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Some Sins of Commission

Larry Palmer

Larry Palmer is harpsichord editor of THE DIAPASON.

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Each one of us surely has an individual concept of sin, generally from direct personal experience: I sometimes describe it as “anything that is more fun for the doer than for someone else!” Defining commission might be slightly more difficult. For the purpose of this narrative, I choose to define the term as “the solicitation of a new musical composition, whether or not money is involved.” In my nearly half-century of commissioning new music, much of the time I have been the recipient of extraordinary generosity: most of my composers have donated their music, while others have asked for only modest fees.

Calvin Hampton

The first time I solicited a composer to write something specifically for me was in 1957, when I asked my Oberlin classmate and fellow organ major Calvin Hampton if he would provide an offertory for a summer service at First Presbyterian Church, Canton, Ohio--my first major (if only month-long) church “gig.” His response came in the form of a lovely three-minute aria, titled Consonance. While not a major work by this important composer, it does illustrate the advantage of choosing the right friends; namely, ones who go on to become well-known, thereby considerably increasing the value of their manuscripts. Equally useful, subsequently such friendships may provide one with material for articles about “what they were like before they became well-known”--a perfectly good academic topic indeed, if one includes the proper footnotes.

Neely Bruce

In the fall of 1960 I moved to Rochester, New York to begin graduate study. There I met the next of my composer friends. On my second day at the Eastman School, as I waited in the fourth floor corridor to meet with my advisor Dr. M. Alfred Bichsel, head of the newly established Church Music Department, a striking younger student walked up to me and asked, with lilting southern inflection, if I could tell him where to find Dr. Bitch-el. I was captivated by Neely Bruce, a freshman who had come to audition for the Polyphonic Choir, a new choral ensemble established for this sacred music area. As Dr. Bichsel’s rehearsal assistant, I saw young Bruce regularly. We became friends, and Neely, a precociously talented pianist and composer, eventually supplied the concluding piece for my 1961 master’s recital Organ Compositions Based on the Kyrie fons bonitatis.

When he left Eastman after that single year to attend the University of Alabama, I was devastated. I wrote sad poems (a la Edna St. Vincent Millay and Dame Edith Sitwell)--filled with lines such as:

Our night for love designed, speeds silent on and on,

And time, which only breathless seconds since had seemed so kind,

Is gone.

Neely didn’t answer letters or write poetry. He did, however, write music, and some months later I received the penciled score of his first work for harpsichord--Nine Variations on an Original Theme. The piece held such emotional intensity for me that it was not until 1979 that I copied it out while on my first sabbatical leave, prepared it for performance, and then gave the premiere the following year. Whatever one may think now of such a youthful endeavor, the work certainly is well-crafted for harpsichord--one result of Neely’s frequent opportunities for experimenting with the instrument’s textures at the small two-manual Sperrhake harpsichord, shoehorned into the third-floor dormer room I rented at one of Rochester’s “organ student houses,” 20 Sibley Place.

During my seven years of teaching in Virginia I played a fair amount of 20th-century harpsichord music: Ned Rorem’s Lovers, the Falla Concerto, the Martinu Sonate. But there I was primarily a choral conductor and organist (and enjoyed premiering several new works written for choir or organ by St. Paul’s College colleague Walter Skolnik and New York composer Robin Escovado). My only harpsichord “commission” of this period went to the builder William Dowd, along with almost half a year’s salary, for my first truly first-rate harpsichord, one of his early Blanchet-inspired instruments, delivered to Norfolk in January 1969.

Rudy Shackelford

Shortly after moving to Dallas in 1970, an unanticipated package reached me at Southern Methodist University. This contained Virginia composer Rudy Shackelford’s piece Le Tombeau de Stravinsky. Since my SMU colleague Robert Anderson was a devoted exponent of wild and wooly new organ music, it seemed fitting for me to take on Rudy’s serialism. I also liked the work, and included it on my first Musical Heritage Society disc, The Harpsichord Now and Then, released in 1975.

Ross Lee Finney

Another challenging work, more thorny than I usually care to learn, is Ross Lee Finney’s unique essay for the instrument, Hexachord for Harpsichord. In four movements (Aria, Stomp, Ornaments, Fantasy), the 12-minute work was commissioned for me to play at a Hartt School of Music contemporary keyboard music festival scheduled for June 1984. Drawing few registrants, the event was cancelled, so I gave the first performance that fall in Dallas, not playing it in the composer’s presence until a concert in Hartford the following year.

Working with Finney was quite daunting. A most distinguished and individual composer, he basically disregarded my several suggestions as to texture, and provided me with a nearly-illegible score, the successful realization of which absolutely required a damper pedal, unfortunately not available on most harpsichords. I struggled to read his chicken scratches and tried to parlay his ideas into something that made sense on a plucked instrument. Eventually I wrote him a detailed letter filled with questions and suggestions for possible improvements, not knowing if I would be ignored, despised, or possibly even removed from the project.

Instead, this generous and intelligent man wrote back that it was all very helpful--reminding him of the careful editing his Piano Sonata had received years earlier from its first performer, John Kirkpatrick. For Hexachord’s last movement, the most unplayable of the four, he promised a revision, although current work on his opera left him little time. When the promised revision arrived, it was accompanied by this note: 

I don’t know whether this is better or worse. I’ve spent the vacation week on it and now am so loaded with commitments that it’s the best I can hope for. . . . I tied my right leg to the piano stool so I hope I didn’t think in terms of pedal. . .

Responding to a tape of the first performance, Finney wrote,

I like immensely your performance . . . It seems to me that you have done a wonderful job of projecting the music and it sounds better to me than I feared it would. I like all of your revisions, particularly the ending of the last movement, and I will see that your corrections get in the copy with Peters so that when it is published, they will be included. . .

Unfortunately, this was not to be the case. The printed score from Peters does not present the preferred ending, but rather a more-protracted, rather anemic one.

Herbert Howells

A major commission from the 1970s was Herbert Howells’ Dallas Canticles, the unique Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis composed for St. Luke’s Church, where I was organist and choirmaster from 1971 until 1980. This lovely work was first performed there in 1975. The dedication and copyright of the work, basically a gift from the generous English composer, led to some early adventures in music publishing and the nurturing of  professional and personal connections with the American composer, church musician, and publisher Gerald Near.

Gerald Near

Undoubtedly the most ambitious of my commissions thus far is Near’s three-movement Concerto for Harpsichord, composed for performance at the 1980 national convention of the American Guild of Organists in Minneapolis. Gerald, a Minnesota resident at that time, had not been included in the group of composers invited to provide new works for the gathering, so I asked him to write a concerted work for my program in Orchestra Hall. He took on the project, and, most generously, accepted no fee for this major work.

The performance was carefully prepared, with the composer conducting a superb string ensemble comprising players from the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra. The work was greeted with warm applause and considerable affection by the large crowd of attendees. And why not? The piece is very appealing, with memorable melodies, lush harmonies, and an appropriately balanced scoring. Critic Byron Belt, writing in The American Organist for August 1980, concentrated his remarks on the plethora of new scores heard during the convention. Of the Near he commented “ . . . its obvious popular appeal was instantly audible in a splendid performance by Larry Palmer (to whom it is dedicated) and the orchestra under the composer.” In The Diapason (August 1980), Marilou Kratzenstein opined, “The Distler [Allegro Spirituoso e Scherzando] and Near works are both very idiomatic to the medium. By skillful orchestration, the harpsichord part comes through clearly even when accompanied by a 22-piece string orchestra. Both of these attractive works were given clean, crisp performances. It was a pleasure to be present at the premiere of the Gerald Near concerto, which will likely become a favorite with harpsichordists in the near-future.” A future “for the Near” has taken considerably longer than anticipated, but, at last, Gerald’s lovely work had its second performance in October 2004, this time with the SMU Meadows Symphony under Paul Phillips.

Ever peripatetic, Near lived in Dallas for a time, where he held several church positions. When I needed a piece to conclude a program given in conjunction with the Dallas Museum of Art’s major show of El Greco paintings I turned again to Gerald. He spent some time at my house trying various ideas on the harpsichord. The resulting Triptych, completed in 1982, was first played in public at the Museum in January 1983. It certainly achieved its requisite Spanish flavor in the concluding movement, a brilliant neo-Scarlattian romp. Before that Final there are two lovely miniatures--an impressionistic Carillon, and the lyrically Italianate Siciliano (inspired by the composer’s love interest at the time). All three movements are idiomatically conceived for the instrument.

Vincent Persichetti

Dear Vincent Persichetti responded to questions concerning his then-unpublished 1951 Harpsichord Sonata by sending a copy of the manuscript. I loved the work immediately, and still find this first essay for harpsichord to be Vincent’s most arresting and accessible work for the instrument! By the time I was engaged to play a harpsichord recital for the Philadelphia gathering of the International Congress of Organists in 1977, his Sonata was available in printed form. The concert was scheduled to be played in historic St. George’s Methodist Church in the central city, so Persichetti, who lived in Philadelphia, planned to attend, but heavy rain that afternoon delayed him. (It also knocked out power to many venues, causing consternation, and cancellation, for some concurrent organ recitals.) The composer arrived at the church just as my program ended, so I offered to play his Sonata for him after the audience departed. I did so, he made cogent comments (some of them concerned keeping steady tempi and he advised playing the work exactly as he had notated it), and he autographed my printed score (“Thanks to Larry Palmer for a meaningful Benjamin Franklin performance in my own city.” [The reference to Franklin refers to the bridge bearing his name. St. George’s is adjacent to the bridge access road, allowing considerable noise every few minutes from public transit vehicles.]). Then he drove me back to the hotel.

Thus began an acquaintance, nurtured by a Sonata commission from me, occasional piquant notes, or the random, unexpected telephone call from the composer. When he published an incorrect wording of the dedication in my commissioned Sonata VI (crediting Southern Methodist University with payment of the commission fee, an error that I feared might cause problems with some of my academic colleagues), Vincent assured me that he would think of some way to make it up to me. A year or so later, he telephoned with the news that his latest piece, Serenade Number 15, would bear the inscription “Commissioned by Larry Palmer.” “To make it official,” he said, “send me a check for one dollar.” Because this was a time of high inflation, I sent him a check for two dollars, eliciting the response, “How wonderful--this is the first time I’ve ever had a commission doubled!”

It was even more gratifying for me, since I gained two works from a significant composer for a total fee of $502.

Persichetti’s concise Serenade consists of five short movements: the moody Prelude, marked desolato; a quicker Episode; the even faster Bagatelle; a gentle, cantabile Arioso; and the closing Capriccio--made up of a delicato single line, in the texture of a Bach composition for solo stringed instrument. The seven-minute work reminds that, while Persichetti was a distinguished academic, whose mind espoused complicated serial techniques, his soul remained true to the song-inspired expressivity of his Italian heritage.

Rudy Davenport

The 1990s saw a veritable spate of harpsichord writing by Texas-based composer Rudy Davenport. First introduced to me in 1992 through Fr. Tom Goodwin, a harpsichord-playing Catholic padre on Padre Island, Rudy provided me with nine unique works for solo harpsichord or small ensemble with harpsichord. His first national exposure came at the combined 1998 Southeastern and Midwestern Historical Keyboard Societies’ meeting in Texas, where a program devoted to Davenport’s harpsichord writing concluded with the haunting Songs of the Bride, the composer’s settings of texts from The Song of Solomon for solo soprano, oboe, and harpsichord. (Six of these works comprise the program for the compact disc Music of Rudy Davenport, issued by Limited Editions Recordings in 2003.)

