The Lighter Classics in Music by David Ewen
introduction are amplified and developed. A brilliant coda leads to the
6148 words | Chapter 49
conclusion of the work where the second of the two melodies is given for
the last time by trombones and strings.
Rimsky-Korsakov’s most famous work for orchestra is the symphonic suite,
_Scheherazade_, op. 35 (1888). Nowhere is his remarkable gift at
pictorial writing, at translating a literary program into tones, more in
evidence than here. This music describes episodes from the _Arabian
Nights_ in four movements which are unified by the recurrence of two
musical motives. The first is that of the Sultan, a forceful, majestic
statement for unison brass, woodwinds and strings; the second is a
tender melody in triplets for strings depicting the lovely Scheherazade.
The Sultan theme opens the first movement, entitled “The Sea and
Sinbad’s Ship.” After quiet chords for the brass, the Scheherazade
melody is heard in solo violin accompanied by harp arpeggios. The music
later becomes highly dramatic as Sinbad’s ship, represented by a flute
solo, is buffeted about by an angry sea, the latter portrayed by rapid
arpeggio figures. The poignant Scheherazade motive in solo violin
introduces the second movement, “The Tale of the Kalendar.” The tale is
spun in a haunting song for bassoon, dramatically contrasted by a
dynamic rhythmic section for full orchestra. The third movement, “The
Young Prince and the Princess” is a tender love dialogue between violins
and clarinets. After a recall of the Scheherazade melody there appears
the finale: “The Festival at Bagdad; The Sea, The Ship Founders on the
Rock.” A brief recall of the Sinbad theme brings on an electrifying
picture of a festival in Bagdad. The gay proceedings, however, are
interrupted by a grim shipwreck scene, vividly depicted by the exciting
music. This dramatic episode passes, and the suite ends with a final
statement of the Scheherazade theme.
The _Spanish Caprice_ (_Capriccio espagnol_), for orchestra, op. 34
(1887) is one of the composer’s rare attempts at exploiting the folk
music of a country other than his own. There are five parts. The first
is a morning song, or “Alborada,” in which two main subjects of Spanish
identity are given by the full orchestra. This is followed by
“Variations.” A Spanish melody is here subjected to five brief
variations. In the third part, the Alborada music returns in a changed
tonality and orchestration. The fourth movement is entitled “Scene and
Gypsy Dance” and consists of five cadenzas. The Capriccio ends with
“_Fandango asturiano_,” in which a dance melody for trombones is
succeeded by a contrasting subject in the woodwinds. A last recall of
the main Alborada theme of the first movement brings the work to its
conclusion.
Richard Rodgers
Richard Rodgers was born in Hammels Station, near Arverne, Long Island,
on June 28, 1902. As a child he began studying the piano and attending
the popular musical theater. He wrote his first songs in 1916, a score
for an amateur musical in 1917, and in 1919 created the music for the
Columbia Varsity Show, the first freshman ever to do so. Meanwhile he
had initiated a collaborative arrangement with the lyricist, Lorenz
Hart, that lasted almost a quarter of a century. Their first song to
reach the Broadway theater was “Any Old Place With You” in _A Lonely
Romeo_ in 1919. Their first Broadway musical was _The Poor Little Ritz
Girl_ in 1920, and their first success came with _The Garrick Gaieties_
in 1925 where the song, “Manhattan,” was introduced. For the next twenty
years, Rodgers and Hart—frequently with Herbert Fields as
librettist—dominated the musical stage with some of the most original
and freshly conceived musical productions of that period: _Dearest
Enemy_ (1925), _The Girl Friend_ (1926), _Peggy-Ann_ (1926), _A
Connecticut Yankee_ (1927), _On Your Toes_ (1936), _Babes in Arms_
(1937), _I’d Rather Be Right_ (1937), _I Married an Angel_ (1938), _The
Boys from Syracuse_ (1938), and _Pal Joey_ (1940). From these and other
productions came hundreds of songs some of which have since become
classics in American popular music. The best of these were “Here In My
Arms,” “Blue Room,” “My Heart Stood Still,” “My Romance,” “The Most
Beautiful Girl in the World,” “There’s a Small Hotel,” “Where or When,”
“My Funny Valentine,” “Spring Is Here,” “Falling in Love With Love,” “I
Could Write a Book” and “Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered.”
