I know that this CD is
ostensibly American music and not British, however the first composer represented
on this disc is Alexander Reinagle who was born in Portsmouth, England and
lived in the United Kingdom before emigrating to the United States. He is a composer that deserves investigation.
This is a new series from
Danacord, designed to reveal ‘the stylistic breadth, high musical quality and
great originality of the best American piano works.’ For listeners who are
already attuned to this repertoire, they will not need to be reminded of that
fact, and will simply relish the music. However, I guess many enthusiasts of
piano music will be unfamiliar with these sonatas and in some cases even the
composers. There is a definite (but certainly not absolute) euro-centric
perception of classical music in the UK, especially in piano repertoire.
The series presents music from
the 18th century through to the present day. Two criteria have been used in selecting
works: primarily musical worth and secondly originality and characteristic
American flavor’. Danacord have not
issued a detailed ‘batting order’ for this series of CDs although I understand
that the second disc (for which we will have to wait until 2017!) will be
entitled ‘Music of the Night’ and will feature a selection of American ‘nocturnes’.
I am not sure if it will feature the same pianist.
I was impressed with Alexander
Reinagle’s ‘Philadelphia’ Sonata I in D major. It is the only work on this CD
that is completely new to me: it is a pure delight. It is claimed that this is
the first piano sonata to have been composed in the United States.
Reinagle was born in Portsmouth,
England on 23 April 1756 to a Hungarian father and a Scottish mother. His early musical development and alternative
career in the shipping trade was spent in London and Scotland with several
trips to the States. He met C.P.E. Bach
whilst on his travels on the Continent. In 1786 he emigrated to New York and
hence to Philadelphia where he had an important role in developing the musical
culture of that city introducing (amongst other things) concertgoers to the
music of Haydn and Mozart. He is the regarded as the most significant composer
from that period of American history.
Apart from keyboard works, Reinagle composed a deal of theatre
music. Alexander Reinagle died in
Baltimore in 1809.
There is a danger of confusion
with his nephew, Alexander Robert Reinagle (1799-1887), also a musician, but
who resided in Great Britain for all his life.
There are three Sonatas for the
Piano Forte which are known as the ‘Philadelphia Sonatas’, believed to have
been composed shortly after Reinagle’s arrival in the States in 1786. They were immensely popular and received many
performances by the composer in the following decade. The musical style would
seem be inspired by Haydn, Clementi and C.P.E. Bach. But then, many other
composers were influenced by these ‘big names’ as well. The freshness and
vivacity of this present sonata is striking. Unusually, this work lacks a slow
movement.
Little need be said about Edward
MacDowell: there is plenty of biographical detail on the internet and in
standard reference works. However, one point needs to be made. If the listener
were to judge his career from Classic FM,
the assumption would be made that he a) wrote only one piece: ‘To a Wild Rose’
and, based on this hypothesis, if he composed anything else, b) his musical
style would be that of miniature character pieces. This is wrong. I agree, that there is much
piano music that fits this description, but there are also two superb piano
concertos, important orchestral tone poems and suites as well as many
accomplished songs. In fact, the first piece of MacDowell I heard was his Piano
Concerto No.2 played by Van Cliburn and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
conducted by Walter Hendl (RCA RB16244). It was only then that I put MacDowell
and his ‘Wild Rose’ together in my mind.
It is largely forgotten that Edward MacDowell composed
four impressive and romantic piano sonatas: No.1 ‘Tragica’, No. 2 ‘Eroica’, No.3
‘Norse’ and No.4 ‘Keltic’. They were composed
between 1891 and 1900.
The liner notes quote William S. Newman (The Sonata since Beethoven) that these
‘easily outrank any other U.S. sonatas produced before World War 1.’ On the
‘Tragica’ Sonata in particular, James Huneker, the celebrated American critic, pronounced
that this sonata was ‘the most marked contribution to solo sonata literature
since Brahms' F minor piano sonata’. Strong praise indeed.
MacDowell’s Sonata lives up to its subtitle, ‘Tragica.’ It
was written in memory of composer, pianist and teacher, Joachim Raff, who had
died in 1882. There are four well balanced movements.