Some of my most enjoyable concert experiences have been those involving making music with others, and none has offered more delight than performing music for multiple harpsichords (usually two prove difficult enough to nudge into some semblance of compatible tunings). A Davenport work of exceptional charm, but one not graced with a completely written-out score, is his At Play with Giles Farnaby, a set of seven variations and a fugal finale on Farnaby’s For Two Virginals (Number 55 in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book). Rudy heard this short piece when it was performed by colleague Barbara Baird and me during our 1994 summer harpsichord workshop in New Mexico. His jaunty take on it, as well as the delightful and crafty contrapuntal ending have been an audience favorite on the two occasions we played together. This duo harpsichord work was an especially intensive collaboration, in its creation as well as its performance. Since the divergence of our ways after 1999, I have missed such exuberant music making, as well as the active involvement in fine polishing and editing Rudy’s engaging works.

Glenn Spring

But that void has been filled by the reintroduction into my artistic life of the Denver-based composer Glenn Spring, first encountered at the 1990 Alienor Harpsichord Composition competition finals in Augusta, Georgia. There his William Dowd: His Bleu was one of the winning works. Eventually Spring’s composition was published in The Diapason’s February 1992 tribute to the eminent harpsichord maker. A short while later Glenn’s son Brian moved to Dallas, giving us yet another reason to “stay in touch.” After Brian’s departure from this part of Texas there were years of diminishing communication, a situation suddenly reversed by Brian’s “out-of-the-blue” early morning call from Korea, where he was employed as an English teacher. He must have told his father about this call, for shortly thereafter I received a copy of a 1999 keyboard work, Glenn’s seven-movement charmer Trifles (now a prize winner in the most recent Alienor Competition, 2004). I liked it, learned it, and began playing it in recitals here and there.

A special confluence of friends occurred when Charles and Susan Mize, having contracted for Richard Kingston’s opus 300 Millennium harpsichord, a spectacular nine-foot Franco-Flemish instrument with contemporary brushed steel stand and computer-compatible music desk, asked me to play the Washington, D.C. dedication concert on the instrument. I thought it desirable that Charles should play on his new instrument at that event, so I commissioned Glenn Spring to write a work for two players at one instrument. The pleasing result was Suite 3-D, comprising Denver Rocket, Big D[allas] Blues, and D C Steamroller (honoring the three D’s of our home cities), interspersed with two quiet, lyrical movements (Romance, Night Thoughts). For a second performance on my home concert series (Limited Editions), long-time colleague Charles Brown brought both his musical and histrionic skills to the work, serving as collaborative harpsichordist as well as creator and reader of witty verses before each movement.

The most recent sins of commission, from the year 2004, have included another ensemble work by Spring, Images from Wallace Stevens for Violin and Harpsichord, first performed February 13 in celebration of the 20th season of house concerts (program number 60). Meeting Glenn’s wife, violinist Kathleen Spring, at the Mize harpsichord dedication program, I invited her to join me in this anniversary season, and inquired about possible violin and harpsichord pieces from her husband’s catalog. He responded by offering to compose something for us. Consisting of seven movements, the Images are inspired by short bits of Stevens’ poetry, so much of which evokes musical connections.

Tim Broege

Tim Broege’s score Songs Without Words Set Number Seven, composed for the SMU Wind Ensemble’s conductor Jack Delaney and me, had its first performance by the group and mezzo-soprano Virginia Dupuy on April 16, 2004. The most notable and prominent part for harpsichord is Broege’s reworking of the famous Lachrimae Pavan by John Dowland as each section is presented by the solo harpsichord, then reprised by the full ensemble, heard as the fifth of the work’s nine movements. (This setting may be extracted and played as a solo harpsichord composition).

Simon Sargon

My 35th annual faculty recital at SMU in September 2004 featured the first public hearing of composition professor Simon Sargon’s harpsichord reworking  of Dos Prados (“From the Meadows”), another lovely pavan, originally conceived for the single-manual 1762 Iberian organ in SMU’s Meadows Museum, and now, with a few changes of texture and tessitura, effectively adapted for solo harpsichord.

Involving composers in our performing lives is one of the most rewarding actions we can take. For us it provides the excitement of adding new pieces to our repertoire; for them, it is an affirmation of their necessary contributions to the ongoing vitality of our art; and perhaps not least, this is one pleasure that is neither life-threatening nor fattening! I urge each of you to join me in committing some sins of commission in the near future.

Sources

Calvin Hampton: Consonance remains unpublished; however an increasing number of his organ works are available from  Wayne Leupold Editions (available through ECS Publishing).

Neely Bruce: Nine Variations is available from <[email protected]> (or 212/875-7011).

Rudy Shackelford: Tombeau de Stravinsky is published by Joseph Boonin (B.319).

Recording: The Harpsichord Now and Then (Larry Palmer, harpsichord), MHS LP 3222.

Ross Lee Finney: Hexachord for Harpsichord is published by Edition Peters (67034).

Herbert Howells: Dallas Canticles, Aureole Editions (available from MorningStar Music).

For additional information about the commissioning of this work, see my article “Herbert Howells and the Dallas Canticles” in The American Organist, October 1992, pp. 60-62.

Gerald Near: Concerto for Harpsichord and Strings 1980 (Aureole Editions 149; performance materials on rental only) and Triptych for Harpsichord (Aureole Editions 02) are both available from MorningStar Music.

Recording (Triptych): 20th Century Harpsichord Music, vol. 2 (Barbara Harbach, harpsichord), Gasparo GSCD-266.

Vincent Persichetti: his nine Harpsichord Sonatas and Serenade 15, are published by Elkan-Vogel.

For additional information see my article “Vincent Persichetti: A Love for the harpsichord (Some Words to Mark his 70th Birthday)” in The Diapason, June 1985, p. 8.

Rudy Davenport: Scores are available from the composer at <www.RudyDavenport. com>.

For additional information, see my article “Rudy Davenport’s Harpsichord Music of the 1990s” in The Diapason, April 2004, p. 18.

Recording: Music of Rudy Davenport (Patti Spain, soprano; Stewart Williams, oboe; Larry Palmer, harpsichord), Limited Editions Recordings LER 9904.

Glenn Spring: Scores are available from the composer at <[email protected]>.

Tim Broege: Scores are available from the composer at <[email protected]>.

Simon Sargon: Scores are available from the composer at <[email protected]>.

Related Content

Rudy Davenport's Harpsichord Music of the 1990s

Larry Palmer

Larry Palmer is harpsichord editor of The Diapason.

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Repertoire

[* indicates an available recording]

*Lagrimas [Tears] (1992), solo harpsichord

Noce Oscura [Dark Night] (1993), solo harpsichord

Enchanted Journey (1993), solo harpsichord

*Soliloquy VI of St. Teresa of Avila (1994), soprano, harpsichord

At Play with Giles Farnaby (1995), two harpsichords

*Sonata for Oboe and Harpsichord (1996)

*Songs of the Bride (1996), soprano, oboe, harpsichord

*Seven Innocent Dances (1996), solo harpsichord

*Chaconne: A Remembrance of Louis Couperin (1997), solo harpsichord

Four Dark Dances (1998), solo harpsichord

Millennium Preludes (1999), solo harpsichord

 

The Agony and Ecstasy of Writing for Harpsichord

"Rudy, WHERE are those seven harpsichord dances you promised?"

"Oh, they're all finished . . ."

"Well, why haven't I seen them?"

"They aren't written down yet--just completed in my head."

"Don't you suppose that if you want someone to play them, you should commit them to paper?"

This exchange between us took place on an October morning in 1996 as Rudy Davenport drove me to the airport. The night before I had played a recital for his Corpus Christi parish, St. Pius X Catholic Community, during which the first public hearing of his Songs of the Bride had moved the audience to tears.

The dances referred to had been promised several years previously for the graduate harpsichord recital of one of my students at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. Although the work had not been delivered, the thought of them had, nonetheless, continued to intrigue me. A month later they arrived in the mail. My nagging had finally paid off.

Seven Innocent Dances, premiered the following April at House of Hope Presbyterian Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, remain among the composer's most perfectly conceived works for the harpsichord. Scarcely anything needed to be changed or adjusted for texture. Miniature etudes, concealing their didactic purpose extremely well, they never fail to charm listeners with their brevity, suitability to the instrument, and easy-to-enjoy melodies. Each short movement has a title that begins "With," prompting the reflection that this is authentic "With it" music!

* Number one, D Major, "With Casualness," begins as a study in holding arpeggiated chords, but quickly shows its lack of predictability by having the first note of each group released from the sixth measure on. The effect is that of a limp!

* Number two, E minor, "With Resolve," contrasts an accompanied melody with a chordal accompaniment.

* Number three, G Major, "With Playfulness," is a study in shifting meters. In the second half of the piece the dry, lute-like sounds of the buff stop are featured.

* Number four, A minor, "With Excitement," is a study in hand-crossings and the arpeggiation of chords at different speeds.

* Number five, B minor, "With Fire," is a single page in perpetual motion, reminiscent of a Chopin etude.

* Number six, F Major, "With Pomposity," is a tango as well as a study in quick repeated notes.

* Number seven, C Major, "With Steadiness," is another study in holding and releasing notes. Its effect is similar to that of Bach's C Major Prelude in the first book of his Well-Tempered Clavier.

These Dances are dedicated to Tom Goodwin, a Catholic priest whose Willard Martin harpsichord was Rudy's introduction to the instrument. Father Tom first suggested to Rudy that he write something for harpsichord, particularly since I was known to be interested in playing new music. In 1992 Fr. Goodwin had invited me to give a Lenten recital at his church in Port Aransas. Following that concert he introduced me to Rudy, who showed me his work for harpsichord, Lagrimas. A set of variations in the style of the English virginalists, the work has seven parts (a liturgical reference). Inspiration for the piece had come from the writings of St. Teresa of Avila, the Spanish mystic whose works first attracted the composer to the Catholic faith.

Although it was successful as music, the work was a disaster as a work for harpsichord. Like so many 20th-century pieces, it was a piano composition in disguise, requiring a damper pedal to allow harmonic coherence in its widely spaced arpeggiations. I made some small suggestions for improvement to the work and left south Texas with little memory either of the work or of its composer.

But Rudy did make substantive changes, and, since he had enrolled for my summer workshop near Taos, I promised him that if he would continue to accept suggestions about the piece and write out a fair copy, I would play it on my faculty recital that summer at Fort Burgwin--which I did. The piece was well-received by the audience, and Rudy's career as a composer for harpsichord was launched. Over years he continued to think about better harpsichord textures for Lagrimas, eventually settling on solutions more apt than his original version had been.

Rudy's second harpsichord work, Noce Oscura, was dedicated to harpsichord maker Richard Kingston, who was builder-in-residence for our New Mexico workshop. This short six-page piece reflected the composer's exposure to the unmeasured preludes of Louis Couperin, alternating specifically notated spread chords with more rhythmically incisive sections.

A growing sophistication in Davenport's harpsichord writing was evident in his next effort: Enchanted Journey, Suite for Harpsichord, an autobiographical work in seven movements (Prelude: Long Ago and Far Away; March: The Journey Begins; Scherzo: The Jester as Companion; Waltz: Mountains and Valleys; Recitative: Mist; Interlude: Reminiscence; Finale: Journey's End).

Each of Rudy's ensemble pieces was created for specific performers and a scheduled program. The first of these "commissions" was Painful Longing for God, a cantata based on the sixth soliloquy of St. Teresa. Soprano Patti Spain had been engaged to sing baroque works with harpsichord. We programmed a lot of Purcell and some Handel, but I wanted a new work to add another aural dimension to the program. Rudy responded with one movement: a recitative unified by a haunting recurrent motive for the harpsichord. I found this appropriate, but suggested immediately that the work needed to be extended. He agreed, and speedily wrote two additional movements. The ending of this work never seemed quite right, a problem not finally resolved until we were engaged in recording it! We had experimented over the years with at least three possible solutions, but finally settled on the simplest of them all: an unaccompanied vocal line. Interestingly enough, Davenport's Soliloquy has a remarkable affinity to Purcell's masterful dramatic cantata The Blessed Virgin's Expostulation, a composition Rudy heard for the first time at the same recital in which we first performed his own composition!