_By Jupiter_, in 1942, was the last of the Rodgers and Hart musicals.
Hart’s physical and moral disintegration made it necessary for Rodgers
to seek out a new collaborator. He found him in Oscar Hammerstein II,
with whom Rodgers embarked on a new and even greater career as composer
for the theater. Their first collaboration was _Oklahoma!_ in 1943, an
unprecedented box-office triumph, and a production that revolutionized
the musical stage by crystallizing the concept and procedures of the
musical play as opposed to the musical comedy. After that Rodgers and
Hammerstein brought to the stage such classics as _Carousel_, _South
Pacific_, and _The King and I_. Other Rodgers and Hammerstein
productions were _Allegro_ (1947), _Me and Juliet_ (1953), _Pipe Dream_
(1955), _The Flower Drum Song_ (1958) and _The Sound of Music_ (1959).
Among the most famous songs by Rodgers from these productions—besides
those from musical plays discussed below—were “A Fellow Needs a Girl,”
“No Other Love,” “Everybody’s Got a Home But Me,” “All at Once You Love
Her,” “I Enjoy Being a Girl,” “Do, Re, Mi,” “The Sound of Music” and
“Climb Every Mountain.” The collaboration of Rodgers and Hammerstein
ended in 1960 with the death of the lyricist.
_Oklahoma!_, _Carousel_, _South Pacific_, and _The King and I_ have
become enduring monuments in the American theater. They are continually
revived, have been adapted for motion pictures, and are perpetually
represented at semi-classical concerts and on records. In whatever form
they appear they never fail to excite and inspire audiences. It is in
these productions that Rodgers has reached the highest creative
altitudes of his career, with music of such expressive lyricism,
dramatic impact, consummate technical skill, and pervading charm and
grace that its survival in American music seems assured. Robert Russell
Bennett has made skilful orchestral adaptations of the basic melodic
material from each of these musical plays, and it is most usually these
adaptations that are most frequently performed by pop and semi-classical
orchestras.
_Carousel_ is the second of the Rodgers and Hammerstein masterworks,
succeeding _Oklahoma!_ by about two years. It is one of the most radiant
ornaments of our musical stage. Oscar Hammerstein II here adapted Ferenc
Molnar’s play, _Liliom_, with changes in setting, time, and some basic
alterations of plot. In the musical version the action takes place in
New England in 1873. Billy Bigelow, a barker in an amusement park, falls
in love and marries Julie Jordan. A charming but irresponsible young
man, Billy decides to get some money in a holdup, when he learns his
wife is pregnant. Caught, Billy eludes arrest by committing suicide.
After a brief stay in Purgatory, Billy is permitted to return to earth
for a single day to achieve redemption, the price for his admission to
Heaven. On earth, he meets his daughter. Through her love, understanding
and forgiveness he achieves his redemption. Thus the musical ends in a
happy glow of love and compassion whereas Molnar’s original play ended
on the tragic note of frustration.
_Carousel_ opened in New York on April 19, 1945. John Chapman described
it as “one of the finest musical plays I have ever seen, and I shall
remember it always.” It received the Drama Critics Award and eight
Donaldson Awards. Since then it has often been revived besides being
adapted for the screen; in 1958 it was presented at the World’s Fair in
Brussels.
The heartwarming glow that pervades the play in Hammerstein’s moving
dialogue and lyrics was magically caught in the score, which begins with
an extended waltz sequence for orchestra. In the play this music is
heard under the opening scene which represents an amusement park
dominated by a gay carousel. This waltz music is a self-sufficient
composition that can be, and often is, played independently of the other
excerpts. The other main musical episodes include the love duet of Billy
and Julie, “If I Loved You”; Billy’s eloquent and extended narrative,
“Soliloquy,” when he learns he is about to become a father; the
spiritual “You’ll Never Walk Alone”; the ebullient “June Is Bustin’ Out
All Over”; two vigorous choral episodes, “Blow High, Blow Low” and “This
Was a Real Nice Clambake.”