The listener will not hear any ‘Americanisms’ in this
music. It was written at a time when MacDowell was still in thrall to the
European model. It was only later in his career that he began to make use of the
parameters and mood of American folk-tunes; he did not collect these in the
same manner as Cecil Sharp and Vaughan Williams. The fact that MacDowell
studied in Frankfurt with Carl Heymann and Joachim Raff, and also moved in
Liszt’s circle explains this European influence on the present work. The Sonata
was composed in 1893, the first movement was played by MacDowell that year in
Boston, and the work was published during the following year. It soon became
popular with pianists and recital goers.
Charles Griffes’ Sonata for piano was premiered by the
composer on 26 February 1918. Interestingly, it was performed at the MacDowell
Club in New York. It is usually regarded as one of the finest examples of the
genre written by an American. Maurice
Hinson describes it as being ‘a peak of neo-romantic expression in American
piano music.’
Griffes is often regarded as an ‘impressionist’ composer.
This is usually predicated on the back of works such as the The White Peacock and The Pleasure Dome of Kubla Khan. Much of
his music was influenced by Scriabin, Debussy and Japanese folk music.
On the other hand, the Sonata is an abstract work with no
literary programme. It was originally conceived as a single movement work, but
before the premiere Griffes decided to present it in ‘standard’ three movement
form. The Sonata probably represents the
beginning of Charles Griffes ‘experimental’ period. In this work, Griffes expands his musical
horizons to include inspiration from Liszt, Schoenberg and Stravinsky. It
balances aggression with lyrical melody and a ‘clearly perceived formal
structure’.
Elie Siegmeister (1909-1991) was
a New York born composer who studied at the Columbia University with Seth
Bingham, had private lessons with Wallingford Reigger and latterly with Nadia
Boulanger in Paris. Much of his career
was spent in New York as a conductor, pianist, teacher and composer. His catalogue is considerable, with some
eight operas, nine symphonies, many concerti and piano music. His style is
always approachable and eclectic, sometimes making use of jazz and American
folk-music.
The first of Elie Siegmeister’s
five piano sonatas is hugely impressive. In the composer’s own words it is ‘an
American panorama, blending jazzy and folk-like themes with purely classical
form.’ The work was completed in Brooklyn in 1944.
I first heard this work in the
Kenneth Boulton’s fine performance on Naxos 8.559020. I believe that this is
the only other version of this work currently available on CD. The sonata has three ‘classically’ designed
movements. The first and last demand highly rhythmical playing from the soloist
whilst the middle movement is lyrical, quotes the protest song ‘Sistern and
Brethren’ and avoids the use of jazz.
The last movement is stunning: Siegmeister contrasts boogie-woogie
themes with a typically lilting cowboy song.
It is my favourite work on this CD. For my ear, Cecile Licad brings just
that little bit more magic than Boulton’s superb reading.
Cecile Licad was born in Manila
in the Philippines. She began piano lessons when only three years old, with her
mother. Unbelievably, she made her debut, aged only seven with a performance of
a Beethoven Piano Concerto. After moving
to the USA she attended the Curtis Institute of Music and studied with Rudolf
Serkin, Seymour Lipkin and Mieczyslaw Horszowski. After her first professional engagement, her
career went from strength to strength. In recent years she has developed an interest
in playing chamber music. Her repertoire is wide ranging – from Mozart to
Gershwin and from Beethoven to Bartok.
Major recordings of Rachmaninov’s
Piano Concerto No.2 and Saint-Saëns Piano
Concerto No. 2 began her successful recording career. She has also covered work by Schumann, Chopin
and Ravel. In 2003 she turned her
attention to the American composer, Louis Gottschalk with a CD for Naxos. Her
playing was summed up in a review in the Washington Post: "every sound she
made was beautiful, every note and phrase the result of intellect warmed by
emotion." Most recently, she recorded the Leo Ornstein Sonata for the Danacord
Husum Festival Series, 2013.
This is an exciting new release that promises to
expand into a collection of American musical masterpieces, albeit at a slow
rate. It is essential listening for all who consider the piano as their
favourite instrument and who regard the piano sonata as one of the most
important and sophisticated forms.
Track Listing:
Alexander REINAGLE
(1756-1809) Philadelphia Sonata I in D major (c.1786)
Edward MACDOWELL (1861-1908)
Sonata No.1 in G minor, op.45 (Tragica) (1893)
Charles T. GRIFFES
(1884-1920) Sonata for Piano (c.1904)
Elie SIEGMEISTER (1909-1991)
American Sonata (Piano Sonata No.1) (1944)
Cecile Licad (piano)
DANACORD DACOCD
774
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this review was first published.
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