It took a lot of convincing to get Rudy to agree to compose a work for oboe and harpsichord. He had never heard a first-rate oboist and he was adamant that a clarinet would be a more suitable musical partner. It was not until we were standing in the checkout lane of an all-night grocery store in Corpus Christi discussing the pros and cons of the two instruments that a checker's comment "Write it for oboe. I used to play one!" helped convince him. A witty, classically proportioned Sonata for Oboe and Harpsichord resulted. First performed in the fall of 1996 on my house concert series, Limited Editions, it was an instant hit. In three movements, the work is reminiscent of Poulenc and Mozart in the first; poignantly nostalgic for the Appalachian surroundings of the composer's childhood home in Hayesville, North Carolina in the second; and playfully humorous in the third.

This first experience of writing for the oboe led directly to the composition of Songs of the Bride. Here soprano, oboe, and harpsichord unite to create hauntingly longing sounds for the exquisite images of King Solomon's sensuous love poetry. I was immediately attracted to this powerful work, but found its intensity almost overwhelming. An instrumental interlude seemed necessary to give a little respite. The composer agreed, providing a "pastoral interlude," with ostinati and clever use of quintuple meter. It was just what the song-cycle needed.

Chaconne: A Remembrance of Louis Couperin (1997) pays homage to one of the greatest of classic French composers for harpsichord. Using a recurring grand couplet with intervening material in the style of the 17th-century master, Davenport wrote a noble and appealing work, totally idiomatic to the instrument. In it he paid tribute to the first compact disc recording I had made on my Vaudry-copy instrument by Yves Beaupré, as well as to Rudy's own instrument, a gloriously resonant single manual harpsichord in the French style by Richard Kingston.

Four works from this bountiful catalog were heard in the first "retrospective" concert of Davenport's harpsichord compositions during the 1998 joint meeting of the Southeastern and Midwestern Historic Keyboard Societies. The uniquely communicative soprano Patti Spain and brilliant young oboist Stewart Williams joined me for a program comprising the Chaconne, Soliloquy, Innocent Dances, and Songs of the Bride. Audience response ranged from purely positive to ecstatic: here was music of our time that was also timeless, emotionally involving, and something people enjoyed hearing.

Dark Dances in Ancient Style mirrored a troubled period in the composer's personal life. Comprising an Allemande, Courante, Sarabande, and Gigue, Rudy thought of them as possible candidates for choreography, writing that he "could just see the costumes--shroud-like, subdued colors . . . two or four couples. Modern dance, not classical ballet, but incorporating the feeling and steps of the baroque dances, French in style." In two autumn performances I prefaced these pieces with an E minor Toccata by the 17th-century German Matthias Weckmann. There seemed to be no undue clashing of styles or centuries.

Approaching the end of the twentieth century, Rudy was filled with excitement over a large project: composing a Well-Tempered Clavier for the new age! I have seen ten of a projected twenty-four Millennium Preludes, and performed only three of them--the last of my Davenport premieres: a graceful C minor Toccatina; the madcap G Major Texas Wildflowers (As Seen on the Roadside from a Speeding Car); and a Chopinesque, E-flat minor Buddha Smiles in the Rain. Lovely pieces, all.

Recordings

The Davenport concert in Dallas led, eventually, to a recording, completed in 1999. The same artists who had been responsible for first performances of all these pieces spent three hot June days and evenings committing their interpretations to disc. The venue was Caruth Auditorium at Southern Methodist University. Difficulties were many: extraneous noises from outside the hall (for instance the raucous sounds of a jazz combo at a reception in the lobby, scheduled, unbeknownst to us, for one of the evenings of our sessions); several major changes of musical text requested on the spot by the composer (including an entirely new, lower key for the last movement of Songs of the Bride); and, subsequently, a bitter disagreement over production details (my insistence that the cover be an expressionistic, attention-demanding reproduction of the painting Lagrimas by Colorado-based artist friend Doug Pedersen marked the initial trouble, followed by Rudy's second thoughts about certain recorded balances). The result was that the composer withdrew copyright permission for the release of the just-delivered discs and instructed me, through his lawyer, not to perform any of his music in the future.

Now, after years of negotiations accomplished with the help of several mutual friends, all difficulties have been resolved, and the disc Music of Rudy Davenport (Limited Editions Recording 9904) comprising the Sonata for Oboe, Chaconne, Seven Innocent Dances, Soliloquy, Lagrimas, and Songs of the Bride, is available at last.

A second, more recent recording of Seven Innocent Dances is included on the Centaur compact disc (CRC 2651) Dances with Harpsichords, played by Elaine Funaro. (This disc features delightful terpsichorean-inspired works by Herbert Howells, Kent Holliday, Dimitri Cervo, Stephen Dodgson, Timothy Tikker, Timothy Brown, Francis Thomé, Sondra Cark, Sally Mosher and Stephen Yates, in addition to the Davenport Dances).

Scores

All requests for scores should be directed to the composer, who may be contacted through his website <www.RudyDavenport.com&gt;, where his telephone phone number is listed as 512/416-1802.         

Thanks to Jane Johnson for permission to reproduce her 1998 drawing of Rudy Davenport.

Old Instruments, New Music: SEHKS 2004

Martha Novak Clinkscale

Martha Novak Clinkscale is the author of Makers of the Piano: 1700-1860, 2 vols. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993 and 1999). She is Adjunct Professor of Fortepiano at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.

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Beautiful weather and a warm welcome greeted the nearly 100 registrants for the Southeastern Historical Keyboard Society's conclave, held March 11-13 at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Those interested in the early piano found a wealth of historical pianos in the G. Norman and Ruth G. Eddy Collection, and the University also boasts the Franz and Willemina de Hen Collection of Musical Instruments.  Many of these treasures were attractively, if compactly, displayed, in the lobby of the Music Building.

Brenda Neece, curator of the entire Duke musical instrument collection, opened the proceedings with a description and short history. Edwin Good then described his adventures in preparing the first checklist of the Eddy Collection. He pointed out that, besides the thirteen Eddy pianos (eleven of which are now at Duke), collector Norman Eddy owned a number of other instruments, including several horns, a tuba and an ophicleide. Among the Eddy acquisitions displayed are an upright grand piano by William Stodart (ca. 1810-18), a small Broadwood square "playing-card piano," and a splendid square by Alpheus Babcock. To illustrate the beautiful, singing tone of the Babcock, Ted played the two-movement Haydn Sonata in D major (Hob. XVI:51). Following Good's presentation, Maria Rose described and demonstrated the "singing tone" of the early French Romantic piano with works by Hérold and Boëly--electrifying discoveries--on a Clementi grand (ca. 1805-10). Although written in 1816, the Hérold sonata already shows the rhapsodic melody and rippling virtuosic style of French opera arias of the 1820s. These fluid and expressive pieces are dramatic, yet sensitive, and immediately suggest that they and pieces like them had a powerful effect on the young Chopin. Maria explained the similarities between the Clementi's English action and the mécanisme à étrier (repetition action) of the 1808 Érard grand piano. Indeed, Sandra Soderlund, in her presentation on pianist-composer Ignaz Moscheles, stated that even he preferred Clementi's pianos to those of  Érard for their "more subtle mechanism," although Moscheles later admitted his admiration for the Érard 1822 double escapement action.

To close this first session Gail Olszewski played a program of piano music by late 18th- and early 19th-century English women composers. She proved that these works possess irresistible charm and vivacity, especially noted in the Sophia Corri Dussek (1775-1847) sonata movement and two movements from a sonata by Cecilia Maria Barthélémon (ca. 1770-after 1840).

Friday afternoon's events took place at the inner-city home of instrument collector Steve Barrell. The host himself introduced the instruments with amusing accounts of his start as a collector of instruments and early keyboard music. Playing several of his antique clavichords, Steve demonstrated their differences as well as the sweetness of their tone. His presentation was followed by a vigorous and technically impressive program of fortepiano music by Haydn, C. P. E. Bach, and Mozart played by Kristian Bezuidenhout on a 1794 Dulcken instrument. Bezuidenhout's ornamentation of the repeated sections was imaginative and engaging, and sometimes even whimsical.

For the Friday evening concert, John Pruett, classical violin; Brent Wissick, classical cello; and Randall Love, fortepiano, gave an all-Beethoven program: a sonata for piano solo and duo sonatas with violin and cello, ending with a spirited performance of the "Ghost" Trio. Love played a replica by Thomas and Barbara Wolf of a six-octave Nannette Streicher piano from 1815.

Saturday morning's session began with Margaret Hood's introduction of her own handsome replica of the six-and-a-half-octave Nannette Streicher grand at Yale. Interestingly, Margaret pointed out that in all pianos that she has seen containing both bassoon stops and moderators, the bassoon stop is coupled to the moderator; this phenomenon convinces her that it may have been the norm to use them together. The Eddy Clementi was brought into play again by Karyl Louwenaar and her colleague, violinist Karen Clarke, in stunning performances of two sonatas by Clementi, the G major, op. 2, no. 3, with "the accompaniment of a violin or flute," and the solo piano sonata in G minor, op. 14, no. 2.

Andrew Willis was next with a tour de force presentation of the Chopin G-flat Impromptu (op. 51, 1842), which he played--with the help of computer editing and merging--on six different mid-19th-century Pleyel grands from European collections. An ultimate surprise was the inclusion of Andrew's own recently acquired instrument: the Willis-Greensboro Pleyel (1848).

Harpsichords and organs also were a spectacular part of this conclave. Duke University Organist Robert Parkins opened the conference on Thursday evening with a thrilling program of Frescobaldi, Bruna, Cabanilles, Guilain, and Bach works played on the Italianate meantone Brombaugh organ (1997) in a small side chapel and the monumental, soaring Flentrop organ (1976) in the nave of the Gothic-style Duke Chapel.

Before an elegant Saturday lunch in the University Faculty Commons, David Chung's glowing recital of works by Froberger, Weckmann, Reincken, and Böhm in the stylus phantasticus rang out on a splendid William Dowd Mietke harpsichord in the same small side chapel that houses the Brombaugh organ.

Saturday afternoon offerings included Joseph Butler's paper entitled "Grigny, Bach, and Walther: Revision of the Premier Livre d'Orgue." Bonnie Choi followed with a smattering of virtuoso 20th-century harpsichord works by Ligeti, Hakim, Penn, and the outrageous and hilarious Bird-Boogie (1973) by Franspeter Goebels. Larry Palmer, never to be outdone, gave a lecture-recital comprising some of his many "Sins of Commission," including Neely Bruce's Nine Variations on an Original Theme (1961); Glenn Spring's Images after Wallace Stevens (2003), in which he was joined by violinist Kathleen Spring; two movements from Serenade 15 (1987) by Persichetti; and Gerald Near's Triptych (1982). This program included brief recorded excerpts from works by Rudy Shackelford, Ross Lee Finney, and Rudy Davenport. The entire afternoon served as a stimulating warm-up for the Aliénor Competition finalists' concert that evening.

Five prize-winning solo harpsichord works had been selected by judges Joyce Lindorff, Keith Paulson-Thorp, and Max Yount as finalists in this year's competition. Three additional monetary awards were to be bestowed by vote of the audience. The program began with two exceptionally attractive and engaging suites, Idée Prix Fixe by Kari Henrik Juusela of Stetson University and Trifles by Glenn Spring of Denver. These were followed by multi-movement works by Stefan Thomas and Stephen Francis Yates, the Bulgarian Dance and Fantasy by Paul Whetstone, and the Sonatina No. 2 by Asako Hirabayashi, whom the audience selected as the top winner (several men in the audience were overheard to admit voting for her startling attire).

In a Chamber Music category, new to this competition, second prize went to Robert Greenlee's intriguing and inventive Sonata Rondo, while Andriy Zymenko's over-extended and occasionally whimsical Happy Spider was awarded third place. Jukka Tiensuu's interminable--and boring--Lots was inexplicably given first prize. This piece expanded minimalism to the maximum and diminished this listener's patience to sub-zero. One sympathized with the players.