_The King and I_, presented on March 29, 1951, was adapted by Oscar
Hammerstein II from Margaret Landon’s novel _Anna and the King of Siam_
(which had already been made into a successful non-musical motion
picture starring Rex Harrison and Irene Dunne). Anna, played in the
musical by Gertrude Lawrence, is an English schoolmistress come to Siam
to teach Western culture to the royal princes and princesses. Her own
strong will and Western independence comes into sharp conflict with the
king, an Eastern despot enacted by Yul Brynner. But they are nonetheless
drawn to each other, partly through curiosity, partly through
admiration. Naturally, since they are of different social stations and
cultures, a love interest is out of the question, but they are
ineluctably drawn to each other, particularly after Anna has managed to
save a critical political situation in Siam through her ingenuity. The
king dies just before the final curtain; Anna remains on as a teacher of
the children she has come to love.
Part of the attraction of Rodgers’ music is its subtle Oriental
flavoring. In the music—as in text, settings and costuming—_The King and
I_ is a picture of an “East of frank and unashamed romance,” as Richard
Watts, Jr., said, “seen through the eyes of ... theatrical artists of
rare taste and creative power.” The Oriental element is particularly
pronounced in the orchestral excerpt, “The March of the Royal Siamese
Children,” with its exotic syncopated structure and orchestration. Other
popular excerpts from this score include Anna’s lilting “I Whistle a
Happy Tune”; her poignant ballad “Hello, Young Lovers”; Anna’s duet with
the king, “Shall We Dance?”; her amiable conversation with the children,
“Getting to Know You”; the King’s narrative, “A Puzzlement”; also two
sensitive and atmospheric duets by the two Siamese lovers, Tuptim and
Lun Tha, “We Kiss in the Shadow” and “I Have Dreamed.”
_Oklahoma!_, the first of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
plays—which opened on March 31, 1943—made stage history. Its run of
2,248 performances was the longest run of any Broadway musical up to
then; a national company toured for ten years. It was successfully
produced in Europe, Africa, and Australia. But beyond being a box-office
triumph of incomparable magnitude, it was also an artistic event of the
first importance. This was musical comedy no more, but a vital folk play
rich in dramatic content, and authentic in characterization and
background. The play upon which it was based was Lynn Riggs’ folk play,
_Green Grow the Lilacs_, adapted by Oscar Hammerstein II. In making his
adaptation, Hammerstein had to sidestep long accepted formulas and
clichés of the American musical stage to meet the demands of Riggs’
play. Chorus-girl routines made way for American ballet conceived by
Agnes De Mille. Set comedy routines were replaced by a humor which rose
naturally from text and characters. Each musical incident was basic to
the movement of the dramatic action. Even the plot was unorthodox for
our musical theater. At the turn of the present century in West-Indian
country, Laurey and Curly are in love, but are kept apart by their
respective diffidence and a false sense of hostility. An ugly, lecherous
character, Jud Fry, pursues Laurey. Laurey and Curly finally declare
their love for each other. At their wedding Jud arrives inebriated,
attacks Curly with a knife, and becomes its fatal victim when he
accidentally falls upon the blade during a brawl. A hastily improvised
trial exonerates Curly of murder and permits him and his bride to set
off on their honeymoon for a land that some day will get the name of
Oklahoma.
The play opens at once with its best musical foot forward, a simple
song, “Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’,” which has the personality of
American folk music. It is sung offstage by Curly. After that the
principal musical episodes include the love song of Curly and Laurey,
“People Will Say We’re in Love”; several songs with a strong American
national identity, including “Kansas City,” “The Farmer and the Cowman,”
“The Surrey With the Fringe on Top,” and the title number; and two
highly expressive numbers, “Out of My Dreams” and “Many a New Day.”
_Slaughter on Tenth Avenue_ is one of Rodgers’ most famous orchestral
compositions, and one of the finest achievements of the school of
symphonic-jazz writing. This music was used for a ballet sequence in the
Rodgers and Hart musical, _On Your Toes_, first produced in 1936. Since
_On Your Toes_ dwelled in the world of ballet, with dancers as principal
characters, ballet episodes played an important part in the unfolding of
the story; these episodes were conceived by George Balanchine. The play
reaches a dramatic climax with a jazz ballet, a satire on gangsters,
entitled _Slaughter on Tenth Avenue_. This is a description of the
pursuit by gangsters of a hoofer and his girl. Caught up in a Tenth
Avenue café, the gangsters murder the girl and are about to kill the
hoofer when the police come to his rescue. Rodgers’ music for the ballet
is an extended and integrated symphonic-jazz composition which has won
its way into the permanent repertory of semi-classical music. It is
constructed from two main melodic ideas. The first is an impudent little
jazz tune, and the second is a rich and luscious jazz melody for
strings.
