins, into a
cultivated lady who is successfully palmed off upon high English society
as a duchess. Higgins falls in love with her and, though a long
confirmed bachelor, finds he can no longer live without her. _My Fair
Lady_ became one of the most highly acclaimed musical productions of
recent memory; Brooks Atkinson called it “one of the best musicals of
the century.” It achieved a fabulous Broadway run and was brought by
many touring countries to all parts of the civilized world, including
the Soviet Union. It captured one third of the honors annually conferred
on the theater by the Antoinette Perry Awards. The original-cast
recording sold over three million discs. The principal numbers from
Loewe’s captivating score include three romantic songs, two of the Hit
Parade variety (“I Could Have Danced All Night” and “On the Street Where
You Live”) and the third, “I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face”; two
atmospheric numbers that evoke musically the place and setting of the
play, “The Ascot Gavotte” and “The Embassy Waltz”; and the two cockney
ditties of Eliza’s father, “Get Me to the Church On Time” and “With a
Little Bit of Luck.”
Albert Lortzing
Gustav Albert Lortzing was born in Berlin on October 23, 1801. His
parents were actors compelled to lead an itinerant life which made it
impossible for Albert to obtain any systematic education. His mother
taught him music, the study of which he later continued briefly in
Berlin with Rungenhagen. His first effort at composition consisted of
some songs, but in 1824 he completed his first opera, _Ali Pascha von
Janina_. From 1833 to 1844 he was employed as a tenor at the Municipal
Theater in Leipzig, for which he wrote the comic opera _Die beiden
Schuetzen_, successfully produced in 1837. He achieved his greatest
success the same year with the comic opera, _Zar und Zimmermann_, which
within a few years’ time became a favorite among theater audiences
throughout Europe. His later operettas included _Der Wildschuetz_ (_The
Poacher_) in 1842 and _Der Waffenschmied_ (_The Armourer_) in 1846,
while one of his finest romantic operas was _Undine_ in 1845. Lortzing
also filled several engagements as conductor of operas and operettas in
Leipzig, Vienna and Berlin, and as an opera impresario. He died in
Berlin on January 21, 1851, one day after his last opera, _Die
Opernprobe_ (_The Opera Rehearsal_) was introduced in Frankfort.
Lortzing was one of the earliest and most successful exponents of German
national comic opera; and _Czar and the Carpenter_ (_Zar und
Zimmermann_) was his masterwork. It was first produced in Leipzig on
December 22, 1837. The music is consistently light and tuneful,
frequently in the style of German folk songs. The libretto, by the
composer, is a delightful comedy based on an actual historic episode:
the escapade of Peter the Great of Russia in Holland where he worked as
a carpenter. In the Lortzing comic opera, Peter the Great is a carpenter
on a ship at Saardam where he meets a compatriot, also named Peter, who
is a deserter. Temporarily they become rivals for the affection of Mary.
After the arrival of the Ambassadors from France and England to seek out
the Emperor, the latter quietly departs for his homeland, leaving behind
him both money and an official pardon for the other Peter. The gay
spirit of the comic opera as a whole is magically caught not only in its
vivacious overture, but in several familiar excerpts. The most notable
are: the Burgomaster’s comic entrance song, “_O sancta justa_”; in the
second act, the Wedding Chorus, and the French Ambassador’s beautiful
air, “_Lebe wohl, mein flandrisch’ Maedchen_”; in the third act the
vigorous _Clog Dance_ (_Holzschutanz_), and the very famous air of Czar
Peter, “_Sonst spielt’ ich mit Zepter_.”
Alexandre Luigini
Alexandre Luigini was born in Lyons, France, on March 9, 1850. He was
the son of the distinguished conductor of the Théâtre-Italien in Paris.
After attending the Paris Conservatory—where he was a pupil of Massenet
and Massart among others—the younger Luigini played the violin in his
father’s orchestra. In 1870 he began a successful career as ballet
composer with _Le Rêve de Nicette_, given in Lyons. His greatest success
came with the _Ballet Égyptien_, first seen in Lyons in 1875. For twenty
years Luigini was the conductor of the Grand Theater in Lyons and
professor of harmony at the Lyons Conservatory. Until the end of his
life he was the conductor of the Opéra-Comique in Paris. He died in
Paris on July 29, 1906.
An orchestral suite derived from some of the most attractive pages of
the _Ballet Égyptien_ score is a favorite of bands and salon orchestras
everywhere. This is music striking for its Oriental-type melodies and
harmonies, and for its colorful orchestral hues. The first two movements
are particularly popular. The first begins with a strong and stately
theme, but midway comes a gayer section in an exotic Oriental style. The
second movement highlights a capricious subject for the woodwind, once
again in a recognizable Oriental style.