In addition to composers and presenters, the event planners deserve accolades, especially for the magnificent Saturday meals. The luncheon banquet tempted eye as well as palate, and the final reception, a triumphant buffet, was prepared by sixteen-year-old Eric Love, son of Elaine Funaro and Randall Love. Eric already enjoys a wide local reputation as a master chef; for the celebratory reception he shopped, cooked, baked, and served--all to great acclaim.

Congratulations go to program co-chairs Elaine Funaro and Randall Love, and their local arrangements committee members for one of the best SEHKS conclaves ever.

Harpsichord News

Larry Palmer
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Where next?

So, you have mastered Couperin’s eight preludes from L’Art de toucher le clavecin. What harpsichord repertoire should follow these basic pieces?

To my ears Domenico Scarlatti was the ultimate artist/composer when it came to varying textures in writing for our instrument. I have advised more than a few curious contemporary composers to consult the 500-plus keyboard sonatas from this Baroque genius and then to emulate his wide palette of various densities of sound: one of the best ways to create a varied dynamic range.

Suggestions: perhaps the most-assigned to first-semester students have been two A-major Sonatas, K (Kirkpatrick) numbers 208 and 209. There are several fine editions from which to choose, but, once again as with my choice for the first Couperin pieces, I have found that another “made in America” publication works well on several levels. The sometimes-maligned yellow-bound Schirmer Editions offer Sixty Sonatas by Scarlatti in two volumes. Chosen and edited by the formidable scholar and artist Ralph Kirkpatrick (he of the most-used numbering system for this composer), these 60 were published as Schirmer Library Volumes 1774 and 1775. (Too bad they could not have waited until number 1776, which would have been even more patriotic!) K. 208 and 209 are found in the first of these collections.

Kirkpatrick, working midway in the 20th century (the copyright is dated 1953), used source materials transmitted to him via microfilm. In a rare misreading of the dim and hazy film, he mistook the tempo indication for K. 208, transcribing Adº as “Andante” rather than the indicated “Adagio,” providing once again a perfect teaching moment when one presents the proof of this mistake. Also, it does make quite a difference: Andante, a moving or walking tempo, is not at all the same as Adagio, which, in the composer’s native Italian, means “at your ease” and thus should suggest more flexibility with rubato and a quieter, more involved personality—perhaps that of a lovesick flamenco guitarist. As for texture: the sonata begins with only two voices, soprano and bass, and adds a middle line in measure three, introduces a fourth voice in the chords of measure seven, and builds a terrific crescendo in the penultimate measure thirteen of the A section, before cadencing on an open dominant octave.

The B section begins with a single bass note, and in its first measure we are confronted with the instruction “Tremulo,” indicating a needed ornament in the melodic line. There has been much speculation and some gnashing of musicological teeth about this particular instruction in Domenico’s works. I have tried various solutions, but fairly late in my career I decided that it might possibly indicate the mordent! My reasoning: the mordent is one of the two most generally prevalent ornaments in Baroque music, but there is no indication of it in Scarlatti’s sonatas; and the mordent seems to be feasible each time a Tremulo is indicated.

Vis-à-vis that other musical ornament, the trill, it was the Iberian music specialist Guy Bovet who, during our one semester as Dallas colleagues, reminded me that the usual starting note for Scarlattian trills should be the main (written) note! I realize that many of us were heavily influenced by our piano or organ teachers who taught us to begin all Baroque trills with the note above; but in actual musical practice, this is rather silly: trills normally do begin on the written note in this Italian-Iberian repertoire, but here, and in general, I refuse to be bound to one invariable rule, and frequently substitute an upper-note trill, particularly in cadential figures that seem to ache for a dissonance (or, occasionally, simply to avoid ugly-sounding parallel octave movement of the voices). My advice is to follow Bovet’s instruction as a general practice, but also to use one’s musical instincts when required: after all, we have yet to hear those “recordings” from the 17th and 18th centuries that would prove once and for all what the local practice was. (Do, please, let me know if they are discovered.)

The paired sonata, K. 209, could not be more different from its shorter sibling: an Allegro (Happy) with some technical challenges (as opposed to the many musical challenges offered by K. 208) should prove again the inventiveness of the composer, especially in his use of varied textures. One spot that particularly delights is found in measure 70, where, after the vigorous cadence begins with two voices, the resolution is one single soprano E, a totally unexpected surprise! Kenneth Gilbert, in his eleven-volume edition of 550 sonatas for Le Pupitre, adds the missing bass note, choosing the reading found in a different manuscript source in which the next iteration of that same figure (measure 147) does resolve with an open octave in the bass. I still prefer Kirkpatrick’s reading for these passages: rather than adding notes in the first example, he does away with them at the second iteration . . . and thereby preserves an equal surprise for the B section.

Quite a few other sonatas that serve well as technique-enhancing pieces are to be found in the set comprising the first Kirkpatrick numbers 1 through 30: works published in London (1738) as Scarlatti’s Essercizi per gravicembalo. If your student (or you) want a bit of narrative music, the final entry in this set, K. 30, is particularly fun to play and hear: nicknamed the “Cat” Fugue, it is easy to imagine a favorite feline frolicking treble-ward on the keyboard to create a fugue subject spanning an octave and a half. Several years ago, when preparing a program of Iberian music to play on Southern Methodist University’s Portuguese organ (a single-manual instrument built in 1762 by Caetano Oldovini for Portugal’s Evora Cathedral), I turned to the Alfred Edition print of this sonata, which incorporates some of the quite useful (and interesting) minor corrections offered in a second edition from the year 1739, also published in London by the English organist and Scarlatti-enthusiast Thomas Roseingrave. 

Finally, should one become entranced by Scarlatti’s delightful catwalk, there is a rarely encountered piece by the Bohemian composer Antonín Rejcha (1770–1836) from his 36 Fugues, op. 36, published in Vienna (1805). Fugue Nine is subtitled “On a Theme from Domenico Scarlatti.” In it our musical cat, elderly and more reserved, is heard ranging a keyboard that extends to top F, before settling down, finally, with quiet cadential chords. The score, published by Universal Edition, is found in Bohemian Piano Music from the Classical Period, volume 2 (UE18583), edited by Peter Roggenkamp.

 

Some contemporary components

It will come as no surprise to our loyal readers that, during my lengthy tenure at the Meadows School, Southern Methodist University, I required at least one 20th- or 21st-century composition to fulfill repertoire requirements during each semester of harpsichord study. Among the most admired of these pieces were the twelve individual movements of Lambert’s Clavichord by Herbert Howells. These, the first published 20th-century works for the clavichord, are true gems, and equally delightful both to play and to hear. Issued by Oxford University Press in 1928, they are not widely available now, but I have been told that they may be obtained as an “on-demand print” from the publisher. Howells’s own favorite of the set was De la Mare’s Pavane, named for his friend, the distinguished poet Walter de la Mare. Indeed, it was a question about one chord in this piece that precipitated my first visit with the composer in 1974. Dr. Howells did not answer me immediately, but before we parted he took a pen in hand and drew in the missing sharp sign before the middle C on the second half of beat two in measure 24. That had been my concern, that missing sharp! Thus, I was relieved to have a correction from the only person who could not be doubted, the great man himself.

Other works recommended for investigative forays into this literature (works offering a great deal of good examples for the development of dynamic, articulate, and musical playing) include Rudy Davenport’s Seven Innocent Dances (which I have dubbed the “With It” suite): With Casualness, With Resolve, With Playfulness, With Excitement, With Fire, With Pomposity, With Steadiness­—available in the Aliénor Harpsichord Competition 2000 Winners volume published by Wayne Leupold (WL600233); Glenn Spring’s Trifles: Suite Music for Harpsichord comprising the miniatures A Start, Blues for Two, Burlesque, Cantilena, Habañerita, Recitative, and Introspection, lovely pieces indeed, as are Spring’s more recent Bartókian miniatures: Béla Bagatelles (2011). Both sets are available from the composer ([email protected]). Finally, from the late British composer Stephen Dodgson, three movements of his Suite 1 in C for Clavichord: Second Air, Tambourin, and Last Fanfare (published by Cadenza Music in 2008) form a delightful group of pieces. Equally effective at the harpsichord, they have proven to be very audience-friendly.

 

A May reminder

Do not forget Lou Harrison’s centenary (May 2017), the perfect month in which to investigate the American composer’s Six Sonatas, as detailed in Harpsichord News, The Diapason, October 2016, page 10.

 

The Organ in Concert

A New Series of Organ Music Established by MorningStar Music Publishers

Marilyn Biery

Marilyn Biery, DMA, AAGO, is Associate Director of Music at the Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul, Minnesota. An ardent supporter of composers and performer of new music, she has collaborated with Libby Larsen, Stephen Paulus, David Evan Thomas, James Hopkins, Pamela Decker, and others. She is editor of the new Concert Organ Music Series at MorningStar Music. Biery earned Bachelor and Master of Music degrees in organ from Northwestern University, and her Doctorate from the University of Minnesota.

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It was a frustrating two years of hopeful submissions and
disappointing rejections. Imagine--you are a performer and enthusiast of
new music and you have just been given the greatest gift: a piece of music
written and dedicated to you! You so emphatically believe this composition
should be shared with the world that you do everything you can to find the
piece a publisher, only to be told that it is “a wonderful piece that
won’t sell” or “beautifully written, but the sales it would generate
in today’s market wouldn’t offset the cost of printing it.”

In the spring of 1999, Jim (Biery) and I were given the gift
of an organ duet by one of our composer friends, David Evan Thomas of St. Paul.
Written in the Dust is a symphony for organ duet, written by a versatile composer
whose works have been performed by the Minnesota Orchestra and the Minnesota
Opera, who is Composer-in-Residence at the Schubert Club in St. Paul, and whose
undergraduate years of study at Northwestern University included organ lessons
with Robert Delcamp, currently University Organist at University of the South
in Sewanee, Tennessee. Written in the Dust is
a semi-programmatic work based on the scripture story from John 8: 3-11
about the woman who is caught in adultery, whose punishment was to be stoned
for her sin. Jim and I are convinced that Thomas’ duet is one of the
finest examples of literature written for the genre. We were so excited about
Written
in the Dust
that after the premiere, I
started sending it off to various publishers for consideration. I tried
publishers in the United States, England and France. All were very impressed
with the work; none agreed to publish it.

In the fall of 2001, I broached my frustration to Mark
Lawson, President of MorningStar Music Publishers. MorningStar was founded in
1987 by Rodney Schrank; in 1997 Mark Lawson became president and has continued
the MorningStar tradition of publishing quality music with particular emphasis
on choral, organ and handbell music. Not only did Lawson agree to publish it,
he suggested that we start a series of music that would fit into this category:
Concert Organ Series at MorningStar. The series would include pieces that were
not composed for worship (although some portions or movements could be used as
such), that would be primarily non-chorale based, more virtuosic, more
extended, and more developed than the music currently published by the houses
which promote (primarily sacred) organ music in the United States today. Lawson
says: “I would like this series to encourage composers to continue to
create concert works, and MorningStar will endeavor to make them available to
those interested in obtaining them.”

The reason that Lawson could suggest such a project without
as much concern for its potential to return the publisher’s investment is
that his investment is minimal. Technology today has made it practical for
composers to print their own publisher-ready scores using a computer program,
and therefore submit camera-ready copy. Some publishers use this system often,
others still have their own engraver convert the computer file so that it
matches their other printed scores. In the case of MorningStar, Lawson decided
to ask each Concert Organ Series composer to submit their score camera-ready,
and then MorningStar would print the copies as needed instead of committing to
a set number of printed copies.

What Lawson has done with the formation of this series is to
make a commitment to supporting composers who are writing for the organ as a
concert instrument, by advertising and making their works available through his
catalog of music for the church. Since the beginnings of the idea in 2001, the
catalog has grown to include music by Herb Bielawa, James Biery, Emma Lou
Diemer, Charles Hoag, James Hopkins, Robert Sirota, David Evan Thomas, and
others.

