29 December 2011

177448 (4/9)

Friday, 25 Nov 11
I was at the shop twice this Thanksgiving weekend.  On Wednesday, my friends Emily, Karline, and Henry came for a visit and tour.  We had lunch on a bench that overlooks five counties.  On Friday, I spent an entire day with Celeste.
Our first task was removing two layers of gold paint from my plate, which weighs about 300 pounds.  We used three different quarts of paint stripper and a power washer.  In the event you find yourself in the same situation, I would highly recommend the "paint & varnish remover" by Jasco.
After that, Celeste showed me how to re-bush my keys.  Do you remember Friday, 14 Oct 11 when I removed the old felt?  Celeste and I applied new felt with hide glue to ensure that the keys will fit nicely on the balance rail pins and front rail pins.  She's much better at it than I am, so I left before doing too much damage.
Bernard gave us homemade cranberry-orange scones with cinnamon on top.

Friday, 2 Dec 11
Before I put new felt on the key frameBernard, Celeste, Nathan, Osious, and I glued the ribs to the soundboard with go-bar rods as pictured below.  The sky was white with fog, and the wood burning stove was ablaze.  It was quite the party.

Friday, 9 Dec 11
My dad arrived on Thursday night for a visit.  George, Dr. Mallard, Dad, and I toured the shop for a few hours in the morning.  Afterwards, the three of them dined at the Red Bud Cafe while I (secretly) recorded George's birthday present with Celeste.
This photo from last week shows the new felt I put into the keyframe along with rust-resistant balance pins.

Friday, 16 Dec 11
Although I truly enjoy the charming company I encounter at the shop, there's also something special about being in such a beautiful place alone.  Bernard left a fire in the wood burning stove, and Celeste left an instruction sheet to guide me in cleaning the damper wires and removing felts from the damper heads and guide rail.
Additionally, The Volkert's under levershammersshanksflangeswippens, and soundboard decal arrived.  Bernard set the brand new packages on the square grand for me to open and admire.  And as a square grand is better than a dying ornamented tree, I was more elated than a rich only child on Christmas morning.  Pictured below is a new under lever placed in front of the old ones.

Tuesday, 20 Dec 11
Being a Tuesday, the full crew was in.  In the morning, I sanded down the guide rail and applied a little bit of shellac.  The bulk of the day, however, was spent removing rust from the plate and sanding it down.  It was a mess.
Pictured below is the plate with polished bass hitch pins.  The treble hitch pins will be new.

Wednesday, 28 Dec 11
It was a day of sanding.  I sanded the curves on the under levers (see two photos up) and graphite parts of the wippens (see below) with 500 grit for most of the day.  Additionally, I weakened the wippen springs and rubbed white teflon powder into the yellow buckskin-like pieces shown below.  After the sun came out, I did a little more sanding of the plate.

END PART IV



14 December 2011

George's Birthday

My Jabberwocky turned 35 today,
and I composed a 3.5 minute song for him.
Happy Birthday, Sweetheart!

Vocals - Celeste Coburn
Piano - Lan Kratzke

26 November 2011

19 November 2011

177448 (3/9)

Friday, 14 Oct 11
It was the second beautiful day of cleaning keys with Pink Martini Pandora.  With steam and a needle applicator of windex, I softened the hide glue and removed five pieces of felt from each key.  I also met Bernard's friend, Jack, who came in to regulate another piano.  Jack is an astronomer, pilot, physicist, beekeeper, chess tutor, and mathematician among many other things.  He makes a fine pot of coffee.

Friday, 21 Oct 11
The highlight of the day was Osious carving my new pinblock out of a forty-two pound piece of wood.  The bandsaw on maple emitted the savory smell of popcorn, which made me hungry.  I continued to work on the keys, preparing the naturals to receive new tops and sanding down the ebonies.  Can you tell which half I sanded?

Friday, 28 Oct 11
It was fine cold weather for another day on the black keys.  After sanding the surfaces, I reshaped the corners several times.  By the second half of the day, I was only working with a 400-grit sanding block and a grey piece of scotch-brite.  I applied the first coat of Waterlox tung oil while blasting the "Pirates of Penzance."

Friday, 4 Nov 11
I picked out my soundboard.  It's the one on the right side of the photo in which I'm sitting amidst two thousand dollars of wood.  You know, the pretty one.  After removing the pins from the key frame, I sanded it down.  I also smoothed down the ebonies with steel wool and applied another thin coat of tung oil.
Do you remember Jack, the Jack of all Trades?  The astronomer, pilot, physicist, beekeeper, and mathematician among many other things?  Today, he brought in a book he published.  Check it out.
Needless to say, it was another wonderful day in Blanco.