_South Pacific_, produced on April 7, 1949, was both commercially and
artistically of the magnitude of _Oklahoma!_ Its Broadway run of 1,925
performances was only 325 less than that of its epoch-making
predecessor. In many other respects _South Pacific_ outdid _Oklahoma!_:
In the overall box-office grossage; in sale of sheet music and records;
in the capture of prizes (including the Pulitzer Prize for drama, seven
Antoinette Perry and nine Donaldson awards). The book was adapted by
Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan from _Tales of the South Pacific_,
a series of short stories about American troops in the Pacific during
World War II. In the adaptation two love plots are emphasized. The first
involves the French planter, Emile de Becque, and the American ensign,
Nellie Forbush; the other engages Liat, a Tonkinese girl, and Lieutenant
Cable. The first ends happily, but only after complications brought on
by the discovery on Nellie’s part that Emile was once married to a
Polynesian and is the father of two Eurasian children. The other love
affair has a tragic ending, since Lieutenant Cable dies on a mission.
With Ezio Pinza as De Becque and Mary Martin as Nellie, _South Pacific_
was “a show of rare enchantment,” as Howard Barnes reported, “novel in
texture and treatment, rich in dramatic substance, and eloquent in
song.” Among its prominent musical numbers are De Becque and Nellie’s
love song, “Some Enchanted Evening”; De Becque’s lament “This Nearly Was
Mine”; Cable’s love song “Younger Than Springtime”; three songs by
Nellie, “I’m Gonna Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair,” “A Cockeyed
Optimist,” and “I’m in Love with a Wonderful Guy”; two exotic numbers by
the Tonkinese Bloody Mary, “Happy Talk” and “Bali Ha’i”; and a spirited
and humorous choral number by the Marines, “There Is Nothing Like a
Dame.”
_Victory at Sea_ is a nine-movement suite for symphony orchestra adapted
by Robert Russell Bennett from the extended musical score for a series
of documentary films on naval operations during World War II. These
films were presented over NBC television in 1952 and received both the
Sylvania and the George Foster Peabody Awards. Much of the acclaim
accorded to these remarkable films belonged to Rodgers’ background music
which, as Otis L. Guernsey said, “suggested courage, self-sacrifice and
the indomitable spirit of the free man.” A _New Yorker_ critic described
Rodgers’ music as a “seemingly endless creation, now martial, now
tender, now tuneful, now dissonant ... memorable and tremendously
moving.”
The first movement, “The Song of the High Seas,” is a picture of ships
menaced by Nazi U-boats on the seas during the early part of World War
II. They finally get involved in battle. “The Pacific Boils Over”
describes the beauty of Hawaii at peace in a melody suggesting Hawaiian
song and dance. War comes, and this idyllic mood is shattered. A broad
melody for strings ending in forceful chords tells about the tragedy of
Pearl Harbor and the grim business of repairing the damage inflicted
upon it by the Japanese. The third movement is one of the most famous in
the suite, often performed independently of the other sections. It is
stirring and dramatic march music of symphonic dimensions entitled
“Guadalcanal March.” This is followed by “D Day,” its principal melody a
broad, strong subject for brass telling of the gradual build-up of men
and materials for the invasion of Fortress Europe. The fifth movement,
“Hard Work and Horseplay” provides the lighter side of war. American
soldiers find relief from grim realities in mischievous escapades and
playtime. “Theme of the Fast Carrier” brings up the picture of a battle
scene and ends with moving funeral music. In “Beneath the Southern
Cross” we get an infectious tango melody which Rodgers later borrowed
for his hit song, “No Other Love,” for the Rodgers and Hammerstein
musical play, _Me and Juliet_. “Mare Nostrum” recalls the harsh
realities of war, first by presenting a serene Mediterranean scene, and
then showing how it is torn and violated by the fierce naval attack on
North Africa, Sicily, Salerno, and Anzio. The suite ends on a note of
triumph with “Victory at Sea.” A hymn of thanksgiving is sounded. Then
we hear reminders of the “Guadalcanal March” and the seductive tango
melody from “Beneath the Southern Cross.” This tango is soon transformed
into a rousing song of joy and triumph with which the suite comes to a
magnificent culmination.