Emma Lou Diemer, 1995 AGO Composer of the Year, has had
numerous collections of organ pieces published.  In addition to her organ music, Diemer has written many
works for orchestra, chamber ensemble, solo voice, choir and electronic tape. She
has received an ASCAP award for publications and performances annually since
1962. Diemer says of the Concert Series: “This venture by MorningStar is
producing a treasury of new music that every concert organist will want to
delve into.”1

Herb Bielawa is a free-lance composer and pianist, married
to organist Sandra Soderlund. He has written music for instrumental ensembles,
piano, harpsichord, organ, choir, electronics, chamber opera, band and
orchestra. Bielawa recently remarked on the MorningStar series:
“MorningStar’s new series is certainly a beacon in a very dark sky.
Their bravery in embarking on this kind of project to support serious classical
music is truly laudable.”2

James Hopkins, Professor of Music Composition at the
University of Southern California, whose compositions have been performed by
the National Symphony, Denver Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Seattle
Symphony, Pacific Symphony, Fine Arts Quartet, the Western Arts Trio and the
Washington Choral Society, has received commissions from the National Endowment
for the Arts, Pasadena Chamber Orchestra and the American Guild of Organists.
Hopkins says: “I am very pleased that MorningStar provides an outlet for
music which, because of its technical demands, duration, or other elements will
necessarily not have a large commercial market. Nevertheless, this music, I
hope, merits serious attention by those whose abilities and performance venues
make these compositions entirely appropriate.”3

John Nuechterlein, President and Chief Executive Officer at
the American Composers Forum, based at the home office in St. Paul, is
supportive and enthusiastic about MorningStar’s new series: “Three
cheers to MorningStar for taking this giant leap forward. New work is critical
for the long-term health of the repertoire, and the Concert Organ Series will
offer a visible showcase for the best literature being written for organ
today.”4

Libby Larsen, American composer and tireless advocate for
contemporary music and musicians, says: “To challenge ourselves with the
compelling poetic voices of our time is really the only choice for serious
students and performers of the organ.”5

This new series deserves to thrive under the good will and
support of organists at all levels of experience and technical expertise. Organists
can support this project by collecting these scores either for performance or
for personal libraries of organ music. The list of pieces currently offered by
MorningStar on the Concert Series follows, with some description of each work.

MorningStar Concert Organ Series list of works

Organ Solo:

A Diet of Worms, Michael Horvit

Subtitled “An Entertainment for All Hallows Eve and
Other Cheery Occasions,” A Diet of Worms was written for the first annual
“Monster Concert” of the Houston Chapter of the American Guild of
Organists, held on Halloween night 1979. The title is a play on words, relating
to the two main themes employed in the work. The main body of the piece is a
passacaglia based on the children’s song “The worms crawl in, the
worms crawl out” (the tune from Paul Dukas’ The Sorcerer’s
Apprentice). The other important theme is the chant melody Dies Irae from the
pre-Vatican II Requiem Mass, which Hector Berlioz used as the “Witches
Sabbath” theme in his Symphonie fantastique. In the composer’s mind,
this made a connection to the medieval Church conclave, the Diet of Worms.

h2>Celestial Wind, Robert Sirota

In composing Celestial Wind, Sirota was inspired to write a
brilliant toccata based upon Acts 2:2-3:

And suddenly there came a sound from heaven of a rushing and
mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting.

And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire,
and it sat upon each of them.

Sirota’s aim was not merely to imitate the sound of
rushing wind and flames, but to also evoke the sense of awe and ecstasy that
must have been felt by Jesus’ disciples at this manifestation of the Holy
Spirit. (Example 1)

Cityscape, Morgan Simmons

Cityscape dates from 1992 and was composed for inclusion in
an organ recital of Chicago composers as part of the Fourth Presbyterian
Church’s annual Festival of the Arts. The theme of that year’s
festival was “Faces of the City.” This three-movement work, which
depicts facets of the city, is based on a three-note descending scale (C-B-A),
the opening notes of the popular song, “Chicago, Chicago, That
Toddlin’ Town.” Coincidentally, this same melodic sequence marks
the beginning of Old Hundredth, and a citation of that melody occurs in the
third movement. The Fourth Presbyterian Church is located on the part of North
Michigan Avenue which is known as “The Magnificent Mile.” Each of
its Sunday morning services begins with the singing of Old Hundredth, sung to
the text of the Doxology. The first performance of Cityscape was played by
David Schrader, to whom it is dedicated.

Overture to Coriolan, op. 62, Ludwig van Beethoven, arranged
for organ by James Biery

Beethoven composed nine symphonies, eleven overtures, a
violin concerto and five piano concertos, sixteen string quartets, nine piano
trios, ten violin sonatas and five cello sonatas, thirty large piano sonatas,
an oratorio, an opera, two Masses, and numerous smaller pieces, but only one
curious work for the pipe organ, an odd little Prelude which passes through all
the major keys. In 1824 Beethoven wrote to Freudenberg, an organist from
Breslau, “I, too, played the organ frequently in my youth, but my nerves
could not withstand the power of this gigantic instrument. I should place an
organist who is master of his instrument at the very head of all
virtuosi.”6 The opening unison C’s and exclamatory chords of the
Coriolan overture, each followed by some of the most resounding rests in all of
music literature, allow the magnificent King of Instruments to add its own
voice to Beethoven’s powerful music.

Deux Danses, James Hopkins

Hopkins’ Deux Danses for organ was composed in 1983
and was premiered by James Walker at the AGO Far-Western Regional convention in
June of that year. The titles for each of the dances were suggested by two
legends from Greek mythology. The title of the first dance, Mirror of Medusa,
refers to the tale of the Medusa. She was one of the three fearsome monsters
called Gorgons. Her body was covered with scales, her hair was a mass of
twisting snakes, and whoever looked at her turned into stone. In the legend,
Medusa was slain by the Greek hero Perseus, who used a shield of polished
bronze as a mirror with which to see her. The title of the second dance, The
Circle of Bacchants, refers to the followers of Bacchus, the God of Wine. The
Bacchants, being frenzied with wine, rushed through the wilderness
“uttering shrill cries and performing frightful deeds.” (Example 2)

Fantasy on Cortège et Litanie of Marcel Dupré,
James Hopkins

The Fantasy on Cortège et Litanie of Marcel
Dupré was composed in 1986 as a solo piece for concert organist Cherry
Rhodes and first performed by her in October, 1989, at Grace Cathedral, San
Francisco. Because of the very orchestral nature of the writing, the composer
decided in 1994 to recast the work in a second version for small orchestra. The
Fantasy is based on the two main themes of the well-known work Cortège
et Litanie of Dupré. Even though one or both of these themes is almost
always present in some form, there is in fact no direct quotation from the
original work. The harmonic style, while incorporating some fairly dissonant
combinations, nevertheless retains Dupré’s original E major tonal
framework. The first part of the Fantasy consists of several short sections
that evoke a vague, dream-like atmosphere. After a brief cadenza, the
rhythmically driving central portion of the work is heard. A short
recapitulation of earlier material and a final triumphant outburst bring the
Fantasy to a joyous conclusion. Hopkins’ Fantasy won first prize in an
international composition contest sponsored by the Los Angeles Chapter of the
AGO.

Five Pipe Organ Adventures, Herbert Bielawa

This set of relatively short organ pieces dates from 1993
and was written for specific groups of musicians: those who have recently
become interested in the pipe organ, those who have yet to discover it and
those who are intrigued by the pieces themselves. The Adventures were composed
with a capable keyboard player in mind, with minimal skill or experience
playing pedals. The pedal parts are fairly basic and undemanding. The number of
pedal notes in Adventures is limited, changing foot position occurs when manual
activity is minimal, and occasionally no pedal is required at all.

Four Biblical Settings, Emma Lou Diemer

This major work was commissioned by the Ventura, California
chapter of the AGO. The four movements feature a variety of styles, including
minimalism, rhythmic innovation, and subtle dissonances. It was premiered on
June 30, 1993 by Sandra Soderlund in Santa Barbara. The movements are based on
Psalm 90, Psalm 121, Isaiah 11:1 and Isaiah 35:1. The first movement is in a
minimalist style and is innovative in the way that the increments in
“volume” of the crescendo pedal are used not only for drama but to
define the phrase structure of the movement and to express the imagery in Psalm
90. The second movement (Psalm 121) has expressive, upward bending lines. The
third movement (Isaiah 11) weaves in the chorale “Jesu, meine
Freude.” The last movement (Isaiah 35) is characteristically joyful and
rhythmic in its use of various groupings of eighth-note patterns. (Example 3)

Metopes, James Hopkins

Commissioned by the Far West Regional Convention of the
American Guild of Organists, Metopes was composed in the summer of 1990 and
first performed by Cherry Rhodes in June 1991. The work consists of two
extended movements, Arachne’s Web and The Gift of Nessus. These are
connected by the brief “Interlude,” for pedals alone, which serves
to unite the two by motivic transformation. The title Metopes is the
architectural term that refers to the sculptured marble slabs between the
triglyphs of a frieze. These spaces were frequently decorated in low relief
with depictions of scenes from classical Greek mythology.

Arachne’s Web refers to the story of the maiden
Arachne, a mortal who was exceedingly skilled in the art of weaving. She
unwisely challenged the goddess Minerva to a contest. Minerva was greatly
displeased by Arachne’s obviously greater skill at weaving. To punish
Arachne for her impudence, Minerva transfigured Arachne into a spider that
hangs by its own thread. Musically, an almost constant stream of descending
thirds depicts the weaving while above it an ever more ornate melody is spun
out. An angry outburst terminates the melodic elaboration, and the movement
ends quietly with the opening material.

The Gift of Nessus relates to the story of the centaur Nessus
who attempted to run away with Dejanira, the wife of Hercules. Hercules heard
her cries and shot the centaur in the heart. The dying Centaur told Dejanira to
take a portion of his blood and keep it to be used later as a charm to preserve
the love of her husband. Dejanira did so and before long had occasion to use
it. In one of his conquests Hercules had taken prisoner a fair maiden, named
Iole, of whom Dejanira became jealous. When Hercules was about to offer
sacrifices to the gods in honor of his victory, he sent to his wife for a white
robe to use on the occasion. Dejanira, thinking it a good opportunity to try
her love-spell, steeped the garment in the blood of Nessus. As soon as the
garment became warm on the body of Hercules, the poison penetrated into all his
limbs and caused him the most intense agony. The garment stuck to his flesh and
as he wrenched it off, he tore away whole pieces of his body. This movement
begins in a low register as a slow dance with menacing sounds. As the music
gradually moves higher, the dance becomes more complex and animated. A quiet
middle portion that develops the material heard thus far provides a foil to the
dramatic and agonized final dance episode.

Of Things Hoped For, David Evan Thomas

“Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the
evidence of things not seen,” writes Paul in his letter to the Hebrews.
Thomas’ two-part work is based on the idea of faith; the experience of
writing a piece on such a subject enabled Thomas to express his own thoughts:
“Faith and I have an uneasy dialogue, since my own faith is so . . .
mercurial. But just as the act of writing a letter is the quickest way to draw
a friend close, the meditation of writing music often makes the ineffable
concrete. I found when all the notes were down that a reverent murmur had grown
into a crowning shout of praise. Paul’s words came to mind, and thus a
title.”

