Naxos 8.559722 (2012)
Sergio Mims provides a link to a very informative Fanfare Magazine interview with Adolphus C. Hailstork (b. 1941), who is featured at AfriClassical.com:
Defining Self: Adolphus Hailstork in Interview |
Departments - Feature Articles | |
Written by Colin Clarke | |
Friday, 23 November 2012
Back in
Fanfare
33:1 (September/October 2009), I reviewed a disc
of piano music by the memorably named composer Adolphus Cunningham
Hailstork III. And a very positive review it was, so much so that it was
suggested I interview the composer for this august journal. There is a
certain sense of privilege associated with making contact with someone
who has spent time studying with such luminaries as David Diamond and
Nadia Boulanger, of course.
One can see immediately that Diamond is vital to
the American composer lineage, whereas Boulanger was simply a truly
great teacher. I asked Hailstork about what he learned from them. From
Boulanger, it was “mental and physical discipline are two principles I
observed while spending one summer as a student at Fontainebleau. Mme.
Boulanger required us to memorize (almost instantly) and solfège through
Bach preludes and fugues. Musical multitasking (with the Hindemith
“Basic Training for Musicians” as the text) was used to train the mind
and muscles to do several things simultaneously. At an afternoon open
class I witnessed a remarkable demonstration: one of her year-round
students was instructed to begin a Bach fugue, and while playing the
theme of the first measure, he recited the notes of the second measure!
On another occasion, in a class, while discussing a Schubert piano
sonata, she exclaimed, “Listen to how Schubert
orchestrated
that chord!” Now, at that time, I had never
linked orchestration with piano writing (though we know that orchestral
coloring is commonly associated with Beethoven’s writing for the
instrument). What I took away from that class was the notion that we
composers should pay careful attention to the voicing, the distribution
of sound in every chord, that a C-Major triad is a particularly voiced
C-Major triad.
“I finished my master’s thesis in 1966 under the
guidance of David Diamond at the Manhattan School of Music. What I most
remember from my lessons with him was not a technique, but an attitude. I
had picked up a tendency to pretty strictly follow what I considered
the ‘rules and guidelines’ of composition laid down (or even suggested)
by earlier teachers. But Mr. Diamond would counter my ‘this has to do
such and such a thing’ with a short and snappy question ‘Who says?’ Wow.
“That was when I began to question musical
‘lawgivers’ and began judging for myself. I began to develop some mental
toughness and self-reliance which would serve me well during the
“mandatory modernism” and experimentalist push, which were part of the
1960s and 1970s. On a technical note, Diamond taught me to listen more
carefully to the flow of the lines and chords to discover where they
were leading, rather than to impose a particular arrival point upon
them.”
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