Although this tune is often thought to be based on the spiritual “Goin’ Home,” in fact the words were written forty years later to fit the melody by one of Dvořák’s students at the National Conservatory. The most striking example is the haunting tune of the slow movement, sung by the plangent tones of the English horn. We hear both of these influences in the “New World” Symphony - wide-ranging, sweeping melodies, open harmonies, and, in places, music that is based on the scale of much folk music as well as that of African American spirituals. He was also inspired by the musical traditions of native Americans and Black people. Like Copland, Dvořák was inspired by the vastness of his host country and attempted to capture the American natural landscape in his music. So it was in Spillville, Iowa (population at the time 108), that Dvořák composed his Ninth Symphony, a symphony which he called “From the New World.” Thurber was keen to establish an American musical tradition at a time when most of the music performed (and admired) in America was from Europe. Dvořák was given four months off a year to compose, which he did by retreating to a small town in Iowa, settled by Czech, German and Swiss immigrants. He was invited to this country by a wealthy patroness of music, Jeannette Thurber, who founded the National Conservatory of Music in New York City, the predecessor of the Juilliard School of Music, and she wanted Dvořák to run it. Most notable is the set of variations on an old Shaker song, “Simple Gifts.” The variations call up various scenes from the life of the young couple, and the piece ends with a chorale, bestowing peace on their future, with music that recalls the quiet opening.ĭvořák was a Czech composer who spent three years in the United States in the early 1890s. Copland manages to conjure the American landscape with sturdy, wide-open tunes and very basic harmonies. The music is full of evocations of nature and of old America. We shall see and hear the ballet version on Friday, July 21, when Xian Zhang conducts Copland and Dvořák, featuring Nimbus Dance in the Koussevitzky Music Shed at Tanglewood. Steep, inaccessible smile that eastward bends/And northward reaches in that violet wedge/Of Adirondacks!” Copland made later versions (suites) for chamber ensemble and for full orchestra without dancers. The title is taken from a poem by the early 20th-century American poet Hart Crane, entitled “The Dance.” The spring is a water source: “O Appalachian Spring. Examples include Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons,” Beethoven’s “Pastoral” Symphony, Mendelssohn’s “Hebrides” Overture, Debussy’s “La Mer,” and Philip Glass’s Second Violin Concerto, which is entitled “The American Four Seasons.”Īaron Copland’s “Appalachian Spring,” originally conceived as a ballet for Martha Graham accompanied by a small chamber group, tells the story of 19th-century American pioneers, a young couple, establishing a homestead in the wilderness, aided by an older pioneer woman and a preacher. And sometimes whole compositions are focused on the evocation of natural scenes. Instruments have for centuries been called upon to imitate birdsong or wind or thunder. In music, songs about nature or using nature as backdrop go back to the Middle Ages. Turner’s storms at sea, to the feathers and shells in “Where the Crawdads Sing” by Delia Owens, nature has filled the history of humankind’s cultural expressions. From the acanthus leaves on Greek columns, to the 16th-century sonnets, to J. Painters, poets, sculptors, architects, novelists and composers are all often inspired by the natural world and all its healing wonders. LENOX - Nature plays a strong role in all the arts.
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