Hans Christian Lumbye
Hans Christian Lumbye was born in Copenhagen, Denmark on May 2, 1810. As
a young man he played in military bands. He then formed an orchestra of
his own which achieved extraordinary fame throughout Copenhagen
(specifically at the Tivoli) with light musical programs. For these
concerts Lumbye produced a library of light music: waltzes, galops,
polkas, marches, and so forth. This music is so filled with infectious
tunes and pulsating rhythms—and they are so light in heart and
spirit—that they have won for their composer the sobriquet of “The
Johann Strauss of the North” and the status of Denmark’s foremost
creator of semi-classical music. He died in Copenhagen on March 20,
1874.
Lumbye’s dance pieces are played wherever there is a salon, pop or
café-house orchestra. Among his best waltzes are _Amelie_, _Hesperus_,
and _Sophie_. Other successful Lumbye compositions are the _Columbine
Mazurka_, the _Champagne Galop_, _Concert Polka_, _Dream Pictures_, _An_
_Evening at the Tivoli_, _King Frederick VII Homage March_, and the
_Railway Galop_.
Edward MacDowell
Edward Alexander Macdowell, one of America’s most significant
19th-century composers, was born in New York City on December 18, 1861.
After preliminary music study with private teachers, he attended the
Paris Conservatory from 1876 to 1878, and the Frankfort Conservatory in
Germany from 1879 to 1881. Maintaining his home in Germany, MacDowell
joined the faculty of the Darmstadt Conservatory in 1881, and in 1882 he
made an official bow as a composer by introducing his first piano
concerto in Zurich, and his _Modern Suite_ for piano in Germany. He
returned to the United States in 1888, settling in Boston where a year
later the Boston Symphony under Gericke introduced his now-famous Second
Piano Concerto, the composer appearing as soloist. From then on, most of
his important symphonic works were introduced by the Boston Symphony,
placing him in the vanguard of American composers of that period. In
1896 he filled the first chair of music created at Columbia University
in New York; at that time he was described as “the greatest musical
genius America has produced.” MacDowell resigned in 1904 after sharp
differences with the trustees of the University over the way a music
department should be run. The bitterness and frustrations suffered by
MacDowell during this altercation with the University undermined and
finally broke his always delicate health. His brain tissues became
affected. From 1905 on he was a victim of insanity, spending his time in
an innocent, childlike state, until his death in New York City on
January 23, 1908. Shortly after his death the MacDowell Memorial
Association was founded to establish a retreat for American creative
artists on MacDowell’s summer residence in Peterborough, New Hampshire,
which MacDowell’s widow had deeded to the Association.
A composer whose artistic roots lay deep in the soil of German
Romanticism, MacDowell was a composer who filled his writing with noble
poetic sentiments and the most sensitive emotions. His sense of style
and his feeling for structure were the last words in elegance, and his
lyricism and harmonic language were ever ingratiatingly inviting to the
ear.
The _Indian Suite_, op. 48 (1892) is the second of MacDowell’s suites
for orchestra. It is one of several works in which MacDowell uses
melodic and rhythmic material of the American Indian, blending this
idiom with his usual sensitive and poetic style. This is one of
MacDowell’s most popular works for orchestra. The first movement,
“Legend,” has a slow introduction in which the main melody is given by
three unaccompanied horns in unison. The melody is taken over by other
instruments and developed. Here the material comes from a sacred
ceremony of Iroquois Indians. The second movement is “Love Song,” whose
principal subject is immediately given by the woodwind; this melody is
derived from the music of Iowa Indians. “War Time” follows, a movement
dominated by a melody to which Indians of the Atlantic Coast ascribed
supernatural origin. This melody is heard in the first sixteen measures
in two unison unaccompanied flutes. A subsidiary section follows.
“Dirge,” the fourth movement, is a woman’s song of mourning for an
absent son, come from the Kiowa Indians. The mournful melody is heard in
muted violins. The suite ends with “Village Festival,” in which two
light and vivacious melodies from the Iroquois Indians are presented;
the first is a woman’s dance, and the second a war song.
The most familiar pieces of music written by MacDowell—_To a Water Lily_
and _To a Wild Rose_—come from the _Woodland Sketches_, op. 51 (1896), a
suite for solo piano made up of ten sections, each a descriptive poem in
tones. In this suite MacDowell became one of the first American
composers to interpret the beauty of American scenes and countrysides in
delicate melodies. Both _To a Water Lily_ and _To a Wild Rose_ are
exquisite tone pictures of Nature, and both have enjoyed numerous
transcriptions. The other eight movements of the _Woodland Sketches_
are: _Will o’ the Wisp_, _At an Old Trysting Place_, _In Autumn_, _From
an Old Indian Lodge_, _From Uncle Remus_, _A Deserted Farm_, _By a
Meadow Brook_, and _Told at Sunset_.
Albert Hay Malotte
Albert Hay Malotte was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on May 19,
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