Of Things Hoped For begins with a modest arching phrase,
supported by a descending pedal line. The ensuing meditation develops a new
melismatic idea along with toccata elements, leading to a grand statement. A
dance follows, based on the melisma, which stretches and flips the material.
The little bass line from the opening reasserts itself as a soprano tune, first
in a quiet B-major episode, then--triumphantly and in D major--in the
trumpet. The two movements may be performed together, or may stand alone; they
would work well in a worship setting. Marilyn Biery commissioned Thomas to
write this work in honor of James Biery’s birthday in 2001; it was
premiered by James in May 2001, at the Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul,
Minnesota. (Example 4)

Organ Booklet, Herbert Bielawa

The movements in Bielawa’s Organ Booklet are
essentially etudes modeled upon the various “Organbooks” in
history. It was from Bach’s term Orgelbüchlein that he drew the
title for these organ etudes. Bielawa set himself the task of making use of the
classical major and minor triads and manipulating them in unusual ways. The
challenge was to create a fresh marriage of familiar triads with unfamiliar and
unexpected developmental procedures. Whereas the triads are from antiquity,
their combination is from the present.

Prologue, Reflection and Jubilation on York, James Biery

In Biery’s search for possible material on which to
base this commission for The Congregational Church of Green’s Farms,
Westport, Connecticut, he came across the hymn “O Lord, Almighty God, Thy
Works.” The history of the text coupled with the quirky angularity of the
melody proved irresistible. The hymn was one of several “hymns and
spiritual songs” found in the third edition (1651) of the Bay Psalm Book.
The Bay Psalm Book was published by the Congregationalist settlers in the
Massachusetts Bay Colony; in 1640 it was the first book published in English in
North America. “O Lord, Almighty God” was popularly known as
“The Song of Moses and the Lamb” and was sung at the first great
council of Congregational Churches in New England, the Cambridge Synod of 1648.
The hymn is sung to the tune York, which is one of the twelve Common Tunes from
the Scottish Psalter of 1615. At one time in England it was second only to Old
Hundredth in popularity.

Even though the Prologue, Reflection, and Jubilation is
based on the tune York, the entire melody is not heard until the third movement.
The Prologue is a tribute to one of Biery’s favorite 20th century
composers, Maurice Duruflé. The running figuration heard throughout is
built upon the first four notes of the hymn. The main theme, played on the
string stops, begins with the ascending triad of the opening phrase of the hymn
(transformed to the minor mode).

The first movement melts into the second, a serene
“Reflection.” Once again the melodic line begins with the first
four notes of York.

An improvisatory recitative passage leads into the final
“Jubilation.” This movement pays homage to Calvin Hampton, the
gifted and innovative New York composer who died in 1984 at the age of
forty-six. Again the rising triadic motive is prominent, now in the major key.
The hymntune is first heard in the pedal part, and then triumphantly in a final
grand statement. (Example 5)

Psalm 151, Emma Lou Diemer

Psalm 151 was commissioned by Joan DeVee Dixon in 1998 in
honor of Alvin Broyles. The piece moves restlessly with sixteenth-note
figuration, punctuated by melodic ideas that alternate between the hands. Psalm
151 builds to a dramatic close in which an A major chord emerges from the
contrasting sonorities and is sustained full organ to the end. (Psalm 151 is one
of the non-canonical psalms found in the Dead Sea Scrolls at Quamran.)

Scherzo, Emma Lou Diemer

Scherzo was written in 1996 in honor of Carolyn and David
Gell and for the dedication of the Schulmerich Carillon at Trinity Episcopal
Church in Santa Barbara. The piece is mostly for manuals, and sections of it
may be played with various bell sounds contrasting to light organ
registrations. It is in the style of a traditional scherzo, bouncy and bright
in character.

Six Chorale Preludes on Ton-y- Botel, Herbert Bielawa

In Giocoso, the tune is in the pedal for several measures
but turns into a fugal subject in partial imitation. In Cantilena the tune is
embedded inside the staccato “peppering” of the texture. Canone
Doppio is a double canon with fragments of the tune in the pedal. Cadenza is a
flourish for the pedals where the tune is laced into the rush of sixteenth
notes with a few commentaries on the manuals. Preghiera is a prayer in which
very delicate flakes of sound accompany the pedal, which presents the tune.
Maestoso is a grand finale with the tune appearing in the manuals and pedal
alternately. (Example 6)

T.S. Eliot Impressions, Dennis Bergin

T.S. Eliot Impressions (Set 1) was inspired by the four
“Ariel” poems of T.S. Eliot. The poems are entitled “Journey
of the Magi,” “A Song for Simeon,” “Animula,” and
“Marina.” Colorful organ registrations, late twentieth-century
musical language and references to other organ works and chant melodies are
employed in this musical representation of Eliot’s poetry. The poems
mark, in part, Eliot’s conversion experience to orthodox Christianity.
The spiritual theme of T.S. Eliot Impressions is that of a journey from
darkness to light and from despair to hope.

Organ duet, two players, one console:

Auld Lang Syne, Eugene Thayer, edited by Robert C. Mann

The organ works of Eugene Thayer are not widely known today.
Thayer (1838-1889) was a well-known and highly respected organ
recitalist, pedagogue, composer and church musician who held church positions
in Massachusetts and New York. Robert C. Mann has provided this edition of
Thayer’s duet on Auld Lang Syne, which Thayer transcribed for duet from
one of his solo compositions. Thayer used duets as teaching pieces: he would
play the secondo part and his student would play the primo part. Unfortunately,
this duet is printed with each performer having their own score, making it
necessary to have an organ with a wide music desk in order to fit both scores
on it.

Evensong, Charles Callahan

Both of the Callahan duets in the MorningStar Concert Series
were commissioned by Raymond and Elizabeth Chenault. Evensong was premiered in
May of 1987 at the Spoleto Festival in Charleston, South Carolina. It is based
on two evening hymns: Tallis’ Canon and Ar Hyd y Nos. Evensong is quiet in
nature and uncomplicated in texture.

Largo ma non tanto, J. S. Bach, transcribed for organ duet
by James Biery

Biery has transcribed the middle movement of the Bach
Concerto in D minor for Two Violins, BWV 1043, for organ duet. This duet
requires the secondo player to sit in the middle of the bench to play the
ripieno part (which uses pedals), and the primo player to sit off to the right
side in order to play the two solo parts (manuals only). (Example 7)

Ragtime, Charles Callahan

Ragtime was also premiered in 1987 at the Spoleto Festival
by the Chenaults. The title of this piece conveys the compositional style of
this lively and colorful duet.

Psalm Variations, James Hopkins

Psalm Variations was composed originally in the spring and
summer of 2000 for orchestra. The piece was reworked in the summer of 2002 for
organ duet, and is dedicated to Marilyn and James Biery.

Psalm Variations is based on the American folk melody
Resignation. This melody is most often associated with the text “My
Shepherd Will Supply My Need,” a metrical paraphrase of Psalm 23 by Isaac
Watts (1674-1748). Although Psalm Variations is not a religious piece,
the variations do follow the flow of the text.

Written in the Dust, David Evan Thomas

Written in the Dust by David Evan Thomas was inspired by an
address given at the First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis in November 1998 by
the Rev. Dr. Kendyl Gibbons, Minister of the Society. Gibbons’ address
focused on the biblical story from John about the woman, caught in adultery,
whose punishment was to be stoned for her sin (John 8: 3-11). Jesus said
to the crowd “Let anyone among you who is without sin be the first to
throw a stone at her,”  and
then he dismissed her, saying, “Go and sin no more.” The
semi-programmatic movements of Written in the Dust are entitled “Jesus,
the Woman and the Pharisees” (verses 3-6), “The Writing in
the Dust” (6-8), and “Go, and sin no more”
(9-11). Written in the Dust contains all the ingredients which make this
a masterful, virtuosic work for duet: a brilliant pedal cadenza, “pedal
fans” in the outer movements, motives which are started by one player and
finished by the other, ranges of motion for each player that cover the keyboards,
fast figuration, conversational passing back-and-forth of musical ideas, and
elegant, lyrical writing. All combined, they enable Written in the Dust to tell
a compelling musical story. It was premiered in October 1999 by Marilyn and
James Biery at the Cathedral of St. Paul in St. Paul, Minnesota. (Example 8)

Duet, two organs:

Chantasy, James Hopkins

Chantasy for two organs was a commission from Mount Angel
Abbey, St. Benedict, Oregon, in thanksgiving for the two recently installed
Martin Ott organs. It was premiered by Cherry Rhodes and Ladd Thomas on October
17, 1999 in the Abbey. Hopkins calls it a “chant fantasy” on the
Kyrie and Sanctus of the Missa Cum Jubilo. Much of the harmonic language of
Chantasy is reminiscent of the music of Maurice Duruflé. (Example 9)

Voluntary for Antiphonal Organs, James Biery

The Voluntary for Antiphonal Organs was composed for and
first performed at the 1988 National Convention of the Organ Historical Society
in San Francisco. The piece is constructed using the standard sonata form with
a brief slow introduction.

Organ with instrument:

Divertimento (string quartet), Charles Callahan

A light-hearted piece, with considerable contrapuntal
activity among the instruments and a mystic element of calmly soaring melody in
the quiet sections.

Easter Canticles (organ and violoncello), Robert Sirota

The three movements of Easter Canticles--Vigil,
Crucifixion, and Resurrection--are structured as a triptych after the
iconostasis7 of an Orthodox church. The three panels are meditations on scenes
from the Passion of Jesus Christ: his prayerful agony in the Garden of
Gethsemane, his crucifixion and resurrection. With the combination of cello and
organ, Sirota sought to capture the mysticism of these three moments of the
Passion. The first movement is agonized and restless, the second portrays the
crucifixion, even down to the hammering of the nails into Christ’s hands,
and the third depicts Christ’s light-suffused resurrection.

The Kraken, Charles Hoag

The Kraken is a work for organ pedals with the player also
playing a large tam-tam (or the player could also be joined by a
percussionist). It is based upon the poem by the same name by Alfred Lord
Tennyson (1809-1892). The Kraken is a mythical Norse sea monster. The
opening lines of the poem give the setting for the music, which starts on the
lowest possible pitches and works upward to a frenzy in both instruments:

Below the thunders of the upper deep,

Far, far beneath in the abysmal sea,

His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep

The Kraken sleepeth . . .

Organ and Voice:

Canticle of the Sun (high voice), David Evan Thomas

Canticle of the Sun, a setting of the poem by St. Francis of
Assisi, was commissioned by the Twin Cities (Minnesota) AGO and first performed
by soprano Elizabeth Pauly and organist James Biery in 2000.

The parallel verses of St. Francis’s poem inspired from
Thomas a series of variations on what could be called a Theme of Praise, a
declamatory melodic idea that emphasizes fourths and fifths. After the initial
presentation of the theme (“All praise to you, my Lord”), the
speaker moves from extolling sun and moon to praising each of the four elements
of the medieval world (wind, water, earth, fire) taking in all of creation.
Because the text is concise--only a few key images per variation--it
remains for the organ to develop the material through figuration, texture and
registration, as well as to provide links between sections, each of which
explores a different tonality. A special place is reserved for the human art of
forgiveness. The vocal line here descends into its lowest register, accompanied
by the simplest organ texture, before rising up again in fountains of praise.

Concertos:

Concerto for Organ and Orchestra, Gerald Near

This concerto by Gerald Near was conceived in the grand
traditional manner. The movements follow the usual form for a concerto: Sonata-allegro,
Slow movement (in no particular form) and Rondo (Toccata). It is scored for
chamber orchestra in a desire to make the work more practical and accessible.
Gerald Near’s music is published by Aureole Publications and distributed
by MorningStar.           n

Baroque in Boston: The 13th Biennial Early Music Festival

Larry Palmer

Larry Palmer is harpsichord editor of THE DIAPASON.

Default

Anticipation was high as the hour drew near for the first staged performance
of Johann Mattheson's Boris Goudenow.
Composed in 1710 for the Hamburg Opera, but never performed (probably for
political reasons), the opera slept the long sleep of libraries, narrowly
surviving destruction in the World War II bombing of northern Germany. Moved
secretly for safekeeping, the score remained in Armenia, was returned to
Hamburg in 1998, and now, on June 14, 2005, after almost 300 years, this ink on
paper was about to become living sound for an audience.

