Tag: Lux Aeterna

  • journal 18. Autumn Rain

    San Marcos, 2016 —

    The style that we now hear as the sound of America in the 20th century — where did it come from? Before Henry Cowell or Aaron Copland, before Lou Harrison or John Cage, it came from the bold, eccentric music of Charles Ives.

    Ives not only created the musical sound of 20th-century America, he wrote about American life, literature, and places. His Piano Sonata No. 2, Concord, Mass., 1840–60 (1915)explores the ethos of New England writers in its four movements:

    1. “Emerson” (after Ralph Waldo Emerson)
    2. “Hawthorne” (after Nathaniel Hawthorne)
    3. “The Alcotts” (after Bronson Alcott and Louisa May Alcott)
    4. “Thoreau” (after Henry David Thoreau)
    LISTEN ›

    Stephen Drury on YouTube

    One of Ives’ most performed and well-known works is Three Places in New England (1914) for orchestra. Each “place” is a musical sketch of a place’s unique atmosphere, painting a picture of life at the dawn of 20th-century America. It epitomizes the unique style that established Ives as an icon of American music in the 20th century.

    That style, which built what became the defining sound of American music, featured:

    • sound masses of dissonant tone clusters
    • chaotic layering of multiple simultaneous tunes
    • huge, sudden contrasts of loudness and texture

    The movement sketches are subtitled:

    1. The “St. Gaudens” in Boston Common (Col. Shaw and his Colored Regiment)
    2. Putnam’s Camp, Redding, Connecticut
    3. The Housatonic at Stockbridge
    LISTEN ›

    Cleveland Orchestra on YouTube

    Frost

    If Charles Ives is the iconic composer of 20th-century America, Robert Frost is the iconic poet. I became an ardent admirer of Frost’s writing as early as 1966, reading his complete works by the time I was in grad school. Two poems had a profound early impact on my spirit and sense of artistic possibility. “Mending Wall” (1914) and “The Road not Taken” (1916). To me, the latter is wondering about looking into the uncertain future, expressed in a woodland metaphor typical of Frost that resonated with my rural Michigan youth. (That is probably why I quoted it in my very first public speech, my valedictory address at the 1967 Howell High School commencement ceremony.)

    THE ROAD NOT TAKEN” excerpt

    Two roads diverged in a wood,
    And sorry I could not travel both
    And be one traveler, long I stood
    And looked down one as far as I could
    To where it bent in the undergrowth;

    Fast forward to 2016, when my colleagues Ian Davidson, Ames Asbell, and Vanguel Tangarov at Texas State asked me to write an unaccompanied solo for each of their instruments, oboe, viola, and clarinet. As the Pleasant Street Players, they recorded what was to be a whole album of my music, including a duo, two quartets, and a quintet for their trio plus guest colleagues. The recording project was exciting and bore excellent musical results. But it slammed into the COVID epidemic and could never be finished and published.

    Here is what its roster of 7 tracks would have been:

    Snow and rain

    Two memories of walking in the snow stand out in long-term memory. In about 1965, one recreation of a restless Michigan teenager on winter nights was to put on boots and parka and hike through snow-covered fields and forest in the moonlight. In 1992, my composer friend Arnošt Parsch led me on a walk into the logging forest above his Moravian village, Bílovice nad Svitavou. Through late-fall snowflakes, we retraced the steps of Janácek, passed the natural-spring well and the Sokol tavern up to a beautiful promontory view of the snow-covered village below.

    Sur la Neige is a snow fantasy on three quoted musical ideas. The work begins with an obscure quote from Stravinsky’s L’Histoire du Soldat, elaborated and then transitioning into a quote from Debussy’s Prelude No. 6 in his Préludes, Book I, subtitled “de pas sur la neige.” Eventually, a small decorative figure from Janácek’s Sinfonietta appears and quickly disappears like a scurrying bystroušky (fox).