Friday, 11 Nov 11
The weather couldn't have been prettier.  I worked on the action parts, removing the hammers/shanks/flangeswippens, and let-off buttons from the action rails.  I had 176 screws to wirebrush and lacquer.  After I set out the first 88, I met an intrepid grasshopper.  Not wishing to lacquer the grasshopper, I took a picture of him instead.  In one very dramatic moment, a gust of wind caught hold of the cardboard, causing four screws to fall underneath the deck, and the grasshopper leapt several feet into the air, landing on my head.  I screamed.

Friday, 18 Nov 11
After I "satinized" the white keytops with 320, 400, and 500-grit sand paper, I continued scrubbing the keys and action rails with steel wool.  That was it.
You haven't lived until you've spent six consecutive hours with steel wool.

END PART III



08 October 2011

177448 (2/9)

Friday, 2 Sep 11
Bridges transmit vibrations from the string to the soundboard.  I created a mylar cut-out of the treble and bass bridges, traced the original bridge pin holes with a soldering iron, and finished the diagram with a light sanding and pencil rubbing.  Using a caliper, I was able to notate several height readings.
Once these specs were recorded, Bernard used a bandsaw to remove most of the treble bridge cap and the top quarter inch of the bass bridge.  I steamed the remainder of the cap off the treble bridge root with the help of prying tools.

Friday, 9 Sep 11
Bernard had soaked some hide glue overnight and cooked it up in a hotpot for me by the morning.  With a pair of sharp pincers, I bisected toothpicks and discarded the ends.  I then plugged the treble bridge holes with glue and wood using a mallet.  Bernard and I hoisted The Volkert up on its side, so I could remove the wooden levers underneath that constitute the trapwork.  We were very careful to mark the position of each lever with a set of numbered steel stamps.  It was a very pleasant day; Bernard and I listened to recordings of grandma's playing.

Friday, 16 Sep 11
The underside of The Volkert was covered with holes from previous movings.  My first task was to smooth over the area with an air sander.  Osious was able to perform a very successful extraction on the screw pictured next to the blue wire below, and I proceeded to fill each hole with wood epoxy.  As that dried, I removed the old leather from the trapwork, sanded down the wood, and painted the parts satin black.  I also reshaped the swing blocks with a belt sander, which was a little bit scary.

Friday, 23 Sep 11
It was full crew and a beautiful day with Bernard, Osious, Celeste, and Nathan.  First, I leveled the dried epoxy with a wood planer and air sander.  Next, I lacquered the trapwork bolts and finished the underlevers with bushings and dag graphite lubricant along friction points.  After Osious checked the fittings of the legs and lyre, I started painting the underside black.  If you are a piano technician, you will notice that I filled in the trapwork screw holes.  Some day, I hope to read this and shake my head in disbelief.  For the time being, however, I don't feel so bad.

Friday, 30 Sep 11
The first task was to sand off some of the paint in order to relocate the trapwork screw holes and drill them in with a tapered bit.  That made me a little nervous, but I did it.  With Osious' help, I wirebrushed and lacquered the springs, cleaned up the dowel and fitted it with new felt, and re-bushed the dowel hole.  Other than that, "I see a red door and I want it painted black."  Check out what used to be the ugly remnants of a mahogany finish.

Friday, 7 Oct 11
It was a perfect day.  Bernard came in and out of the shop; otherwise, it was just me and the chickens.  I sanded and numbered the keys, scraped the sides, removed the back checks with a crow bar, and unscrewed the capstans.  Pictured below, the keys show both the back checks which point upwards on wire, and the capstans which are made of brass.  The new ones will be made of aluminum.

END PART II

25 September 2011

Nephews II

These are my favorite little guys.
Here are Aiden and Andrew on September 24th, a week shy of 11 months old.

27 August 2011

177448 (1/9)

1700
Italian inventor Bartolomeo Cristofori designed the first piano for Prince Ferdinando de Medici.  One hundred and fifty-three years later, German immigrant Henry Engelhard Steinweg founded the company Steinway & Sons in Manhattan.  He and his five sons are largely responsible for some of the ideas behind the design of the modern piano.