Just as I joined the capacity crowd entering the Cutler Majestic Theatre, a
celebratory fanfare sounded forth. I was one of the lucky ones who made it to
my mezzanine spot in the 1200-seat Beaux Arts hall before the overture began.
Those who were not so fortunate created a fair amount of chaos during the
opening scene of the opera, possibly adding some 18th-century-style realism to
the occasion!

Brilliant ceremonial rites at the Russian court, colorful dancing
(especially a divertissement of the disabled that closed the second act, and
the final chaconne), some striking stage pictures (sunrise over the Kremlin at
the beginning of Act III was particularly effective), and the luminously
stylistic, homogeneous playing of the BEMF Orchestra made this a memorable
evening at the opera. Mattheson's music was nothing out of the ordinary, and
gripping, engaging singing, especially from the women, was in short supply. A
bawdy, comic role--the servant Bogda (sung by William Hite)--stood out, as did
some touches such as the percussive clatter of thrown coins (in the Coronation
scene: a foretaste of Britten's slung mugs from Noyes Fludde
style='font-style:normal'>?), and the festive addition of handbells and
castanets for the final tableau.

One strange facet of Mattheson's work is its macaronic text: Italian arias
inserted freely into a primarily German libretto. An added oddity of this particular
performance in 18th-century style was the decision to keep the house lights
dark, although, with a (21st-century) projected text, it might be considered
unnecessary for the audience to refer to the printed texts that had been
provided. 

Festival Concerts

Just how important a mesmerizing singer can be to an opera was borne home
the following evening at Jordan Hall when the Festival offered Nights at the
Opera: Highlights from Beloved BEMF Productions. Opening with a superb reading
of orchestral excerpts from Lully's Thésée
style='font-style:normal'> (staged in 2001), continuing with ravishing and
riveting arias from Conradi's
Ariadne (2003), delivered with dramatic intensity by Canadian soprano Karina
Gauvin, this was voluptuous music presented with authoritative diction and gorgeous
sound, to boot.

It was especially enlightening to have the orchestra front and center, on
stage rather than in the pit, allowing one to observe the close interaction
among the players, and the ways in which they were led by Festival musical
co-directors, lutenists Paul O'Dette and Stephen Stubbs, and concertmaster
Robert Mealy. These leaders, along with the two continuo
harpsichordists--Kristian Bezuidenhout and Jörg Jacobi (who had produced
the printed score and parts used for the Boris premiere)--kept the music moving
with gut-wrenching inflections, infectious dance-based rhythmic nuance, and
some of the most satisfying cadential resolutions to be enjoyed on the planet.
For those not in attendance, these musical splendors may be heard at home in BEMF's
first commercial recording. Their performance of Conradi's Ariadne
style='font-style:normal'> has just been released as a three compact disc set
on the German CPO label (777 073-2).

Excerpts from Luigi Rossi's L'Orfeo,
a back-to-back demonstration of Handel's wholesale borrowing from Mattheson
(nearly-identical arias from the latter's
Porsenna
style='font-style:normal'>, 1702, as used by the former in his
Agrippina
style='font-style:normal'>, 1709), and Mattheson's undistinguished, lengthy
serenata concerning the virtues of chastity,
Die Keusche Liebe
style='font-style:normal'>, failed to achieve the musical excitement generated
in the first half of the program.

Sequentia, ensemble for medieval music, presented the 8 o'clock Jordan Hall
concert on Thursday evening. This was not the ticket I had requested (thinking
that I should at least try to hear one of the 11 o'clock late-night concerts),
but I decided to accept providence and attend Lost Songs of a Rhineland Harper,
a program that proved to be a stunner! Framing two large parts of the program
with songs to texts by the learned medieval musician Boethius, the four-member
ensemble was heard in a variety of voicings, from unaccompanied monophony to
settings with harp, lyre and several flutes, including one made from a delicate
swan's bone. With translations projected on a large central screen hung from
the organ case, it was not difficult to follow the lengthy Latin texts.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 

After intermission the dramatic impact was ratcheted up several notches,
especially in the  gripping
Icelandic saga, Atlakvida (Lay of Attila
the Hun), the earliest known retelling of the Rhinegold story later the basis
for Richard Wagner's four-opera
Ring of the Nibelungs
style='font-style:normal'>. In considerably less time, Sequentia founder
Benjamin Bagby related the violent tale, becoming the embodiment of an
Icelandic harper, concentrated and severe in expression, and with such incisive
diction that the old Scandinavian text was chillingly clear. We listeners
experienced grim history as our ancestors might have done. Bagby's performance
was a startling, unforgettable theatrical tour-de-force.

Drama of another sort--that of program changes--informed the Friday evening
program Five Concerti and a Magnificat. An Overture (to the opera Porsenna
style='font-style:normal'>) and the double chorus
Magnificat
style='font-style:normal'> were by Mattheson. The Overture, featuring BEMF's
principal oboist Washington McClain, was followed by the first program
substitution: the Bach
Concerto in D minor for Two Violins
style='font-style:normal'> (with soloists Andrey Reshetin and Maria
Krestinskaya) replacing the scheduled Vivaldi Concerto to have been played by
Giuliano Carmignola, indisposed in Italy. Matthias Maute romped through two
Recorder Concerti (in F Major by Telemann and the G Major, RV 443, by Vivaldi)
with musical insight and astonishing virtuosity. Like soprano Gauvin, he was
unafraid to make the occasional ugly sound for dramatic effect. Replacing
Carmignola's second star turn was Johann Wilhelm Hertel's
Cello
Concerto in A minor
, featuring BEMF's
superb principal cellist, Phoebe Carrai, a satisfying and expressively kinetic
player.

Announcing the program changes, Paul O'Dette quipped that it was probably
the first time, at least in North America, that a program would feature two
Hertel Concerti. A native of J. S. Bach's hometown, Eisenach, the unfamiliar
Hertel (1727-1789), proved his worth in the works heard on this program, with
the Concerto in F minor for Fortepiano and Strings
style='font-style:normal'> a stronger composition. It was lovingly played by
Kristian Bezuidenhout, who achieved hushed, nearly inaudible pianissimi in the
poignant Largo, and also improvised an extended cadenza at the end of this
movement.

A Plethora of Offerings: Fringe and Beyond

The large number of concerts during Festival Week forced would-be listeners
to make difficult choices. For example, two further sets of daily concerts at 5
and 11 included duos for bass violas da gamba; choral music for the Holy Roman
Emperor Maximilian I and his daughter Marguerite of Austria; violin and
harpsichord music for the 18th-century Russian manor house; Gypsy Primadonna
music of 1820s Moscow; "Waild and Krejzy: secular music in 1730s
Slovakia"; and baroque lute music played by the indomitable duo of Stubbs
and O'Dette, who seemed to be everywhere--opera orchestra (Boris was played
four times during the week) as well as all other appearances of the BEMF
Orchestra, master classes, solo recitals, administrative matters--an amazing
musical (and physical) expenditure of energy. Every involvement I noted was at
a very high level, as well.

There were at least 57 scheduled "fringe" concerts in various
nearby venues, plus the concurrent Early Music Exhibition (Wednesday through
Saturday) at the Radisson Hotel, where dozens of demonstration recitals were
sponsored by instrument makers and dealers. As harpsichordist for the Texas
Camerata concert on Thursday (Lindsay Chapel of Emmanuel Church), I experienced
a sold-out house of involved and appreciative auditors. It was not possible to
attend many of these added events (all by groups that had been screened before
receiving an invitation from the Festival management), but I heard enthusiastic
reports about many programs. Of the Exhibition concerts I heard two: the first
a morning program with Team Mattheson (Matilda Butkas and William Carragan),
duo harpsichordists, performing works by the featured composer of the week.
They played fine harpsichords by David Werbeloff [Boston] after Zell and Robert
Hicks [Vermont] after Stehlin for an overflowing complement of listeners, many
seated on the floor or leaning against any available wall space.

In the afternoon Duo d'amore (Geoffrey Burgess, baroque oboes; Elaine
Funaro, harpsichord) again played to a capacity audience in the ample
exhibition space occupied by The Harpsichord Clearing House. Perhaps, like me,
these auditors were eager to escape "the din of antiquity" (to borrow
Daniel Pinkham's apt phrase) and to experience old instruments in some new
music. Both players made cogent cases for their commissioned repertory; the
program included two world premieres (works by Chris Lastovicka and Edwin
McLean, whose contribution Incantations gave opportunity to hear the darker,
smoky timbre of the baroque oboe d'amore)! Funaro programmed two short
harpsichord solos by Tom Robin Harris and Stephen Yates. Additional duets were
by John Mayrose, and Andrew Ford, plus Yates's hauntingly beautiful Canto
style='font-style:normal'> (2004), a lyric fantasia well suited to both wind
and keyboard. For contrast one piece of earlier music could have benefited this
program, although all of the new works were of interest. The only other
insertion of "later music" into the Festival program was a Zuckermann
Harpsichords-sponsored program by California harpsichordist/composer Shelli
Nan.

Events with a particular educational focus included a morning clavichord
symposium at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts; "Performing Baroque Music
According to Mattheson" at the Goethe Institute; "Rediscovering Boris
Goudenow
: Performance and Production Issues
in German Baroque Opera"; a wide variety of instrumental and vocal
masterclasses; and organizational discussions on audience building and other
practicalities sponsored by Early Music America and a panel of early music
concert promoters. 

Friday's day-long celebration of the North German organ featured a recent,
refined Richards and Fowkes organ (opus 10, 2000) at First Lutheran Church,
with organists Edoardo Bellotti, Hans Davidsson, and William Porter playing
literature that demonstrated the organist-composer as contrapuntist, as
preacher, and as orator. In the first of the afternoon sessions, Porter used
the rich plenum and full, singing principals of this modest-sized two-manual
instrument in Buxtehude's monumental Praeludium in E minor
style='font-style:normal'> (BuxWV 142), followed by Krebs's
Fantasia
on Herr Jesus Christ, dich zu uns wend

(idiomatic reed solo) and trio on
Herzlich Lieb hab' ich dich, o Herr
style='font-style:normal'> (piquant, lively flutes). C. P. E. Bach's
Fantasia
con Fuga in C minor
served up the gravitas
of a satisfying 16-foot plenum, complete with Sesquialtera.

This provided the perfect musical segue to my other choice of fringe
program, heard in a religious edifice just across the street. First and Second
Church, destroyed by fire in 1968, was replaced, behind its damaged
façade, with a striking, contemporary building, including a second-story
high-ceilinged, freely-angled chapel. In this sky-lit quiet space Iowa's Carol
lei Breckenridge played all six of C. P. E. Bach's Sonaten für Kenner
und Liebhaber
[Sonatas for Connoisseurs and
Amateurs] (Volume I, 1779) in a musical salon concert, with period poetry read
in German by Michael Herrick. 

Breckenridge, heard several years ago in memorable Mozart performances,
maintained her reputation as a master of the clavichord. Playing a large
unfretted instrument by Paul Irvin [Chicago], she limned the rapidly shifting
emotions of these Sturm und Drang compositions with unflappable technical ease.
The six sonatas, each comprising three movements, are not of equal length, nor,
frankly, of equal interest. Among all 18 movements, the very first (a dazzling
Prestissimo) was breathtaking, as was the complete (and shorter) Fifth Sonata
(F Major). Sonata Three, the only one in a minor key, required a brief retuning
(B-flat becoming A-sharp)--as did the amazing chromatics introducing the middle
movement of the final sonata.

Mid-afternoon on Friday was not a fortuitous time to attract a crowd: about
20 listeners shared this perfect pendant to the organ symposia.

At the Exhibition: An Abundance of Fine
Keyboard Instruments

At least 22 makers and distributors of keyboard instruments were listed in
the 276-page Festival program book (itself a work of art). Fine harpsichords
were much in evidence. In addition to those by builders already mentioned, some
that attracted  attention
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 
were made by Adam Decker (the
Harpsichord Gallery, Atlanta); Marc Ducornet (the Paris Workshop); and by
consistently satisfying makers Richard Kingston (North Carolina)--whose Flemish
single harpsichord with colorful abstract lid painting by June Zinn Hobby was a
visual and sonic feast, Allan Winkler (Boston), and Douglas Maple
(Pennsylvania). (Harpsichords by Kingston, David Sutherland [Ann Arbor],
Winkler and Dowd were used in the opera performances and for the BEMF
orchestral programs.)