    In each poem below, I will boldface some of the imagery that particularly inspired ideas for sounds, rhythms, and mood.

    Frost’s first poem that I set to instrumental music in 1973 was his 1913 “My Noember Guest,” an exquisite expression of loss and sadness.

    MY NOVEMBER GUEST” excerpt

    My sorrow, when she’s here with me,
         Thinks these dark days of autumn rain
    Are beautiful as days can be;
    She loves the bare, the withered tree;
         She walks the sodden pasture lane.

    She’s glad the birds are gone away,
    She’s glad her simple worsted grey
         Is silver now with clinging mist.

    The desolate, deserted trees,
         The faded earth, the heavy sky,

    In 1971 in Ann Arbor, I wrote Autumn Rain for oboe and piano. Much of its melodic material was incorporated into the solo English horn piece for Ian in 2016. Its four movements:

    • “these dark days of autumn rain”
    • “my sorrow” (remembering Lidice)
    • “the bare, the withered tree”
    • “the sodden pasture lane”

    The second movement’s memorial to the atrocity of Lidice quotes the Czech national anthem Kde domov můj (“Where My Home Is”). Other musical material expressing darkness, death, and perseverence is a quote from the Lux aeterna of Mozart’s Requiem.

    Clark 1971 / 2024 (TC-85)

    The solo clarinet piece was based on this Frost poem:

    BIRCHES” excerpt

    I’d like to go by climbing a birch tree,
    And climb black branches up a snow-white trunk
    Toward heaven, till the tree could bear no more,
    But dipped its top and set me down again.
    That would be good both going and coming back.

    Musical material quotes the beginning of Bartok’s powerful fugue in Music for Strings, Percussion and Celeste. The fugue theme is scored for the orchestra’s viola section, but in Bending Birches I’ve placed in the beautifully dark chalumeau register of the clarinet.

    Clark 2018 (TC-89)

    The viola piece, Before I Sleep, began as a solo based on this 1922 poem:

    Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening

    Whose woods these are I think I know.
    His house is in the village though;
    He will not see me stopping here
    To watch his woods fill up with snow.

    My little horse must think it queer
    To stop without a farmhouse near
    Between the woods and frozen lake
    The darkest evening of the year.

    He gives his harness bells a shake
    To ask if there is some mistake.
    The only other sound’s the sweep
    Of easy wind and downy flake.

    The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
    But I have promises to keep,
    And miles to go before I sleep,
    And miles to go before I sleep.

    Some of the imagery (again boldfaced above) lends itself to ideas for sounds, rhythms, and mood. The solo viola piece is titled Before I Sleep.

    Clark 2018 (TC-90)

    Concord

    If Charles Ives was unapologetically brash, his music could also be lyric and transcendent, a gentleness akin to the contemplative voice of Robert Frost. Back to Concord . . .

    After the demise of the Pleasant Street album project, the three solo pieces began to come together, merging into a single piece for viola and strings. The result embodies the expressive and sonorous essence of the whole Frost stream of work from 1973 to now.

    Clark 2024 (TC-145)

    ___________

  • journal 13. Millennium

    Taiwan, 2001 —

    In my administrative career, 2001 was a high point, as interim dean of UNT College of Music, then the largest music school in the nation. Though I hired several professors, launched a magazine and Dean’s donor group, and headed up our part of a university capital campaign, I didn’t do any composing.

    Cho (left) and NTUA president (right)

    There was international travel, though. My Chinese-American colleague Gene Cho had established an exchange relationship with the National Taiwan University of the Arts, and he guided me to Taipei for the grand ceremony to sign the formal agreement.

    While there, we saw a traveling exhibit of the Qin Shi Huang Terracotta Army, took a train to visit Hsiuping University of Science and Technology in Changhua City, and went by car to the northern tip of the island of Formosa. In a cold mist on the rocky shore, we gazed out at the infinite expanse of the Pacific Ocean.