Saturday, 9 Jul 11
My grandmother gave me a 1916/1917 Steinway & Sons model O, serial no. 177448, which I have named The Volkert.  After several weeks in trucks and storage facilities, it arrived at Bernard Mollberg's
 shop in Blanco, TX directly from Bellevue, WA.

Saturday, 16 Jul 11
Dr. Mallard, George, and I visited the shop.  Bernard showed us wooden extensions that had previously been drilled into The Volkert's underside, supporting seven large springs that exerted a tremendous amount of upward force onto the soundboard.  That was strange.  George memorized every detail of the piano and asked Bernard if we could preserve the original soundboard decal.  Four days later, my completed paperwork was in the shop.

Friday, 12 Aug 11
This was the first day I was able to work on The Volkert myself.  I started by breaking beckets, which are the parts of the wire that bend into the hole of each tuning pin.  I then pulled the curly wire out from the pins, clipped and removed the wire, and unscrewed the tuning pins.  Osious, another technician, helped me remove the bolts holding down the cast iron plate, which was then lifted with machinery.

Friday, 19 Aug 11
With levers and hammers, we banged out the soundboard, which had been secured to the inner rim with hide glue.  From what I understand, hide glue is made from boiling a dead animal, and is almost the same thing as jello.  The glue joint comes loose with water and heat.  After the larger soundboard pieces were chiseled from the inner rim, I used an iron, wet towels, and scraping tools to steam off the rest.  The soundboard is made from spruce, a soft wood, and the inner rim is made from layers of maple, which are much harder.

Friday, 26 Aug 11
After clamping the bridges down to a table, I used a vise-grip to remove the steel bridge pins.  A chicken climbed into the bottom of my table and we became friends.  I was able to scrape most of the lacquer off the bridges with a razor blade.  With a bench grinder and wire wheel, I removed rust and debris from the plate bolts, and the threads looked brand new (see below).

22 August 2011

Conclusion (10/10)

XXIV:  Disclaimer
     I offer my sincerest apologies for what promises to be the most boring bowleg of them all.  As a race, we have either gotten very good at keeping records, or haven't sorted out what will really make it into the textbooks yet.  It might be worth skimming this one when you're sick and tired of dealing with your real life, there's nobody to talk to, and you happen to have a glass of your favorite wine on hand.

XXV:  Musical Theater
     American musical theater developed from the operettas of Johann Strauss Jr. (1825-1899) in Austria, Jaques Offenbach (1819-1880) in France, and lyricist and composer duo W. S. Gilbert (1836-1911) and Arthur Sullivan (1842-1900) of Great Britain.  Although plots were originally rather contrived, composers eventually turned to more sophisticated novels and plays.  Early American musical theater composers include Victor Herbert (1859-1924, Babes in Toyland), Sigmund Romberg (1887-1951, The Student Prince), Jerome Kern (1885-1945, Showboat), Burton Lane (1912-1997, Finian's Rainbow), Cole Porter (1891-1964, Kiss Me, Kate), Frank Loesser (1910-1969, Guys and Dolls), Harold Rome (1908-1993, Fanny), and lyricist and composer duo Alan Jay Lerner (1918-1986) and Frederick Loewe (1901-1988, My Fair Lady, Camelot).  Composer Richard Rogers (1902-1979) collaborated with lyricist Lorenz Hart (1895-1943) on twenty-eight musicals including Babes in Arms.  After Hart passed away, Rogers turned to lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II (1985-1960) and the two produced such classics as Oklahoma!CarouselSouth PacificThe King and I, and The Sound of Music.
     In the 70s and 80s, Stephen Sondheim (b.1930) created a more complex and dramatic musical sound in musicals like A Little Night MusicSweeney ToddSunday in the Park with George, and Into the Woods.  Much like the Baroque court operas, British composer Andrew Lloyd Webber (b.1948) combined song, dance, and scenic effects in EvitaCatsStarlight ExpressThe Phantom of the Opera, and Sunset Boulevard.  In the same vein, French composer Claude-Michel Schönberg (b.1944) and lyricist Alain Boublil (b.1941) wrote Les MisérablesMiss Saigon, and Martin Guerre.
     Leonard Bernstein (1918-1990) was a terrifically famous composer, conductor, pianist, lecturer, and television personality.  At age forty, he became the first American-born conductor to lead the New York Philharmonic.  Bernstein also successfully combined jazz and musical theater in his classic, West Side Story.  His first success occurred in 1943 at the age of twenty-five, after graduating from Harvard and Curtis.  Bruno Walter, the conductor of the New York Philharmonic, fell sick and needed a substitute for a live nationwide broadcast by CBS.  With no rehearsals, Bernstein held a spectacular performance and instantly became famous.  He collaborated with Jerome Robbins, Betty Comden, and Adolph Green for Broadway's On the Town the next year.  When Bernstein was blacklisted in Hollywood by loser Joseph McCarthy in the early 50s, he collaborated with Lillian Hellman in Candide, a musical best known today for its  overture.  In 1957, Bernstein worked with Jerome Robbins again in West Side Story, a Romeo and Juliet story incorporating Latin rhythms ("Mambo"), a Schoenberg twelve-tone bebop fugue ("Cool"), and the theme of Beethoven's Emperor Concerto ("Somewhere").  As a conductor, Bernstein promoted contemporary American composers, recorded eight of the nine gargantuan Mahler Symphonies, and held musical lectures on television from 1954 until his death.  In addition to musical theater, he composed symphonies, ballets, operas, songs, piano works, and chamber music.

