Composer John Powell is one of the most interesting and at the same time notorious figures in American music. This early American Recording Society LP presents his most famous composition, the Rhapsodie Nègre, which anticipated the so-called “concert jazz” movement by several years.
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John Powell in 1916 |
Doktor goes on to say that “Powell was on the cusp of America’s
burgeoning modernist concert tradition, just before he developed a distinctly
anti-modernist stance. More broadly, I argue that the concert jazz vogue, which
Powell presciently advanced six years before George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in
Blue, reflects musical modernism’s indebtedness to conceptions of black
sound.”
Nevertheless, Powell was a virulent racist. “Four years
later [i.e., after the premiere of Rhapsodie Nègre], Powell launched a
white supremacist campaign to preserve the Anglo-Saxon race in law and in
music. Powell and his political allies helped pass the Racial Integrity Act of
1924, which prohibited miscegenation [in Virginia].”
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Daniel Gregory Mason |
An article by David Z. Kushner, which also provides much
more background on Powell, notes, “By 1920, Mason, too, was pontificating about
the need to recognize the Anglo-Saxon virtues that he juxtaposes to the ‘Jewish
infection in our music.’” Regardless of this rhetoric, none of this is apparent
in Chanticleer, an attractive piece
inspired by Thoreau’s Walden.
Dean Dixon leads the accomplished performances, with the Vienna Symphony (here in the guise of the ARS Orchestra) perhaps
happier with the Powell than the Mason, in which the ensemble sounds thin (as
it often did in these ARS sessions). Oddly, the soloist in the Powell work is
uncredited. I don’t believe it was Dixon,
who as far as I know was not a pianist.
The Mason recording is from March 1951 – at least
the indispensable discographer Michael Gray lists a Mason session for that time
with Dixon, although he says the
work is Chronochromie rather than Chanticleer, evidentally confusing Mason
for Messiaen (which probably would not have pleased the former). The Powell
session is likely from about the same time. The download includes the Doktor and Kushner articles
referenced above.
Reups
I had a request to reupload another ARS disc, the first
recording of Ives’s Three Places in New England, coupled with Robert McBride’s amusing Violin Concerto, with the
excellent soloist Maurice Wilk. Walter Hendl conducts. This has been
remastered, and now has much better sound.
Another new remastered reupload is the result of a request
on another site – Artur Rodzinski’s fine recording of Prokofiev’s Symphony No.5, with the superb Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra of New York.
Links to all items are in the comments.
Links (Apple lossless):
ReplyDeletePowell/Mason
https://mega.nz/#!XI9inL5Z!cpnlIje8gcc8-lcBpHOjLH-WBjhHQH-zCion6aDNi04
https://www.mediafire.com/?ru3uywwqi8cnybt
Ives/McBride
https://mega.nz/#!6YNXWRYA!_AP0_nmfcVVGZcapdJy4LA8dpcMDzKVbt_3YpVYBACs
Prokofiev (Rodzinski)
https://mega.nz/#!OR8zXaSY!gXdnS7SJSD9NeGcOJZEcATrR6usIH6Gg5z89a6xghes
Ironic that these two works should be conducted by a American black musician practically exiled in Europe during his career. I wonder what Dixon thought of the composers and their attitudes. Dixon probably had more experience conducting American music (30's-60's) at that time than anyone else - the ARS repertory ought to be re-recorded in modern sound and with a contemporary orchestra. Not that Dixon, Hendl, et. al. did such a bad job, it's what they had to work with.
DeleteHere is none other than Bruno Walter, conducting Daniel Gregory Mason's Suite After English Folksongs, with the NBC Symphony Orchestra -- dated 25 March 1939 -- from broadcasts over the 1939/40 season by the orchestra, having been invited by his old colleague and friend Arturo Toscanini. The work apparently dates from 1934.