Sigmund Romberg
Sigmund Romberg was born in Szeged, Hungary, on July 29, 1887. His
boyhood and early manhood were spent in Vienna where he studied
engineering and fulfilled his military service with the 19th Hungarian
Infantry stationed in that city. In Vienna, Romberg’s lifelong interest
in and talent for music found a favorable climate. He heard concerts,
haunted the city’s leading music salons, was a devotee of Viennese
operettas at the Theater-an-der-Wien. Vienna’s influence led him to
abandon all thoughts of becoming an engineer. In 1909 he came to the
United States where he led salon orchestras in various restaurants and
published his first popular songs. In 1912 he was engaged as staff
composer for the Shuberts, for whose many and varied Broadway
productions Romberg supplied all the music. Within a three-year period
he wrote the scores for eighteen musicals, one of which was his first
operetta in a European style, _The Blue Paradise_ (1915) for which he
created his first outstanding song hit, “_Auf Wiedersehen_.” Though he
continued writing music for many musical comedies, revues and
extravaganzas—including some starring Al Jolson at the Winter Garden—it
was in the field of the operetta that Romberg achieved significance in
American popular music. His musical roots were so deeply embedded in the
soil of Vienna that only in writing music for operettas in the manner
and procedures of Vienna did he succeed in producing a lyricism that ran
the gamut from sweetness and sentimentality to gaiety, masculine vigor
and charm. His most successful operettas, which are discussed below,
have never lost their capacity to enchant audiences however many times
they are revived.
Romberg began writing music for motion pictures in 1930 with _Viennese
Nights_. Out of one of his many scores for the screen came the poignant
ballad, “When I Grow Too Old to Dream.” His last huge success on
Broadway was achieved not with an operetta but with an American musical
comedy with American backgrounds, settings and characters—and songs in a
pronounced American idiom. It was _Up in Central Park_ in 1945. His last
musical comedy was _The Girl in Pink Tights_ produced on Broadway
posthumously in 1954. Romberg died in New York City on November 9, 1951.
Three years after his death his screen biography, _Deep in My Heart_,
was released, with José Ferrer playing the part of the composer.
_Blossom Time_ was first produced on Broadway on September 29, 1921 and
proved so successful that to meet the demand for tickets a second
company was formed to perform it at a nearby theater. There were also
four national companies running simultaneously. This musical was derived
from the successful German operetta, _Das drei Maederlhaus_, adapted by
Dorothy Donnelly. The central character is the beloved Viennese composer
of the early 19th century, Franz Schubert, and the plot is built around
the composer’s supposed frustrated love for Mitzi, who, in turn, falls
in love with Schubert’s best friend. The composer’s anguish in losing
her makes it impossible for him to finish the symphony he was writing
for her—and it remains forever unfinished. This tragic episode, however,
has no basis in biographical fact and is entirely the figment of a
fertile operetta librettist’s imagination.
Romberg’s most famous songs were all based on Schubert’s own melodies,
and one became a hit of major proportions: “Song of Love” based on the
beautiful main theme from the first movement of the _Unfinished
Symphony_. Other popular selections include “Tell Me Daisy,” “Lonely
Hearts,” “Serenade” and “Three Little Maids”—all possessed of that
charm, grace and _Gemuetlichkeit_ which we always associate with the
city of Vienna and its popular music.
_The Desert Song_, produced on November 30, 1926, had for its background
the colorful setting of French Morocco. There Margot Bonvalet is in love
with the Governor’s son but is being pursued by the bandit chief, The
Red Shadow. In the end it turns out that the Governor’s son and The Red
Shadow are one and the same person. The principal musical excerpts
include the romantic duet of Margot and The Red Shadow, “Blue Heaven”;
the rapturous love song of The Red Shadow, “One Alone”; and two virile
episodes, “Sabre Song” and “French Marching Song.”
