July 4, 1942—Two months after its premiere in
Cincinnati, Aaron Copland’s homage
to America’s 16th President, Lincoln Portrait for Speaker and Orchestra,
was performed in a special way: on a barge in the Potomac River, narrated by
the Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer, Carl Sandburg.
This setting, I would argue, couldn’t be more
appropriate. The river had been connected indelibly, ever since the republic’s
founding, to George Washington, who, in nearly all Presidential ratings by
historians, is ranked immediately above or below Abraham Lincoln. The performance took place with the already-iconic
Lincoln Memorial in the background.
(I must admit, though, that a river was just about
the last place I’d expect a great work such as this to be performed. The only
comparable instance of this in music history might have been Yale University’s Olympic-sized
pool, the setting for Stephen Sondheim’s incidental music for a modern adaptation
of Aristophanes’ The Frogs—a beyond-crazy
production I discussed in a prior post.)
As for the date: Perhaps no President since the
nation’s founding has been more responsible than Lincoln for making a reality
of the central contention of the Declaration of Independence: “All men are
created equal.” Perhaps my favorite
quote from Lincoln is this one, in the concluding remarks in his Second Annual Message to Congress
(December 1862): “In giving freedom
to the slave, we assure freedom to
the free -- honorable alike in what we give, and what we preserve.”
I can only wonder about the technical issues related
to playing on a barge. Evidently, the audience on the boat must have been
distracted, because, Copland recalled years later, this piece elicited no
applause upon its conclusion.
No matter: It’s been receiving all the cheering it
could want in the years since, including, no doubt, much on the Fourth of July.
It’s a showcase not just for orchestras, but for celebrities who know
how to sound every depth in the majestic Lincoln passages narrated
in the second half of the 14-minute piece—by individuals as wildly disparate as
Sandburg, Barack Obama, Adlai Stevenson, Charlton Heston, James Whitmore, Katharine
Hepburn, Annette Bening, Margaret Thatcher, baseball slugger Willie Stargell, General Norman Schwarzkopf —and, on at least one occasion, with
good friend Leonard Bernstein conducting, Copland himself.
(You can hear two of the more memorable voices, Henry Fonda and James Earl Jones, blended together in this YouTube clip.)
(You can hear two of the more memorable voices, Henry Fonda and James Earl Jones, blended together in this YouTube clip.)
The piece, commissioned by conductor Andre Kostelanetz, came in a creatively
fertile half-dozen-year period in the early 1940s, in which Copland also produced the soundtrack for the film Our Town, Fanfare for the Common Man, Appalachian Spring, and Rodeo. It was all part of an attempt by
the composer at an accessible, "imposed simplicity.” Collectively, they functioned as a kind of musical Declaration of Independence, a turn toward and consolidation of indigenous American folk influences incorporated into the symphonic form. In their heightened, unabashed lyricism, they also struck a
chord with a country that desperately needed to remember moments of past greatness.
A living piece of music will transcend the time of its original creation, but to appreciate it in all its fullness, I think, it still helps to consider the age from which it sprang. The hymnlike qualities of Paul Simon’s “American Tune,” for instance (never
rendered more potently, I think, than in the reunion concert in Central Park with Simon’s former
partner, Art Garfunkel, as seen in this YouTube clip), are at stark variance with the savage disillusionment
and psychic exhaustion of the lyrics. (“When I think of the road we’re traveling
on,/I wonder what went wrong.”)
In the year that “American Tune” was released, the
Vietnam War was a wound that had stopped bleeding but remained open, and
Watergate was corroding faith in government.
Many, then, would have identified with Simon's lyric about “the age’s most
uncertain hour.”
In retrospect, that was profoundly shortsighted—but it
was just like a baby-boom generation to feel it was all about them. Nearly every American generation
has been faced with similar anxiety, and perhaps none would have possessed a
better right to it than the generation that survived the Great Depression only
to be called upon immediately afterward to defeat Fascism. “That’s all I’m trying—to get some rest”? They
didn’t have time for that. Copland didn’t create Lincoln Portrait to soothe spirits, but to summon them—“the better angels of our nature” that Lincoln believed
would eventually help “swell the chorus of the Union.”
The surprising thing about Lincoln Portrait is that Copland originally wanted someone else to
memorialize. Kostelanetz’s original proposal, also sent out to composers Jerome
Kern and Virgil Thomson in the month after Pearl Harbor, called for orchestral
works that would celebrate "the qualities of courage, dignity, strength,
simplicity and humor which are so characteristic of the American people." He
suggested several Americans as possible subjects: George Washington, Paul
Revere, Walt Whitman, Robert Fulton, Henry Ford, and Babe Ruth.
Thomson chose New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia
(imagine a contemporary counterpart: a musical celebration of Mike Bloomberg!) along
with Herald Tribune colleague Dorothy
Thompson. Because Kern chose Mark Twain, Kostelanetz did not want a second
writer celebrated in the trio of pieces, so Copland had to choose someone else besides the figure he wanted, Whitman.
A biography that Copland had recently
read made him think of Lincoln as a possible subject. Working steadily
with one aim in mind—“to suggest something of the mysterious sense of fatality
that surrounds Lincoln’s personality…and something of his gentleness and
simplicity of spirit”—he had basically finished the piece by Lincoln’s birthday,
well in time for the patriotic concert scheduled in May by Kostelanetz and the Cincinnati
orchestra.
As fine as Kern and Thomson were as composers, their
pieces for the May concert did not survive their moment in May 1942. In
contrast, Copland’s is a hardy perennial of Presidents’ Day and Independence
Day celebrations.
After his assassination, Lincoln became a symbol of
nationwide unity. But by WWII, Republicans could only watch in annoyance as the
first President from their party—one who, be it noted, was a prosperous lawyer
for major railroads before he campaigned for the White House—was adopted with alacrity
by liberal Democrats and those from more leftist parties. Franklin D.
Roosevelt, in an effort to tweak his GOP opponents, had taken to quoting
Lincoln approvingly, and the American volunteers who fought on the side of the
Loyalists in the Spanish Civil War formed the Abraham Lincoln Brigade.
Copland, then, was not merely choosing a towering
American hero in Lincoln, but one whose destruction of an old socio-political
order--a kind of Second American Revolution--deeply appealed to those with similar ideological sympathies.
Just what those sympathies were became a matter of
some contention in 1953, when Copland was hauled before Senator Joseph McCarthy
to answer whether he had ever been a Communist. That confrontation held deep
peril for the composer, who, while never a formal Socialist or Communist Party
member, had in the 1930s shared a podium with the Minnesota Communist candidate
for governor, S.K. Davis, and supported Communist presidential candidate Earl
Browder.
The kindest interpretation of Copland’s testimony—which
occurred only a few months after cancellation of a performance of Lincoln Portrait at the inaugural of
Dwight Eisenhower, because of the composer’s left-leaning associations—is that
it was deeply evasive. For two years thereafter, the foremost classical American composer
of his day had trouble obtaining a passport, as charges of perjury were seriously
weighed.
The eventual finding—that there were insufficient
grounds to proceed with a prosecution—enabled Copland to reestablish his reputation. Like Lincoln, this once-controversial figure became a bipartisan
patriotic symbol. Lincoln Portrait
would be played at the second inaugural of yet another Republican President,
Richard Nixon, and the House of Representatives that had once questioned Copland's
patriotism gave him the Congressional Gold Medal, its highest civilian honor,
in 1986.
1 comment:
There are a lot of the names that we can see or keep in memory also like Aaron Copland and mainly Nusrat Fateh is the big and brand name in this field of the classical music.
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