DeleteI have mixed feelings about this Nasib piece. I've heard it numerous times since the mid-1980s from my copy of the entire broadcast, but NOT A NOTE OF IT ever manages to stick in my mind! I am reminded of certain Furtwaengler broadcasts of Pepping, Fortner, Jose-Maria Castro, and HEINZ Schubert (not Franz!): one admires the dedication, the craftsmanship, the integrity of the interpreter; but wonders WHY something more important and enduring might not have been substituted?
Ah, but of course Walter was a notorious conservative! (Yet, he was a great enthusiast of Ralph Vaughan Williams' works and deeply praised Boult's performance of the composer's ballet "Job" at the Vienna Festival: *why* couldn't Walter have tried something like THAT instead?!)
At least this performance is very accomplished, and seems entirely committed. The orchestra is, as usual, fully up to the task. Sound quality here is not bad at all! I have done only the tiniest bit of editing/alterations.
Oddly, in the second portion of the concert, announcer Gene Hamilton goes on and on about the FINAL work, Strauss's Death and Transfiguration (of course, as well known then as now); but then immediately shifts to the Mason suite and only delivers the merest few syllables of introduction.
https://www52.zippyshare.com/v/ynlI0ars/file.html
I can take some consolation that the ARS would have done this piece "at sight" by their beer-stained Viennese ensembles, with much poorer quality engineering, in a sort of frantic scramble...
8H Haggis (oh: file expires on 8/24/18.)
Tee-hee: "Nasib" is of course "Mason"--if you hand slips off the right keys. This blasted Blogspot editor goes nuts, with the text skittering out of sight, at the slightest provocation; so I've given up trying to proofread my posts!
Delete8HH
This reminds me of this book I think was called "The Education of Little Tree", written by a white southerner. It shows a very sympathetic view of the black experience and yet was written by a historically racist journalist.
ReplyDeleteAt least that's what I remember; no doubt I have got a whole lot of things wrong.
thanks agin for a very interesting and valuable post!!!
anomia - Powell's attitudes were in some ways sympathetic as well, or paternalistic; at the same time, he did not consider blacks as equals to whites.
ReplyDeleteThis brings up, once again the question of whether the art and the artist should be considered separately.
ReplyDeleteI'm Jewish and have strong feelings about people like Wagner and Pound. Were Jolson and Cantor to be shunned because they did blackface?
To be sure, attitudes change, and most versions of the opening number of Showboat omit the word "nigger" from the lyric and no one I know (including me) pillory Kern or Hammerstein for including it in the first place.
And yet... I do believe there is a line, beyond which slurs remain slurs and their users should not be given a pass because of their talents.
Regardless of the quality of their music, these two, I think, are on the wrong side of wherever such a line is drawn: People were lynched because of attitudes like theirs, irrespective of who strung the rope.
hkitt - It's a difficult issue. To me, this is a historical artifact, to be examined both as music and in the context of its times. On the other hand, I wonder why someone would want to make a new recording of Powell's Symphony, which took place a few years ago.
ReplyDeleteI do think it is useful to remember that Powell's attitudes were quite common (indeed they were the law) in his time.
Agreed--yet, at least in the northeast, there are movements to remove the names of Washington, Madison and Jefferson from streets and buildings because they were slaveholders
DeleteAnd until relatively recently, homosexuality was a crime in the UK and a mental disorder in the US.
We should, by all means, learn from history and recognize that, in each era, people make decisions on the basis of the information--however imperfect--available at the time.
But we should also be wary of relativism, moral or otherwise, lest we excuse too much.
Again, I don't presume to know where to draw the line, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't try to.
Many thanks for your postings; I've learned a lot from them--and not just musically.
hkitt42 - And thank you so much for your kind remarks and your thoughtful comments.
DeleteInteresting to note that Powell and Mason are now known to have been much more than compatriots, which in those days would have caused them to have been jailed, institutionalized, and possibly more.
ReplyDeleteyour host - I did not know that. Puts a different spin on their hostility to others.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteWorth checking out, definitely.
ReplyDeleteAnd what a civil discourse I'm seeing on the topic, too. Nice!
StealthMan - Yes, we like to keep it low key.
Delete