XXVI:  What's on the Radio
     I find this section to be so overwhelming that I refuse to continue writing in English.  Each sentence will look something like this: genre, era: influences: performers.  When read outloud to loved ones, it should be about as interesting as a bibliography.  If it sounds more like a graduation announcement, exaggerate your facial expressions and annunciate until it sounds more like a bibliography.
     Rhythm and blues, 40s-60s: blues, popLouis JordanEtta JamesBo DiddleyJoe TurnerB. B. King.  Rock and roll, 50s: rhythm and blues, country-western, pop, gospel: Bill HaleyElvis PresleyJerry Lee LewisChuck BerryFats DominoLittle Richard.  Soul or Motown, 60s: rhythm and blues, gospel, pop: Diana RossJames BrownMartha ReevesAretha FranklinRay Charles.  Rock and roll or Rock, 60s: The Beatles: The Beach BoysThe Rolling StonesThe Who.  The Beatles experimented with all sorts of different sounds and influences.  They are great.  The Rolling Stones wrote songs that condoned sex, drugs, and violence.
     Folk rock, 60s: rock, folk protest songs: The ByrdsPete SeegerBob Dylan.  Acid Rock, 60s: drugs, improvisation, sound technology: The Jefferson AirplaneThe Grateful DeadPink Floyd.  Jazz rock: 70s: jazz, rock: ChicagoBlood Sweat and Tears.  Art rock or Progressive rock, 70s: art music, rock: Moody BluesThe WhoFrank Zappa Latin rock, 70s: Latin and African percussion, rock: Santana.  Mainstream rock, 70s and 80s: many styles: AmericaThe EaglesThe Doobie BrothersElton John.
     Heavy metal, 70s: simplicity, volume: Led ZeppelinBlack Sabbath, Deep Purple.  Glitter rock or Glam rock, 70s: theater: David BowieLou Reed.  Punk rock, 70s: rock and roll: The RamonesSex PistolsThe Clash.  Disco, 70s: mechanical beat: Bee Gees.  Reggae, 70s: Jamaican rhythms: Bob MarleyBlack Uhuru.  Soft rock, 70s: rejection of heavy metal and punk: The CarpentersOlivia Newton-John.  New wave, 70s: melody, rock: Elvis CostelloThe PoliceBlondieThe Talking Heads.  Rap or Hip Hop, 70s and 80s: synthesizers and stereo turntables: Run DMCPublic EnemyQueen LatifahBeastie Boys.  Gangsta rap, 90s: inner city: N.W.A.Snoop Doggy DoggTupac ShakurNotorious B.I.G.  R&B, 90s: rhythm and blues, melismatic singing: Whitney HoustonMariah Carey.
     In the 80s, the invention of the music video on MTV greatly influenced the visual aspects of new bands.  Michael JacksonBruce SpringsteenPrinceMadonnaU2, and Guns n' Roses were the superstars of the 80s.  Grunge rock, 80s and 90s: punk, 70s metal: SoundgardenNirvanaPearl Jam.  Alternative rock, 80s and 90s: grunge, indie: R.E.M.The SmithsFoo FightersRed Hot Chili PeppersThe Smashing PumpkinsGreen DayWeezerRadioheadThe White Stripes.  Ska (third wave), 90s: ska, punk: No DoubtReel Big Fish.
     Country-Western music has its roots in the mountains of Appalachia.  Hillbilly music: blues: The Carter FamilyJimmie Rodgers.  Bluegrass, 40s on: folk, jazz: Monroe brothersLester FlattEarl Scruggs.  Honkytonk, 50s: rock and roll: Patsy ClineHank WilliamsJohnny Cash.  Classic Country, 60s and 70s: folk: Loretta LynnMerle Haggard.  Mainstream Country, 70s: John DenverGlen Campbell.  Country rock, 80s: country, pop: Dolly PartonWillie Nelson.  Country, 90s: country: Garth BrooksShania Twain.
     Global pop is influenced by music from third world countries, often collaborating between Western and non-Western musicians.  I Love Lucy is a good example of global pop from the 50s.  Another is Zydeco, 50s on: Cajun, African-American, Caribbean: BeauSoleilJean-Baptiste Fuselier.