    California composer Robert Erickson wrote that the stimulus for his music “is usually some noise or some non-music sound composing the environment in which I live, its sounds, its ambience.” In 1968 he composed Pacific Sirens (ocean sounds) involving taped sounds gathered from the environment with acoustic instruments.

    LISTEN ›

    GreyWing Ensemble

    Global warming

    I was commissioned by North Carolina State University’s Arts Now Series, directed by Dr. Rodney Waschka II, for an artistic contribution to The Ericka Fairchild Symposium on Climate Change. “The Fourth Angel” refers to one of the “seven last plagues” as they were called in the King James Version of the Bible. In the NRSV translation, Revelation 16:8 reads:

    “The fourth angel poured his bowl on the sun, and it was allowed to scorch people with fire; they were scorched by the fierce heat.”

    The other six angels and their bowls wrought plagues of painful sores, bloody seas, bloody rivers, darkness, a dried up Euphrates, and finally the seventh angel’s loud voice pronounced, “It is done!”

    Standing in the middle of the sequence, the prophecy of the fourth angel is a dramatic metaphor for global warming.

    The Fourth Angel

    Clark 2006 (TC-77)

    Though there are some literal sound references, the angel is portrayed more broadly as a metaphor for the forces of nature. Rather than capturing actual samples of nature sounds, the computer-generated sounds are all synthesized, musical objects constructed employing a now-common computing technique called grain-table synthesis. (The choice of machine synthesis over nature sampling suggests a particular belief about the causes of global warming.) These synthetic sound images form a broad range of simple and complex musical rhythms and textures evocative of the natural world:

    • sunlight reflected off water and ice
    • glaciers calving and cascading into the ocean
    • solar radiation
    • night sounds.

    Extending the metaphor, sounds echo and swirl in sound space, just as do the dynamic, powerful weather systems that shape our global climate.

    Other angels

    Thus pieces about angels began with The Fourth Angel. Portraying imagery from Revelation, the seven angels in chapter 16 inflict suffering upon humanity. Angels of Bright Splendor evokes an equally awesome but more hopeful experience of our life-giving sun.

    In Zuni origin mythology, thunder sounded, and The People climbed from darkness, emerging into the daylight world. Seeing the Sun (Awonawilona, they cried, not used to such intense light. Where their tears fell, sunflowers sprang from the earth.

    Angels of Bright Splendor

    Spirits

    Heavenly light, voiced musically with metamorphic chord clusters, became an iconic sound in a famous 1968 movie. György Ligeti describes the technique for his 1966 piece for 16-part mixed choir, Lux Aeterna (“eternal light”):

    “The complex polyphony of the individual parts, embodied in a harmonic-musical flow in which the harmonies do not change suddenly, but merge into one another; one clearly discernible interval combination is gradually blurred, and from this cloudiness it is possible to discern a new interval combination taking shape.”

    LISTEN ›

    A Cappella Amsterdam

    Angels in most world religions and mythologies seem to serve one of two functions: wielding controlling power over the physical world or over human affairs; or making spiritual announcements to humans. The next piece in the angels series, scored for antiphonal double SATB choirs, brass, and strings, gives voice to the unseen voices of angels and other spirits. The choir pronounces the names of Native American and Hebrew spirits representing the power and beauty of nature – wind, moonlight, rainbows.

    •   Gǎoh – chief wind spirit (Iroquois)
    •   Yaogah – bear spirit of the north wind (Iroquois)
    •   Neoga – fawn spirit of the south wind (Iroquois)
    •   Oyandone – moose spirit of the East Wind (Iroquois)
    •   Amitolane – rainbow spirit (Zuni)
    •   Nokomis – daughter of the moon (Algonquin)
    •   Gabriel – archangel of justice, annunciation (Hebrew)
    •   Maris stellastar of the sea (Latin)

    Unseen Voices

    Clark 2018 (TC-94)

    Messengers of peace and assurance . . . and hope for the future of this millenium?

    ___________