词条 | Suite of Old American Dances |
释义 |
InstrumentationThe 1952 Chappell score lists the following as the work's instrumentation: piccolo, 1st-2nd flutes, 1st-2nd oboes (2nd doubl. English horn), 1st-2nd bassoons, Eb clarinet, Solo-1st-2nd-3rd Bb clarinets, alto clarinet, bass clarinet, AATB saxophones, Solo-1st-2nd-3rd Bb cornets, 1st-2nd trumpet, 1st-2nd-3rd-4th horns, 1st-2nd-3rd trombones, baritone/euphonium (treble and bass clef parts), tuba ("Basses"), string bass, timpani, and percussion (snare drum, bass drum, cymbals, triangle, bells, vibraphone, xylophone, wood blocks, sandpaper [blocks]). Creation, première, original titleAccording to the composer, the catalyst for the work’s creation was a rare indoor concert by the Goldman Band in Carnegie Hall:
The Goldman Band premiered the suite, with the composer conducting, in Central Park, New York, on 17 June 1949,[5] and performed it several additional times that summer.[6] Bennett's 1949 program noteThe composer supplied a brief program note for the 1949 Goldman première:
Among the "productions" Bennett refers to is the 1939 New York World's Fair for which he composed some 90 minutes of concert band music for the nightly "Lagoon of Nations" spectacles.[8] Orchestral versionSoon after the work’s premiere—and before publication of the concert band original—Bennett prepared an orchestra transcription (copyrighted 16 June 1950[9]). He guest-conducted a Cleveland Orchestra performance on 2 August 1958.[10] Early performancesThe concert band original was copyrighted on 17 June 1952 (technically as an “arrangement” of the already-copyrighted orchestra setting[11]) and published later that year. Pre-publication performances include one by the Ohio State University Concert Band (Manley Whitcomb, cond.), 1 April 1951.[12] In spring 1953, ASCAP and NBC jointly sponsored a series of 13 weekly broadcasts from the Eastman School, devoted entirely to American composers. Two of the concerts were allotted to Frederick Fennell's Eastman Wind Ensemble, and the 23 March broadcast brought two of the suite's movements to a national audience.[13] Other early performances include a 27 February 1953 presentation at Cleveland's Severance Hall by the Baldwin-Wallace Concert Band[14] and its inclusion on the U.S. Marine Band's fall 1953 tour, in and around New York State.[15] Frederick Fennell and the Suite of Old American DancesFrederick Fennell and his Eastman Wind Ensemble made the first commercial recording of the work (Mercury MG 50079, 1953).[16] In consultation with Bennett, Fennell authored an extensive 1979 article about the piece, aimed at conductors, for The Instrumentalist magazine. In that article, he described the circumstances of the work's creation in 1948-49, while Bennett was occupied with orchestrations for such Broadway musicals as Inside U.S.A., Sally, Heaven on Earth, Kiss Me, Kate, All for Love, and South Pacific:[17]
PrecursorOne movement of the piece has its origins in an orchestral Theme and Variations of Bennett's given a network radio premiere in 1941 (WOR/Mutual Broadcasting System) on his “Russell Bennett’s Note Book” weekly program. As with Suite of Old American Dances eight years later, its various movements reflect the characteristic dances of his young years (including a Turkey Trot, Rag, One-Step, Waltz Clog, and Cake Walk); it is the “One-Step” movement that was developed and expanded into Suites “Western One-Step” movement.[19] References1. ^"For a Touch of Musical Americana—The New Band Original: Suite of Old American Dances" (Chappell Co. advertisement). Music Educators Journal, September–October 1952, 41. 2. ^http://www.halleonard.com/product/viewproduct.do?itemid=00348203& 3. ^http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=%22suite+of+old+american+dances%22&&dblist=638&fq=#x0%253Amusic-%2Cx0%253Amusic%2Bx4%253Acd%2Cx0%253Amusic%2Bx4%253Alp%2Cx0%253Amusic%2Bx4%253Acassette%2Cx0%253Amusic%2Bx4%253Adigitalformat 4. ^Bennett, Robert Russell. The Broadway Sound: The Autobiography and Selected Essays of Robert Russell Bennett. George J. Ferencz., ed. University of Rochester Press, 1999. 5. ^H.F.P. "Goldman Band Opens Park Series." Musical America 69:9 (July 1949), 12. 6. ^"Concert and Opera Programs: Guggenheim Memorial Concerts." New York Times, 7 August 1949, X5. 7. ^"Guggenheim Memorial Concerts: The Goldman Band" (concert program), 17 June 1949. 8. ^"Music at the Fair: Concerning Russell Bennett's Score for Fountains in Lagoon of Nations." New York Times, 27 August 1939, X5. 9. ^https://archive.org/stream/catalogofcopyrig345libr#page/312/mode/1up (1950 Copyright Registrations, Music) 10. ^Murray, Bain. "Bennett Dance Suite is Americana at Its Best." Cleveland Plain Dealer, 3 August 1958. 11. ^https://archive.org/stream/catalogofcopyri365libr#page/n7/mode/2up (1952 Copyright Registrations, Music) 12. ^Blair, Jennifer Marie. “The History and Development of The Ohio State University Concert Wind Band Program from 1929-1995.” M.A. thesis, The Ohio State University, 2010, 217. 13. ^“ASCAP-Eastman Broadcasts”. Music Journal, March 1953, 17. An aircheck of this broadcast can be heard at http://pastdaily.files.wordpress.com/2012/11/americas-composers-1953.mp3 14. ^Holtcamp, Rena C. "Goldman, Zestful at 75, Takes Baton at B.-W. Band Concert." Cleveland Plain Dealer, 28 February 1953. 15. ^"Marine Band Plays to Capacity Crowd at Both Concerts." Kingston (NY) Daily Freeman, 28 September 1953, 8. 16. ^Ferencz, George J. Robert Russell Bennett: A Bio-Bibliography. Greenwood Press, 1990, 87. 17. ^http://www.ibdb.com/person.php?id=11369 18. ^Fennell, Frederick. "Basic Band Repertory: Suite of Old American Dances." The Instrumentalist, September 1979. 19. ^Ferencz, George J. “Robert Russell Bennett, Composer and Arranger.” Wind Band Teaching Symposium, U. of Missouri-Kansas City, 22 June 2011. 5 : Compositions by Robert Russell Bennett|Concert band pieces|Suites|1949 compositions|Orchestral suites |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。