XXVII:  Art Music
     Just as Schoenberg's serialism sought to organize pitch material, the concept of total serialism included organization concerning every aspect of music, such as rhythmic and dynamic values.  On the other hand, some composers determined these variables through chance, in what became known as aleatoric music, erasing the notion of form.  In addition to total serialism and aleatoric techniques, contemporary composers have been influenced by non-Western cultures, the role of microtonal intervals such as quarter tones, and electronic music.
     In France, Oliver Messiaen (1908-1992) wrote melodies inspired by bird songs, Javanese gamelan music, and Gregorian chant.  Italian composer Luciano Berio (1925-2003) incorporated aleatoric techniques, serialism, and electronic technology into his compositions.  Karlheinz Stockhausen (1928-2007) explored aleatoric techniques, serialism, improvisation, and prerecorded tape in Germany.  Born in Hungary and active in Vienna, György Ligeti (1923-2006) was heavily influenced by electronic music and developed his own micropolyphony as well as extremely complex rhythmic techniques.  The works of French composer and conductor Pierre Boulez (b. 1925) incorporate many non-Western sounds, serialism, and the use of controlled chance.  Contemporary composers from America include Henry Cowell (1897-1965), George Perle (1915-2009), Henry Brant (1913-2008), Louise Talma (1906-1996), and Barbara Kolb (b.1939).  Perhaps the best known are John Cage (1912-1992) and George Crumb (b.1929).  Cage is credited with inventing the prepared piano, which uses metal, wood, or leather on the strings to vary the sound.  Crumb is revered for achieving a very dramatic and emotional output through the use of contemporary compositional techniques.
     Before 1926, silent film was accompanied by live music featuring popular tunes and sound effects.  With the invention of the Vitaphone system, sound could be synchronized with film for the first time, leading to a demand in film music.  If you don't remember the 20s, perhaps you remember watching a depiction of this technological advancement in the 1952 classic, Singin' in the Rain.  Ever since it was possible, composers have been writing film music to make you feel what you otherwise wouldn't in the  theater.  Although these composers don't typically receive the same recognition as Hollywood stars, it is largely their work that makes you feel the urge to relax, cry, or nervously look away.  Film music can also help to establish mood, character, and setting.  Harkening back to Wagner, many film composers returned to the idea of Leitmotifs.  John Williams (b.1932) has written Leitmotifs you probably know, such as the two-note suspenseful theme from Jaws, or the character motives for Luke Skywalker (fanfare), Yoda (melody), and Darth Vader (march) in the Star Wars trilogy.  Other than previously mentioned composers Shostakovich, Prokofiev, and Copland, notable film score composers include Max Steiner (1888-1971), Eric Korngold (1897-1957), Bernard Herrman (1911-1975), Miklós Rózsa (1907-1995), Dmitri Tiomkin (1894-1979), Elmer Bernstein (1922-2004), Jerry Goldsmith (1929-2004), James Horner (b.1953), Danny Elfman (b.1953), and Tan Dun (b.1957).
     Of course, the use of synthesizers, computer-generated music, and other technological advancements was not lost in the world of art music.  New electronic instruments such as the ThereminOndes Martenot, and Hammond organ were invented.  In the 40s, electronically manipulated recordings formed a trend called musique concrète in France, led by Pierre Schaeffer (1910-1995).  During the next decade, Stockhausen created the school of electronische Musik in Germany.  Other electronic music pioneers are Mario Davidovsky (b.1934), Milton Babbitt (1916-2011), and Paul Lansky (b.1944).
     Current compositions have been labeled as New Romantic and minimalist.  New Romanticism is a response to the largely unappreciated serial techniques which tend to favor intellect over emotion.  Notable composers of this genre include Samuel Barber (1910-1981), Ned Rorem (b.1923), Thea Musgrave (b.1928), David Tredici (b.1937), John Corigliano (b.1938), and Joan Tower (b.1938).  Barber wrote Adagio for Strings, which is the slow movement from his only string quartet.  It has been used in several films and was broadcast on the radio after the death of President Roosevelt.  Corigliano has composed notable chamber pieces, two symphonies, and the soundtracks for Glory and The Red Violin.
     Other composers responded to various twentieth century techniques by simplifying music from the build up of complex procedures.  Although minimalist music changes very slowly, each detail is very carefully considered by the composer.  Well known minimalists are Steve Reich (b.1936), Philip Glass (b.1937), John Adams (b.1947), and Arvo Pärt (b.1935).  Adams is best known for Short Ride in a Fast MachineShaker Loops, and On the Transmigration of Souls, which commemorates the victims of September 11, 2001.  Pärt initially composed neoclassic and serial works, but stopped composing altogether in the 70s and studied medieval and Renaissance music.  When he returned to composition, his sound had changed completely with a new style he called tintinnabulation, derived from the Latin word for "bell."  Pärt is the best known contemporary composer of sacred music.