Unlike most Romberg operettas, _Maytime_, presented on August 16, 1917,
did not have a foreign or exotic setting. The action takes place in
Gramercy Park, New York, between 1840 and 1900. However, the tragic
frustrations of the love affair of Ottilie and Richard belong inevitably
in the make-believe world of the operetta. Ottilie is forced to marry a
distant relative. Many years later, Ottilie’s granddaughter and
Richard’s grandson find each other, fall in love, and fulfil the
happiness denied their grandparents. The most important musical number
in this play is the sweet and sentimental waltz, “Will You Remember?”,
which is repeated several times during the course of the action. Other
numbers include “Jump Jim Crow,” “It’s a Windy Day” and “Dancing Will
Keep You Young.”
_The New Moon_—which came to Broadway on September 19, 1928—was
described by its authors (Oscar Hammerstein II, Frank Mandel, and
Laurence Schwab) as a “romantic musical comedy.” Its hero is a
historical character, Robert Mission, an 18th-century French aristocrat
who has come to New Orleans as a political fugitive. In the operetta he
is a bondservant to Monsieur Beaunoir, with whose daughter, Marianne, he
is in love. When the French police arrive to take him back to Paris for
trial, Marianne boards his ship upon which a mutiny erupts on the high
seas. The victorious bondservants now take possession of a small island
off the coast of Florida where they set up their own government with
Robert as leader, who then takes Marianne as his wife. This opulent
score yields one of Romberg’s most beautiful love songs, “Lover Come
Back to Me,” but it is significant to point out that its main melody was
expropriated by Romberg from a piano piece by Tchaikovsky. Other
delightful musical excerpts from this tuneful operetta include the
tender ballads “Softly as in a Morning Sunrise,” “One Kiss” and “Wanting
You,” and the stirring male chorus, “Stout-Hearted Men.”
_The Student Prince_, like _Blossom Time_, was based on a successful
German operetta, _Old Heidelberg_, once again adapted for the American
stage by Dorothy Donnelly. Its first performance took place on December
2, 1924. It has become one of the best loved operettas of the American
theater; there is hardly a time when it is not revived somewhere in the
United States. The setting is the romantic German University town of
Heidelberg in 1860. Prince Karl Franz falls in love with Kathie, a
waitress at the local inn. Their romance, however, is doomed to
frustration, since the Prince must renounce her to marry a Princess.
Romberg’s music is a veritable cornucopia of melodic riches, including
as it does the love duet of Kathie and the Prince, “Deep in My Heart,”
the Prince’s love song “Serenade,” and with them, “Golden Days” and a
vibrant male chorus, “Drinking Song.”
David Rose
David Rose was born in London, England, on June 15, 1910. His family
came to the United States in 1914, settling in Chicago where Rose
received his musical training at the Chicago Musical College. After
working for radio and as pianist of the Ted Fiorito Orchestra, Rose came
to Hollywood in 1938 where he became music director of the Mutual
Broadcasting network. During World War II he served as musical director
of, and composer for, _Winged Victory_, the Air Corps production by Moss
Hart. After the war, Rose became outstandingly successful as musical
director for leading radio and television programs (including the first
Fred Astaire television show for which he received an “Emmy” Award), and
as a composer of background music for many motion pictures. He has also
appeared extensively in America and Europe as guest conductor of
symphony orchestras.
Rose is the composer of several instrumental compositions in a popular
style that have achieved considerable popularity. Indeed, it was with
one of these that he first became famous as a composer. This was the
_Holiday for Strings_, written and published in 1943, a three-part
composition in which the flanking sections make effective use of plucked
strings while the middle part is of lyrical character. _Holiday for
Strings_ received over a dozen different recordings and sold several
million records. Fifteen years later, Rose wrote another charming
composition in a similar vein, _Holiday for Trombones_ in which
virtuosity is contrasted with lyricism. Other instrumental works by Rose
outstanding for either melodic or rhythmic interest are _Big Ben_,
_Dance of the Spanish Onion_, _Escapade_, and _Our Waltz_.
