[Samuel
Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912) is profiled at
AfriClassical.com,
which features a comprehensive Works List and a Bibliography by Prof.
Dominique-René de Lerma,
www.CasaMusicaledeLerma.com.
We
are collaborating with the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Foundation of the
U.K., www.SCTF.org.uk]
Longfellow Chorus Orchestra
The Longfellow Chorus
Portland, Maine
Portland, Maine
September 1, 2013
WHO:
The
Orchestra of The Longfellow Chorus, Charles Kaufmann, conductor, with
Tai Murray and Lydia Forbes, violin soloists.
WHAT:
Coleridge-Taylor's Violin
Concerto in G-minor,
Op 80, and Keep
Me From Sinkin' Down,
for violin and orchestra.
WHEN:
Wednesday, September 4, 2013, 12 noon to 3 pm, US Central Standard
Time.
WHERE:
Streaming
live on the Web from WHPK
88.5 fm Chicago [WHPK.org/stream]. Sergio Mims is host.
Sometimes reviewers
get it right; sometimes not. In his June 9, 1912, review of the
Norfolk Music Festival for The New York Times, reviewer Richard
Aldrich came to the conclusion that Coleridge-Taylor's Violin
Concerto in G-minor
was "not of highest rank." In contrast, George Chadwick's
symphonic fantasy, Aphrodite
-- premiered at the Norfolk Festival at the same time and unknown
today -- was "likely to prove of lasting value."
What
makes a piece of music a long lasting one, or not, is difficult to
judge first-hand. Aldrich did not mention that, as an encore to the
concerto, Maud also premiered Coleridge-Taylor's short concert piece,
Keep
Me From Sinkin' Down,
based on the African-American Jubilee Song of the same name. This
work has been left unplayed for the last one hundred years by all but
one or two knowledgeable and curious performers.
During The
Longfellow Choral Festival in Merrill Auditorium, Portland, Maine,
March 16, 2013, The Orchestra of The Longfellow Chorus performed both
the Violin
Concerto in G-minor
and Keep
Me From Sinkin' Down
together on the same program for the first time since June 4, 1912.
Tai Murray, from Berlin, Germany, by way of Chicago, was soloist for
the concerto, and Lydia Forbes, from Maine, by way of the
Netherlands, was soloist for the concert piece. (Alas: there was no
reviewer present for first-hand judgment, right or wrong.)
I
like to think of this as a groundbreaking performance. The orchestral
parts for both works were prepared from Coleridge-Taylor's original
manuscript full scores -- probably the very ones used at the
premieres in 1912. This fascinating task kept me busy at my computer
up until the eleventh hour.
One of the most difficult things
about conducting Coleridge-Taylor's music is getting everyone
together on the numerous written-in tempo changes, otherwise known as
rubato
-- a defining musical element of the period. In this sense, because
he indicated these in his scores, Coleridge-Taylor gives us a
valuable primer on how to perform these fluctuations in tempo. Every
serious conductor should study his scores for this: rubato
is like an elastic band: as much as you stretch the music, you must
allow it to return to its original form.
Well, you can stretch
the limits and break ground as much as you want to; if no one else is
present in your very fertile garden, who will know?
Coleridge-Taylor himself cared very deeply about his
concerto, his last major work. We know this from the legend that has
taken hold about his final hours of life, a story that is told
slightly differently by different tellers.
For example, in
program notes written for a later performance of the concerto, Maud
Powell describes it this way. [Thanks to Karen Shaffer of the Maud
Powell Society for this quotation.] :
It
is of pathetic interest to know that when he was on his deathbed [on
September 1, 1912, one hundred and one years ago] he suddenly sat up
and, with great effort, sang a part of the lovely second movement of
the violin concerto, at the same time conducting an imaginary
orchestral accompaniment with great animation.
You can talk about the history of music; you can talk about
the history of humanity. Let's talk about both when we consider the
life and music of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor.
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