XXVIII:  And They All Lived Happily Ever After.
     And so, at last, we reach the end of this series.  If you'd like to pass my final, I'll send you a personally handcrafted graduation certificate.  Just send your answers and color/design requests to kratzke@gmail.com.
Final: A History of Western Music in 10 Bowlegs
1.  Describe something that has made a lasting impression for you.
2.  Write your own conclusion concerning the last 1500 years of Western Music.
3.  Pick a musical era and describe how it sounds different than any other to your own ear.
4.  Ask at least one question about something that didn't make sense to you.
Bonus:  Find a typo for me.

     On the morning of Thursday, August 18th, I was driving from a favorite student's very last lesson to a fantastic presentation by my good friend Emily Jensen.  Needless to say, I was in a bit of a rush.  I turned the radio on to "Classically Austin 89.5, KMFA," which was playing, Midday with Dianne Donovan.  It featured Spiegel im Spiegel (mirror in mirror) by Arvo Pärt, one of his first examples of tintinnabulation.  Performing were UT distinguished artist and violin faculty member Anne Akiko Meyers with pianist Akira Eguchi, in their album Smile.  The sun was shining, the traffic was fairly clear, and a latte was cheerfully pumping through my veins.  I found the performance so beautiful that I stopped paying attention to everything else for a while, and was horrified by the time I glanced down at my speedometer.  Suffice it to say I got to the meeting with time to spare.
     Here is that recording now, set to an edited version of one of my favorite animations of all time.  Some might view this as an example of the film score technique running counter to the action.  If it bothers you, please stop watching and enjoy the beautiful music anyway.  It's well worth seven attentive minutes of our lives.

07 August 2011

20th Century (9/10)

