The Lighter Classics in Music by David Ewen
episode now appears in woodwind and violins after which the folk song
1862 words | Chapter 51
and the loud opening theme are recalled.
_Piemonte_, a suite for orchestra, op. 36 is a charming four-movement
composition in which the folk melodies and dances of Piedmont are
prominently used. The first movement, “Over Woods and Fields,” opens
with a folk tune, which the composer repeats in the finale. Two other
delightful ideas follow: the first in the horn, repeated by the cellos;
the second in muted first violins. In the second movement, “A Rustic
Dance,” the principal Piedmont dance tune is heard in solo violin and
oboe; a second subject occurs after the development of the first in
lower strings and woodwind. The heart of the third movement, “In the
Sacred Mountain,” is a folk song first offered by the horns, accompanied
by cellos and double basses. The suite ends with a picture of a
festival, “Piedmontese Carnival,” its two vigorous ideas heard
respectively in full orchestra, and in trumpet and first violins.
Bedřich Smetana
Bedřich Smetana was born in Leitomischl, Bohemia, on March 2, 1824.
Though he was interested in music from childhood on, he received little
training until his nineteenth year when he came to Prague and studied
with Josef Proksch. For several years after the completion of his music
study he worked as teacher of music for Count Leopold Thun. He soon
became active in the musical life of his country; in 1848 he was a
significant force in the creation of Prague’s first music school. In
1849, Smetana was appointed pianist to Ferdinand I, the former Emperor
of Austria residing in Prague. From 1856 to 1861 Smetana lived in
Gothenburg, Sweden, where he was active as conductor, teacher, and
pianist. After returning to his native land in 1861 he became one of its
dominant musical figures. He served as director of the music school,
conducted a chorus, wrote music criticisms, founded and directed a drama
school, and organized the Society of Artists. He also wrote a succession
of major works in which the cause of Bohemian nationalism was espoused
so vigorously and imaginatively that Smetana has since become recognized
as the father of Bohemian national music. His most significant works are
the folk opera, _The Bartered Bride_, and a cycle of orchestral tone
poems collectively entitled _My Country_ (_Má Vlast_). Smetana was
stricken by deafness in 1874, despite which he continued creating
important works, among them being operas and an autobiographical string
quartet called _From My Life_ (_Aus meinem Leben_). Total deafness was
supplemented by insanity in 1883 which necessitated confinement in an
asylum in Prague where he died on May 12, 1884.
The rich folk melodies and pulsating folk rhythms of native dance music
overflow in Smetana’s music, providing it with much of its vitality and
popular interest. Smetana’s gift at writing music in the style, idiom,
and techniques of Bohemian folk dances is evident in many of his
compositions, but nowhere more successfully than in his delightful folk
comic opera, _The Bartered Bride_ (_Prodaná nevešta_). This little
opera, first performed in Prague on May 30, 1866, is the foundation on
which Bohemian national music rests securely. It is a gay, lively
picture of life in a small Bohemian village. The principal action
involves the efforts of the village matchmaker to get Marie married to
Wenzel, a dim-witted, stuttering son of the town’s wealthy landowner.
But Marie is in love with Hans who, as it turns out, is also the son of
the same landowner, though by a previous marriage. Through trickery,
Hans manages to win Marie, though for a while matters become complicated
when Marie is led to believe that Hans has deserted her.
In its first version, _The Bartered Bride_ was presented as a play (by
Karel Sabina) with incidental music by Smetana. Realizing that this work
had operatic possibilities, Smetana amplified and revised his score, and
wrote recitatives for the spoken dialogue. In this new extended form the
opera was heard in Vienna in 1892 and was a sensation; from then on, and
to the present time, it has remained one of the most lovable comic
operas ever written.
There are three colorful and dynamic folk dances in this opera which
contribute powerfully to the overall national identity, but whose impact
on audiences is by no means lost when heard apart from the stage action.
“The Dance of the Comedians” appears in the third act, when a circus
troupe appears in the village square and entertains villagers with a
spirited dance. The “Furiant”—a fiery type of Bohemian dance with marked
cross rhythms—comes in the second act when villagers enter the local inn
and perform a Corybantic dance. The “Polka,” a favorite Bohemian dance,
comes as an exciting finish to the first act as local residents give
vent to their holiday spirits during a festival in the village square.
The effervescent overture which precedes the first act is as popular as
the dances. The merry first theme is given by strings and woodwind in
unison against strong chords in brasses and timpani. This subject is
simplified, at times in a fugal style, and is brought to a climax before
a second short subject is stated by the oboe. Still a third charming
folk tune appears, in violins and cellos, before the first main subject
is recalled and developed. The coda, based on this first theme, carries
the overture to a lively conclusion. Gustav Mahler, the eminent music
director of the Vienna Royal Opera which gave this opera its first major
success outside Bohemia, felt this overture was so much in the spirit of
the entire work, and so basic to its overall mood and structure, that he
preferred using it before the second act so that latecomers into the
opera house might not miss it.