Gut-strung Lautenwerks from Steven Sorli (Amherst, MA) were beautifully
crafted, exciting instruments, as was a portable high-pitched clavichord by
Gary Blaise (San Francisco). I could not resist the 1939 John Challis
clavichord displayed by Glenn Giutarri and The Harpsichord Clearing House among
their many fine instruments, including 
chamber organs. Another triple-transposing continuo organ from Les
Ateliers Guilbault Bellavance Carignan (Quebec) had a pleasingly gentle wooden
4-foot Principal among its four stops.

Also tempting were displays on tables laden with musical facsimiles and
other scores, eye-catching recordings (among the most enticing were the 18
unorthodox and brilliant covers for the Vivaldi Edition CDs issued thus far by
the Italian label Naïve) and opulent publications such as Goldberg Early
Music Magazine, now publishing collectible single-composer issues. It was
necessary to keep checkbook and credit cards firmly under control, although
failing to do so also had its rewards (until the bills arrived).

Boston: Convenient and Memorable

Nearly all the concert venues were within walking distance or accessible by
inexpensive public transport. Food of all varieties and prices was available,
ranging from pre-packaged sandwiches to elegant restaurant menus (Legal
Seafoods was just across from the exhibition space).

And central Boston itself held so many musical associations and personal
memories. For instance it was not possible to be in Jordan Hall without
remembering Ralph Kirkpatrick's 50th anniversary harpsichord recital (in 1981,
during the very first Early Music Festival); or to walk into King's Chapel
without recalling composer Daniel Pinkham, who graced the organist/ choirmaster
position there for so many years. Lovely, now historic, harpsichords built by
William Dowd were in evidence and in use. A photograph of early music pioneer
Arnold Dolmetsch, once employed to direct the making of early instruments at
the Chickering Piano Factory across the river in Cambridge, graced the front
cover of a Boston Clavichord Society brochure.

Inexpensive dormitory housing, available in a building now owned by Emerson
College, was only steps away from Steinert Hall, endowed by one of America's
first early instrument collectors, piano dealer Morris Steinert. Directly
across the street, in the old burying ground on Boston Common, the remains of
composer William Billings are thought to be buried, and he is commemorated by a
plaque placed there during the 1976 American Guild of Organists national
convention (a conference memorable for E. Power Biggs's late-career performance
of Rheinberger Organ Concertos with the Boston Pops, despite EPB's
stress-fractured arm!).

Wagnerian swanboats long have been a feature on the pond of the Public
Garden (founded in 1839). Recent, however, is the reverent, nostalgic addition
to this venerable and well-utilized park: a Garden of Remembrance for the
victims of the 9/11 attack. Many people pause at the simple stone memorial to
meditate, and to read these touching words from Boston and Sea Poems by
Lawrence Homer, poet-laureate of Faneuil Hall:

Time touches all more gently here,

Here where man has said, No:

Trees and grass, and flowers will remain:

. . . watching swanboats glide in season.

It was a pleasure to attend this Boston Early Music Festival and Exhibition,
after a 20-year-long interval of not being there, and to observe the breadth
and vitality of the current early music scene. If Johann Mattheson's music did
not prove him to have been a composer of extraordinary genius, the event was,
nevertheless, a welcome opportunity to learn more about this 18th-century
musician and writer, to assess more knowledgeably his place among his
well-known contemporaries, and to experience yet another from the
ever-lengthening list of forgotten or unknown operas, transformed from dusty
scores to living stage productions through the inspired efforts of America's
premier early music festival. More, please.

Further Information

Stephen Stubbs: "Johann Mattheson--the Russian connection: the
rediscovery of Boris Goudenow and his other lost operas," Early Music
style='font-style:normal'> XXXIII/2 (May 2005), 283-292.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 

Previous BEMF reports by Larry Palmer

The Diapason, August 1981, 1, 3 [the
first Early Music Festival].

The Diapason, April 1985, 9 [the 1983
Festival].

The Diapason, October 1985, 10-11
[the 1985 Festival].

Harpsichord News

Larry Palmer

Larry Palmer is harpsichord editor of THE DIAPASON.

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Facsimiles from Fuzeau: Sources for Lifelong Learning

Alternately fascinating and frustrating, facsimiles of original manuscripts and printed editions have become increasingly available. For the harpsichordist there is little that is more rewarding than playing from an actual musical “picture” as presented by the composer. Reading from the “original” certainly does not answer all questions, but it does give an unadulterated source as basis for making one’s own musical decisions. For this reason, I heartily recommend playing from facsimiles as a challenging, and often a cleansing, exercise in musical growth.

To utilize these recent scores from publisher Jean-Marc Fuzeau of France, it will help to have an adventurous spirit, as well as a willingness to learn the occasional unfamiliar clef, frequently used in earlier music manuscripts to avoid excessive employment of ledger lines.

Alessandro Poglietti: Rossignolo  [Collection Dominantes Number 5905].

Works for harpsichord or organ by the Italian composer who died in 1683 during his flight from Vienna following the Turkish siege of that city. Three main sources for these pieces are introduced by Peter Waldner, whose notes in French, English, and German include both biographical and bibliographical information and a listing of available modern editions. Fuzeau’s publication comprises three slim paperbound volumes in a folder: an autograph manuscript from the Austrian National Library, Vienna (Cod. 19248), an early edition from the Music Library of the Benedictine Monastery of Marienberg, Burgeis (60/q 366), and another copy of an old source, now housed in the Deutsche Staatsbibliothek, Berlin (Mus.ms. 17670). All utilize the soprano clef (notes written a third higher than the customary G clef) and the familiar bass clef on F. Individual pieces include a Toccata, Canzone, Allemande Amour, Courante, Sarban, Gigue, Ayre, as well as Il Rossignolo Capricio [sic] and a Petitte Ayre gay “in imitation of the Nightingale.”

Johann Kuhnau: Neue Clavier-übung, Partie I (1689) [Collection Dominantes Number 5716], consists of seven short keyboard suites in C, D, E, F, G, A, and B-flat, prefaced by eleven pages of introductory material by Philippe Lescat. Each group of pieces begins with a Prelude (the fourth suite, a Sonatina). The volume is engraved in a large, clear format employing the first line soprano clef and the familiar bass clef on F.

For a modern performing edition of these works (and others, including the popular and appealing Biblical Sonatas) by Bach’s immediate predecessor as Cantor of Leipzig’s  Thomaskirche, consult the beautifully-presented two-volume set of Kuhnau’s Collected Works for Keyboard edited by C. David Harris, available from The Broude Trust, New York (ISBN 0-8540-7660-4).

Christoph Graupner: Monatliche Clavir Früchte (1722) [Collection Dominantes Number 5855].

Not surprisingly, this collection of “Monthly Keyboard Fruits” comprises twelve groups of keyboard pieces illustrating the months of the year. (I suppose one could create a larger work--Seasons--by playing these suites in groups of three!) Graupner, student of and assistant to Kuhnau in Leipzig, spent most of his distinguished career in Darmstadt. Soprano and bass F clefs, notes by Oswald Bill.

Louis Marchand: Pièces de clavecin (Book I, 1699; Book II, 1702), Air (La Venitienne) [La Musique Française Classique Number 5761].

Book One contains a Suite in D minor, consisting of a (measured) prelude and eight dance movements (including an elegant Chaconne with four couplets) engraved primarily in soprano and third line F clefs (with occasional deviations to G and third line C clefs). Book Two contains a Suite in G minor, the prelude of which has some unmeasured passages. Seven short dance movements follow.

Edited by Thurston Dart, Marchand’s two suites were published by Editions L’Oiseau Lyre in 1960. Dart’s edition does not contain the short Air (printed by Ballard as the character piece “La Venitienne” [in Pièces Choisies pour le clavecin]), included in the facsimile (with easy-to-read G and F clefs). Introductory notes to Fuzeau’s publication include an essay on “French Harpsichord Makers of Marchand’s Time” by Philippe Lescat. An amusing attribution in his Bibliography replaces American harpsichord maker and instrument historian FRANK Hubbard’s first name with the more Gallic spelling FRANCK.

Christian Gottlob Neefe: Zwölf Klavier-Sonaten (1773) [Collection Dominantes Number 5880].

Twelve early classic works for clavichord by Beethoven’s teacher; published in Leipzig with a dedication to “Herr Kapellmeister [C P E] Bach in Hamburg.” The original print featured a clear, clean text (soprano, bass F clefs). The inevitable printer’s errors are noted and corrected in introductory material by Pascal Duc.

Number Twelve in the Fuzeau series Méthodes & Traités  fills two volumes, each containing more than 200 pages. Clavecin presents in chronological order selections from the most important French sources concerning the harpsichord. A reading knowledge of French would be helpful, but for those who are challenged by the language, a great amount of enjoyment may be gleaned from the generous offering of harpsichord-related images, easily-deciferable information, and the many musical examples.

Beginning with tuning and building information from Mersenne’s Harmonie universelle (1636) and Denis’ Traité de l’accord de l’espinette (1650), volume one continues with ornament tables found in the keyboard volumes by Chambonnières (1670), d’Anglebert (1689), Dieupart (1701: a volume dedicated to the Countess of Sandwich), Le Roux (1705), François Couperin (Book I, 1713), Dandrieu (1724), Dagincourt (1733), Michel Corrette (1734), Louis-Claude Daquin (1735), Rameau (1736), Van Helmont (1737), Jollage (1738), and Royer (1746), plus complete facsimiles of Saint-Lambert’s Les Principes du Clavecin, (1702) and Couperin’s L’art de toucher le clavecin (1717). [Consult the original layout of Couperin’s Troisième Prélude (page 175) to substantiate a correct reading of the never-corrected faulty first bass note at the beginning of the last score: the guide (guidon) from the preceding line shows it to be a “C,”  but the engraver actually notated a “B-flat,” creating a chord unidiomatic to an 18th-century piece.]

Also included are two documents including important information for stylistic performance of French keyboard music: a letter by Le Gallois concerning the playing of the prélude non mésurée (1680) and Rameau’s two-page commentary on proper touch at the harpsichord (1724), ending with his intriguing comment that the same techniques are applicable as well to the organ.

Volume Two continues this rich treasure trove with Michel Corrette’s Les Amusemens du Parnasse, a short and easy method for the harpsichord (1749). This includes a simple Suite in C for beginners, with fingerings provided AND utilizing the familiar G and F clefs, followed by an additional twelve pages of easy pieces. At the end of the volume Marpurg’s Art de toucher le clavecin (1797) gives a fin de siècle example of keyboard instruction, concluding with another lengthy set of easier pieces by Mr. Sorge, organist and mathematician of Lobenstein (once again using “modern” clefs).

Other gems reprinted in this second volume include composer Duphly’s handwritten remarks on fingering (1769) as preserved in the copy of his Pièces de clavecin, Book I, belonging to his student, English Lord Fitzwilliam; illustrations of harpsichord construction from Diderot’s Encyclopédie (1751- 1772); Lessons and Principles of Harmony by Bemetzrieder (1771) reproduced from a copy once owned by the important 19th-century musical reformer Choron; and several more enchanting engravings of variously styled harpsichords with other instruments from the Essai sur la musique ancienne et moderne by Laborde (1780).

For more complete details, including current prices, consult the publisher’s website: <classical-music.fuzeau.com>. A recent promotional offering, a miniature volume of selected pages from facsimile publications, is offered at this address. Let your discoveries begin!

Send news items or comments about Harpsichord News to Dr. Larry Palmer, Division of Music, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX 75275;

<[email protected]>.

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