XXII:  Twentieth Century Nationalism
     When the phonograph was invented by Thomas Edison in 1877, composers were able to quote folk songs more precisely, and nationalism spread throughout several countries.  In Paris, a group of composers associated with Erik Satie (1866-1925) formed the group Les Six.  They were Georges Auric, Louis Durey, Arthur Honegger, Darius Milhaud, Francis Poulenc, and Germaine Tailleferre.  The best remembered today is Poulenc (1899-1963).  Out of Russia emerged Sergei Rachmaninoff (1873-1943), Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915), Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953), and Dmitri Shostakovich (1906-1975).  German composers included Paul Hindemith (1895-1963), Carl Orff (1895-1982), and Kurt Weill (1900-1950).  Even England produced important composers: Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1858) and Benjamin Britten (1913-1976).  Other nationalists were Béla Bartók (1881-1945) and Zoltán Kodaly (1882-1967) from Hungary, Leoš Janáček (1854-1928) from the Czech Republic, Manuel de Falla (1876-1946) from Spain, Carlos Chávez (1899-1978) and Silvestre Revueltas (1899-1940) from Mexico, and Jean Sibelius (1865-1957) from Finland.
     So as not to be too remiss, let's have a quick word on the Russians.  Rachmaninoff was an exceptional composer, pianist, and conductor.  He studied with Nikolai Zverev and graduated early from the Moscow Conservatory, earning the prestigious Conservatory Great Gold Medal.  His First Symphony premiered in 1897 under conductor Alexander Glazunov.  Glazunov might have been drunk during this performance, and the symphony was considered a failure.  After three years of depression and professional help from psychologist Nikolai Dahl, Rachmaninoff resumed composition, married his cousin, and began touring as a concert pianist.  When the Russian Revolution broke out in 1917, Rachmaninoff and his family fled to Sweden and Denmark.  The next year, his family settled in America where he concertized for the rest of his life.  Rachmaninoff wrote four piano concertos, the Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini for piano and orchestra, three symphonies, two piano sonatas, twenty-four piano preludes, two sets of piano etudes, two piano trios, choral works, and several songs.
     Scriabin said (and presumably believed) things like, "I am God."  According to Bowers' biography, "No one was more famous during their lifetime, and few were more quickly ignored after death."  Scriabin composed mostly for piano and has been praised for his unique and original sound.  Although his works are extremely lyrical and emulated those of Chopin, his harmonic language became increasingly atonal throughout his life.  Strangely, he attributed his compositional procedures to "mysticism."  Scriabin's output includes five symphonies and hundreds of piano works, including ten piano sonatas.  He died before completing his last work, Mysterium, which was envisioned to last a full week at the foothills of the Himalayas, incorporating senses of touch, smell, and sound.  Following this performance would be the end of the world and the annihilation of the human race.
     Prokofiev entered the St. Petersburg Conservatory as a young boy to study piano and composition until 1914.  Because of the outbreak of World War I, he headed for the USA in 1918 and Paris two years later.  Prokofiev began concertizing in Russia, the USA, and Europe.  In 1935, Prokofiev and his family returned to Russia, but the Composers' Union regulated all newly composed works.  Eventually, his music was accused of being too formalist.  Soviet formalist music was criticized for failing to display mass appeal with the intention of glorifying the country.  Among Prokofiev's output are five piano concertos, nine piano sonatas, two violin sonatas, two violin concertos, two cello concertos, seven symphonies, the opera Love for Three Oranges, the ballet Cinderella, the film score for Alexander Nevsky, and the famous Peter and the Wolf.
     Shostakovich had a lot of trouble with Stalin's policies.  Although he was the recipient of numerous awards, his music was also severely criticized as formalist, and was officially denounced in 1936 and 1948.  Despite the fact that Shostakovich issued a public apology for his compositions, many of his compositions were banned, he was fired from teaching at the Conservatory, and his ten-year-old son was forced to denounce his father in school.  Shostakovich spent nights outside his apartment to protect his family from any violence in the case of his arrest.  The following year, Stalin called him personally to request that he travel to New York and represent the Soviet Union at the Cultural and Scientific Congress for World Peace.  When Shostakovich pointed out that his music was banned in his own country, and Stalin promptly revoked these orders.  In New York, Shostakovich was relentlessly attacked by the press.  Stalin died in 1953, but Shostakovich never fully recovered from these experiences.  He composed fifteen symphonies, two piano concertos, two violin concertos, two cello concertos, fifteen string quartets, many other chamber works, several suites and symphonic works, and works for solo piano.  He also composed numerous operas, ballets, film scores, choral works, and songs.