Gioacchino Rossini
Gioacchino Rossini was born in Pesaro, Italy, on February 29, 1792. He
received his musical training at the Liceo Musicale in Bologna. In 1810
he wrote his first opera, _La Cambiale di matrimonio_, produced in
Venice. Success came in 1812 with his third opera, _La Pietra del
paragone_, given at La Scala in Milan. _Tancredi_ and _L’Italiana in
Algeri_, performed in Venice in 1813, further added to his fame and
helped make him an adulated opera composer at the age of twenty-one. In
1815 Rossini was appointed director of two opera companies in Naples for
which he wrote several successful operas. But his masterwork, which came
during this period, was not written for Naples but for Rome: _The Barber
of Seville_ introduced in the Italian capital in 1816. In 1822 Rossini
visited Vienna where he became the man of the hour. In 1824 he came to
Paris to assume the post of director of the Théâtre des Italiens. Among
the operas written for Paris was _William Tell_, introduced at the Paris
Opéra in 1829. Though Rossini was now at the height of his fame and
creative power—and though he lived another thirty-nine years—he never
wrote another work for the stage. He continued living in Paris, a
dominant figure in its social and cultural life. His home was the
gathering place for the intellectual élite of the city, the scene of
festive entertainments. He died of a heart attack in Paris on November
13, 1868.
Rossini was the genius of Italian comic opera (_opera buffa_). His
melodies are filled with laughter and gaiety; his harmonies and rhythms
sparkle with wit and the joy of life. He was at his best when he brought
to his writing an infallible instinct for comedy, burlesque, and
mockery. But he was also capable of a lyricism filled with poetry and
infused with heartfelt sentiments. He was, moreover, a master of
orchestral effect—especially in his dramatic use of the extended
_crescendo_—and highly skilled in contrasting his moods through rapid
alternation of fast and slow passages. He was also a daring innovator in
his instrumentation.
He is a giant in opera, but with his infectious moods and endless fund
of melodies he is also a crowning master in semi-classical music. His
masterwork, _The Barber of Seville_ (_Il Barbiere di Siviglia_) is as
popular with salon orchestras through its merry overture and main
selections as it is in the opera house. _The Barber of Seville_ is based
on two plays by Beaumarchais, _Le Barbier de Séville_ and _Le Mariage de
Figaro_, adapted by Cesare Sterbini. It is a vivacious comedy in which
Count Almaviva, in love with Rosina (ward of Doctor Bartolo who is in
love with her himself) tries to penetrate Bartolo’s household by
assuming various disguises. The Count and Rosina plan to elope, but
Rosina reneges when Bartolo convinces her that the Count is unfaithful
to her. Eventually, Rosina discovers that Bartolo has deceived her. She
marries the Count, and Bartolo finds consolation in the fact that the
Count is willing to renounce Rosina’s dowry in his favor.
When this work was first performed in Rome on February 20, 1816 it was a
dismal failure. This was largely due to a carefully organized uproar in
the theater by admirers of another famous Italian composer, Paisiello,
who had previously written an opera on the same subject. A sloppy
performance did not help matters either. The furor in the auditorium was
so great that it was impossible at times to hear the singers; and
Rossini was in the end greeted with hisses and catcalls. But the second
performance told a far different story. The singing and staging now went
off much more smoothly, and Rossini’s enemies were no longer present to
do their damage. Consequently the opera was acclaimed. Five years later,
a tour of the opera throughout Italy established its fame and popularity
on a solid and permanent basis.
The deservedly famous overture is so much in the carefree and ebullient
spirit of the opera as a whole—and so felicitously sets the tone for
what is soon to follow on the stage—that it comes as a shock to discover
that it was not written for this work. Rossini had actually created it
for an earlier opera, and then used it several times more for various
other stage works, tragedies as well as comedies. The overture opens
with a slow introduction in which the violins offer a graceful tune. A
transition of four chords leads to the main body in which strings
doubled by the piccolo offer a spicy little melody. The same infectious
gaiety is to be found in the second theme which is first given by oboe
and clarinet. A dramatic crescendo now leads into the development of
both themes, and the overture ends with a vivacious coda.
Besides the overture, some of the principal melodies from this opera are
frequently given in various orchestral potpourris and fantasias: Count
Almaviva’s beautiful serenade, “_Ecco ridente in cielo_” and Figaro’s
patter song, “_Largo al factotum_” from the first act; in the second
act, Rosina’s coloratura aria, “_Una voce poco fa_” and Basilio’s
denunciation of slander in “_La Calunnia_”; and in the third act,
Basilio’s unctuous greeting “_Pace e gioia sia con voi_” and Figaro’s
advice to the lovers to get married in haste and silence, “_Zitti,
zitti, piano, piano_.”