Smetana’s most famous work for orchestra comes from his cycle of six
national tone poems entitled _My Country_ (_Má Vlast_), which he wrote
between 1874 and 1879 in a tonal tribute to his native land. Each of the
tone poems is a picture of a different facet of Bohemian life,
geography, and background. The most famous composition of this set is
_The Moldau_ (_Vltava_), a portrait of the famous Bohemian river. This
is a literal tonal representation of the following descriptive program
interpolated by the composer in his published score:
“Two springs gush forth in the shade of the Bohemian forest, the one
warm and spouting, the other cold and tranquil. Their waves, gayly
rushing onward over their rocky beds, unite and glisten in the rays of
the morning sun. The forest brook, fast hurrying on, becomes the river
Vltava, which, flowing ever on through Bohemia’s valleys, grows to be a
mighty stream; it flows through thick woods in which the joyous noise of
the hunt and the notes of the hunter’s horn are heard ever nearer and
nearer; it flows through grass-grown pastures and lowlands where a
wedding feast is celebrated with song and dancing. At night the wood and
water nymphs revel in its shining waves, in which many fortresses and
castles are reflected as witnesses of the past glory of knighthood and
the vanished warlike fame of bygone ages. At St. John Rapids the stream
rushes on, winding in and out through the cataracts, and hews out a path
for itself with its foaming waves through the rocky chasm into the broad
river bed in which it flows on in majestic repose toward Prague,
welcomed by time-honored Vysehrad, whereupon it vanishes in the far
distance from the poet’s gaze.”
The rippling flow of the river Moldau is portrayed by fast figures in
the strings, the background for a broad and sensual folk song
representing the river itself heard in violins and woodwind. Hunting
calls are sounded by the horns, after which a lusty peasant dance erupts
from the full orchestra. Nymphs and naiads disport to the strains of a
brief figure in the woodwind. A transition by the wind brings back the
beautiful Moldau song. A climax is built up, after which the setting
becomes once again serene. The Moldau continues its serene course
towards Prague.
John Philip Sousa
John Philip Sousa, America’s foremost composer of march music, was born
in Washington, D. C., on November 6, 1854. The son of a trombone player
in the United States Marine Band, John Philip early received music
instruction, mainly the violin from John Esputa. When he was about
thirteen, John enlisted in the Marine Corps where he played in its band
for two years. For several years after that he played the violin in and
conducted the orchestras of various theaters; in the summer of 1877 he
played in an orchestra conducted by Jacques Offenbach at the
Philadelphia Centennial Exposition. Between 1880 and 1892 he was the
musical director of the Marine Band. It was during this period that he
wrote his first famous marches. In 1892 he formed a band of his own with
which he toured Europe and America for many years, and with which he
gave more than a thousand concerts. His most popular marches (together
with his best transcriptions for band of national ballads and patriotic
airs) were always the highlights of his concerts. Besides the marches,
Sousa wrote the music for numerous comic operas, the most famous being
_El Capitan_ (1896) and _The Bride Elect_ (1898). In 1918 Sousa and his
band were heard in the Hippodrome extravaganza, _Everything_. He
published his autobiography, _Marching Along_, in 1928, and died in
Reading, Pennsylvania, on March 6, 1932.
In the closing years of the 19th century, and in the first part of the
20th, America was undergoing expansion in many directions: art, science,
literature, commerce, finance, world affairs. Hand in hand with this
development and growth came an aroused patriotism and an expanding
chauvinism. Sousa’s marches were the voice of this new and intense
national consciousness.
As Sigmund Spaeth has pointed out, most of Sousa’s famous marches follow
a similar pattern, beginning with “an arresting introduction, then using
a light, skipping rhythm for his first melody, going from that into a
broader tune,” then progressing to the principal march melody. A massive
climax is finally realized with new, vibrant colors being realized in
the main march melody through striking new combinations of instruments.
The following are some of Sousa’s most popular marches:
_El Capitan_ (1896) was adapted from a choral passage from the comic
opera of the same name. This music was played aboard Admiral Dewey’s
flagship, _Olympia_, when it steamed down Manila Bay for battle during
the Spanish-American War. And it was again heard, this time performed by
Sousa’s own band, when Dewey was welcomed as a conquering hero in New
York on September 30, 1900.
_King Cotton_ (1895) was written on the occasion of the engagement of
the Sousa Band at the Cotton States Exposition. _Semper Fideles_ (1888)
was Sousa’s first famous composition in march tempo, and to this day it
is still one of his best known marches, a perennial favorite with
parades of all kinds. Since Sousa sold this march outright for $35.00 he
never capitalized on its immense popularity.
Sousa’s masterpiece—and probably one of the most famous marches ever
written—was the _Stars and Stripes Forever_, completed on April 26,
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