XXIII:  The United States & The Devil
     From the previous generation and across an ocean, our book reads, "Stephen Foster, America's most beloved songwriter, died an alcoholic in 1864, alone and in poverty."  Foster composed parlor and minstrel songs that are still well-known today, including Oh SusannaCamptown RacesOld Folks at HomeMy Old Kentucky HomeJeanie with the Light Brown HairBeautiful Dreamer, and Oh Boys Carry Me 'Long.  Instrumental popular music was developing at this time as well; inspired by the British Military Band, the U.S. Marine Band formed in 1798 and was directed from 1880 to 1892 by none other than "march king" John Philip Sousa (1854-1932).  Sousa composed over 130 band marches, as well as dance music, operettas, and arrangements of ragtime.  He is the composer of Stars and Stripes Forever.  Influenced by band music, hymns, and patriotic songs was Charles Ives (1874-1954).  Ives' art music, which displayed modern techniques such as polytonality and polyrhythm, also incorporated several of these popular tunes.
     Ragtime, named for its syncopated or "ragged" rhythms, emerged as an African-American style of piano playing.  Scott Joplin (1868-1917), the "king of ragtime," performed with his orchestra in 1893 at the World Exposition in Chicago.  Six years later, the sheet music to his Maple Leaf Rag would sell one million copies and help to establish him as one of the first recognized black composers.  Although Joplin wanted to develop ragtime as a basis for art music forms such as the opera or symphony, his efforts were not well received during his lifetime.  In 1976, a mere fifty-nine years after his death, he earned a Pulitzer Prize for his opera Treemonisha.  When the Blues spread to white audiences in the early part of the century, it earned a reputation as the "devil's music."  (I was very glad to hear about this, for the notion of Hell is less daunting with the promise of musical condolence.)  Simply put, the blues is a type of American folk music based on a simple twelve or sixteen bar harmonic pattern.  Jazz first formed in New Orleans, combining ragtime, blues, spirituals, work songs, art music, and improvisation.  Legendary musicians of New Orleans jazz were cornet player Joseph "King" Oliver, saxophonist Sidney Bechet, pianist Ferdinand "Jelly Roll" Morton, and trumpeter Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong (1901-1971).  Armstrong's playing would influence jazz singers such as Billie Holiday (1915-1959) and Ella Fitzgerald (1918-1996).
     The swing or big band era took place in the 30s and 40s, and its star was composer, arranger, and band director Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington (1899-1974).  By the end of the 40s, bebop emerged as a newer jazz style led by trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, saxophonist Charlie Parker, and pianists Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk.  Substyles of bebop are cool jazzWest Coast jazzhard bop, and soul jazz.  Trumpeter Miles Davis is associated with cool jazz, a style filled with lush harmonies and lyricism.  The Dave Brubeck Quartet and Gerry Mulligan Quartet from the 50s are West Coast ensembles, which feature contrapuntal improvisation between different instrumental timbres.  By the 40s, jazz rhythms were heavily influenced by Latin American music.  Jazz historian Gunther Schuller (b. 1925) advocates the idea of third stream, a new form of music in which jazz and art music are combined.  Newer forms of jazz include avant-garde jazzfusioncontemporary neoclassicalfree jazz, and new age jazz.  Other notable jazz musicians are pianist John Lewis, trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, saxophonist John Coltrane, trumpeter Miles Davis, guitarist Jerry Garcia, vibraphone player Gary Burton, and saxophonists Ornette Coleman and Paul Winter.
     George Gershwin (1898-1937) incorporated ragtime, blues, and jazz into his songs, musicals, and instrumental works.  When he was fifteen, he quit school and played popular tunes in bars and cafés.  Eventually, he became a Broadway rehearsal pianist and started composing.  His older brother Ira became his lyricist, and the two created sixty-four songs together.  Into the 20s, Gershwin took lessons in composition and theory.  He met conductor Paul Whiteman, who was interested in proving that jazz could be considered serious music.  The result was Rhapsody in Blue, which was a hit with the public.  Critics, however, argued that the compositions was nothing more than a collection of songs, and looked down on Gershwin's use of a professional orchestrator.  Gershwin orchestrated his Piano Concerto in F, but unfortunately, it was not as well received.  Other notable works include tone poem An American in Paris, three Preludes for Piano, sixteen musicals, five film scores, and his opera Porgy and Bess.
     Born in Brooklyn, Aaron Copland (1900-1990) was less interested than Gershwin in popular music.  He left the USA in 1921 to study modern music in Paris with Nadia Boulanger.  Upon returning to the United States, he composed a jazz-influenced Piano Concerto and the neoclassical Piano VariationsShort Symphony, and Statements for Orchestra.  Due to the growing use of radio, phonograph, and movies, Copland simplified his sound and began composing for a larger audience.  In the 30s and 40s, Copland composed several film scores, an orchestral piece El salón México, and his three ballets: Billy the KidRodeo, and Appalachian Spring.  Criticized as having a split personality, his later works such as Connotations for Orchestra use Schoenberg's twelve tone system.  Nevertheless, it is Copland who is considered the "Dean of American Composers."

According to Lunday, this is Copland's account on his Ballet for Martha, the work that would become his most famous:
"Martha, whatdya call the ballet?"  She said, "Appalachian Spring."  "Oh," I said.  "What a nice name.  Where'd d'ya get it?  She said, "It's the title of a poem by Hart Crane."  "Oh," I said.  "Does the poem have anything to do with the ballet?"  She said, "No, I just liked the title and I took it."  And over and over again, nowadays people come up to me after seeing the ballet on stage and say, "Mr. Copland, when I see that ballet and when I hear your music I can just see the Appalachians and feel spring."  I've begun to see the Appalachians myself a little bit.
From Appalachian Spring by Aaron Copland (1900-1990)
Starring American choreographer Martha Graham (1894-1991)