Copland: Fanfare? (Concert from Edinburgh, 11/09/2018)

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  • edashtav
    Full Member
    • Jul 2012
    • 3667

    #16
    Originally posted by makropulos View Post
    That's very interesting. Can you point us at the recent research which goes into this?
    This may help a little, makropulos:

    “The poignant and deep-felt movement does not come to a full conclusion, but proceeds all but seamlessly into the finale, which begins quietly with the woodwinds' statement of one of the themes heard in all three of the preceding movements, now transformed, or, one might say, clarifiedmso that its origin is recognized for the first time.It is the Fanfare for the Common Man, which Copland composed in 1942 as his contribution to a series of wartime fanfares commissioned form several American composers by Eugene Goossens, who was then conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. Copland felt free to recycle it here, he said, because he never expected the original fanfare to attain such remarkable popularity as it has done in its own right, but that popularity, and its patriotic context, may be themselves acknowledged as providing the Third Symphony itself with its perceived symbolism.

    This fanfare theme, subtly disguised, has gone through numerous merry, brooding and pastoral transformations in the Symphony's earlier movements, and now, following the woodwinds' brief prefatory gesture, it is reconstituted in its original proclamative form with brasses and drums. The entire finale is based on this theme, which returns again in more or less its original form in the coda, ending the Symphony in a blaze of exultation.

    Leonard Slatkin, who recorded the Copland Third with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, chose it for his first program as music director designate of the NSO in September 1994 and has performed it with this orchestra more than twenty times prior to this week's concerts. His performances are based on Copland's original score, which differs in several details from the second published version, one of the more conspicuous alterations in that edition being a cut of eight measures at the very end of the work. The cut was the suggestion of Leonard Bernstein, who was the first conductor to take up the Third Symphony following its premiere under Koussevitzky. Bernstein first conducted it in Prague in June 1947, and first performed it with the cut at the end in Israel in the fall of the following year, reporting to Copland that "it makes a whale of a difference." Copland was eventually persuaded to sanction the cut when the score was published a second time, but Mr. Slatkin has steadfastly demonstrated his confidence in the original ending, feeling the big affirmative gesture is simply more emphatic and more convincing without the cut, more consonant with the overall balance of the work's grand design.

    Richard Freed National Symphony Orchestra programme note, the Kennedy centre, Date: uncertain.

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    • makropulos
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 1665

      #17
      Thanks very much for that edashtav.

      I'm very interested by Suffolkcoastal's reference to recent research that puts the date of the first ideas to four years before the date on Copland's sketch for the symphony (which says 1944-6) - in other words some early material predating both the Fanfare and the Symphony. Can anyone point me at this 'recent research', please? Presumably somebody's published an article about this somewhere?

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      • edashtav
        Full Member
        • Jul 2012
        • 3667

        #18
        Originally posted by makropulos View Post
        Thanks very much for that edashtav.

        I'm very interested by Suffolkcoastal's reference to recent research that puts the date of the first ideas to four years before the date on Copland's sketch for the symphony (which says 1944-6) - in other words some early material predating both the Fanfare and the Symphony. Can anyone point me at this 'recent research', please? Presumably somebody's published an article about this somewhere?
        You can see images of a 4 page sketch for piano of the fanfare which is in the Library of Congress:
        Location: Box Number 73. For information about this resource, refer to finding aid available at https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.music/eadmus.mu002006 Record created through migration from the Performing Arts Encyclopedia Database.


        Elsewhere in the Library’s on-line resources, there’s a good summary of its genesis .

        Good luck!

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        • bluestateprommer
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 3000

          #19
          Originally posted by makropulos View Post
          I'm very interested by Suffolkcoastal's reference to recent research that puts the date of the first ideas to four years before the date on Copland's sketch for the symphony (which says 1944-6) - in other words some early material predating both the Fanfare and the Symphony. Can anyone point me at this 'recent research', please? Presumably somebody's published an article about this somewhere?
          Elizabeth Bergman Crist had an article back in 2001 in the Journal of Musicology (Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 377-405, Summer 2001) that mentions:

          "Although Copland did not receive a commission for the Third until March 1944, the rough sketches of what was to become thematic material for the symphony date back to 1940 and are now gathered into a manuscript of approximately 50 pages, designated ARCO 58.5. The earliest sketch in the score is dated 19 November 1940.....

          These sketches demonstrate that by the late fall of 1940, Copland had composed two of the symphony's main themes, both of which were to return in subsequent movements.

          The first page of the sketch gathering ARCO 58.5 is dated 24 January 1941, and here Copland rewrote the opening theme drafted the previous November with a new countermelody."


          However, given the provenance of this article, maybe you've already seen it.

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          • edashtav
            Full Member
            • Jul 2012
            • 3667

            #20
            Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post
            Elizabeth Bergman Crist had an article back in 2001 in the Journal of Musicology (Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 377-405, Summer 2001) that mentions:





            However, given the provenance of this article, maybe you've already seen it.
            I, for one, have not seen it.

            Ta!

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            • Suffolkcoastal
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 3290

              #21
              Thanks for posting the link BSP. This is the source I was referring to. I thought it was more recent than 2001, shows how quickly time does indeed fly. Incidentally one of the 'Fanfare variants' in the finale also find its way into the Canticle of Freedom of 1955, which adds a further link to the democratic/freedom theme.

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              • makropulos
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 1665

                #22
                Originally posted by bluestateprommer View Post
                Elizabeth Bergman Crist had an article back in 2001 in the Journal of Musicology (Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 377-405, Summer 2001) that mentions:





                However, given the provenance of this article, maybe you've already seen it.
                Thanks very much indeed for this! Greatly appreciated.

                Comment

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