Thursday, August 23, 2007

Copland

This week's New Yorker features an excerpt from Alex Ross's upcoming book, The Art of Noise, that focuses on how Aaron Copland became something of a target in midcentury cold-war and musical politics. Many years ago, as a young editor at St. Martin's Press, I was asked to supervise the publication of Copland: Since 1943, the second volume of Copland's autobiography. That book owes its existence primarily to the heroic exertions of Vivian Perlis, whose long-standing devotion to new music is sincere and ardent. I never met the great man, who by that time was in declining physical and mental health, but the book's publication was the occasion of one of the most memorable evenings of my life: a New York Philharmonic all-Copland concert at Fisher Hall where in one fell swoop I met John Corigliano, David Del Tredici, David Diamond, and that evening's conductor, Leonard Bernstein--all thanks to the generosity of Vivian Perlis.

Clearly Ross relies on Copland: Since 1943 for some information, but he fills the story in beautifully, giving Copland's struggles during that era depth and context. It may just have been the way the piece was edited, but it omits a curious fact. Readers may be interested to know that, in a sign of the split personality that marked the cultural gyrations of that period, Life magazine, which had savagely attacked Copland as a Communist fellow traveler and dupe in 1949, published his late piano work, "Down a Country Lane," not 13 years later!

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Kirsch on Shelley

Adam Kirsch has a perceptive review of Ann Wroe's new book Being Shelley--he manages to say a lot of shrewd things about Shelley while still leaving an appetite for the book itself (and for Shelley's poetry). Kirsch writes of Shelley's radical politics, which he held quite sincerely and which informs his poetry. I wonder if it was of Shelley that Alfred de Vigny was thinking when he said "The poet searches the stars for the route which shows us the finger of God."

Avenging Angel: Books: The New Yorker

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Davis Returns

It's good to see Peter G. Davis back, and in top form, in the pages of The New York Times. Here's hoping we'll see his byline in those pages more often.

Mozart Operas - Salzburg Festival - DVDs - Music - New York Times