_La Gazza ladra_ (_The Thieving Magpie_), first produced at La Scala on
May 31, 1817, is also a light comedy; libretto by Giovanni Gherardini,
based on a French play. The central character is a servant girl falsely
accused of having stolen a silver spoon; she is exonerated when the
spoon is found in a magpie’s nest just as the girl is about to be
punished at the scaffold. The overture begins with an
attention-arresting roll on the snare drum. This is followed by a brisk,
march-like melody for full orchestra. In the main section, the principal
themes consist of a sensitive little tune for strings and a pert melody
for strings and woodwind.
_L’Italiana in Algeri_ (_The Italian Lady in Algiers_) is, on the other
hand, a serious opera. It was first produced in Venice on May 22, 1813,
libretto by Angelo Anelli. In Algiers, Lindoro and Isabella are in love,
but their romance is complicated by the fact that Isabella is sought
after by the Mustafa. The lovers manage to effect their escape while the
Mustafa is involved in complicated rites serving as his initiation into
a secret society. The solemn opening of the overture has for its main
thought a beautiful song for oboe. A crescendo then carries the overture
to its principal section in which two lively melodies are heard, the
first for woodwind, and the second for oboe.
_La Scala di seta_ (_The Silken Ladder_) is an opera buffa which had its
first performance in Venice on May 9, 1812. The libretto by Gaetano
Rossi was based on a French farce involving a young girl who tries
desperately to keep secret from her jealous guardian her marriage to the
man she loves. A brief and electrifying opening for strings in the
overture brings on a sentimental duet for flute and oboe. Two principal
subjects in the main body of the overture include a gay and sprightly
melody for strings, echoed by oboe, and a tender theme for flute and
clarinet accompanied by strings.
_Semiramide_—introduced in Venice on February 3, 1823—is a serious opera
based on Voltaire with libretto by Gaetano Rossi. Semiramis is the Queen
of Babylon who is driven by her love for Asur to murder her husband. Her
later love life is complicated when she discovers that the object of her
passion, a Scythian, is actually her son. Semiramis is killed by a
dagger which Asur directs at her Scythian son; Semiramis’ son then
murders Asur and assumes the throne. The overture opens dramatically
with a gradual crescendo at the end of which comes a slow and solemn
melody for four horns, soon taken over by woodwind against plucked
strings. A short transition in the woodwind brings on a return of the
opening crescendo measures. We now come to the main part of the overture
in which the first theme is for strings, and the second for the
woodwind.
The most famous of all Rossini’s overtures, more celebrated even than
that for _The Barber of Seville_, is the one for the tragic opera
_William Tell_ (_Guillaume Tell_). This is perhaps the most popular
opera overture ever written. It is much more than merely the preface to
a stage work but is in itself an elaborate, eloquent tone poem, rich in
dramatic as well as musical interest, and vivid in its pictorial and
programmatic writing.
_William Tell_, which had its première in Paris on August 3, 1829, is
based on the drama of Friedrich Schiller, the libretto adaptation being
made by Étienne de Jouy and Hippolyte Bis. The hero is, of course, the
Swiss patriot who triumphs over the tyrant Gessler and helps bring about
the liberation of his country.
In the early measures of the overture we get a picture of sunrise over
the Swiss mountains, its beautiful melody presented by cellos and
basses. A dramatic episode for full orchestra then depicts an Alpine
storm. When it subsides we get a pastoral scene of rare loveliness
evoked by a poignant Swiss melody on the English horn. Trumpet fanfares
then bring on the stirring march music which, in our time and country,
has been borrowed by radio for the theme melody of “The Lone Ranger.”
The overture ends triumphantly in telling of William Tell’s victory over
tyranny and oppression.
The contemporary British composer, Benjamin Britten, has assembled
various melodies by Rossini into two delightful suites for orchestra.
_Soirées musicales_ (1936) is made up of five compositions by
Rossini—from _William Tell_ and from several pieces from a piano suite
entitled _Péchés de vieillesse_. The five movements are marked; I.
March; II. Canzonetta; III. Tyrolese; IV. Bolero; V. Tarantella.
_Matinées musicales_ (1941) also gets its material from _William Tell_
and the piano suite. Here the movements are: I. March; II. Nocturne;
III. Waltz; IV. Pantomime; V. Moto Perpetuo.
Anton Rubinstein
Anton Rubinstein was born in Viakhvatinetz, Russia, on November 28,
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