Program
April 1–3, 2021
Stéphane Denève, conductor
Alessio Bax, piano
Lucille Chung, piano
Aaron Copland
Appalachian Spring Suite (for 13 instruments) (1944, arr. 1970)
Arthur Honegger
Pastorale d'été (Summer pastoral) (1920)
Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns
Le Carnaval des animaux (Carnival of the Animals) (1886)
Introduction and Royal March of the Lion
Hens and Roosters
Wild Donkeys—Swift Animals
Tortoises
The Elephant
Kangaroos
Aquarium
Characters with Long Ears
Cuckoo in the Depths of the Woods
Aviary
Pianists
Fossils
The Swan
Finale
Alessio Bax, piano
Lucille Chung, piano
Program Notes
By Tim Munro
Stéphane on this program
From an interview with Stéphane Denève. Stéphane’s responses have been edited for length and clarity, and questions have been removed.
This concert is music of rebirth. There is sunrise, nature, the hope of Spring. French and American cultures unite, giving us two dawns: Appalachian Spring and Pastorale d’été.
Arthur Honegger’s Pastorale d’été is tender, charming, and impressionistic. On the first page of the score, there is a quote from an Arthur Rimbaud poem: “J'ai embrassé l'aube d’été” (“I embraced [or kissed] the summer dawn”). If you close your eyes, Honegger’s sun delicately warms you.
Like Pastorale d’été, Camille Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the animals is a celebration of nature. It was a party piece, written to celebrate Mardi Gras. It’s full of musical references and quotes: the wooden ribs of the xylophone as fossils, a slowed-down can-can for the tortoise, dueling pianos. It’s fantastic music!
Reading about Appalachian Spring, I found an article by Mark Swed in the Los Angeles Times. Swed writes that its roots “lie in the awareness of the Appalachian Trail as the slave route to freedom. Graham and Copland also had been affected by…the Memorial Day Massacre of 1937, when the Chicago police shot and killed ten unarmed protesters.”
In our own time, Swed writes, “a parable of a struggle that leads, with humility and a grace, to a new spring takes on new necessity.”
Appalachian Spring Suite
Aaron Copland
Born November 14, 1900, Brooklyn, New York
Died December 2, 1990, Sleepy Hollow, New York
Dawn breaks on a farmhouse. One by one, instruments gather, offering messages of hope.
In 1942, Aaron Copland was asked for a new ballet score by the dancer and choreographer Martha Graham. Copland had watched Graham blaze a trail through 1920s New York. He’d seen her uncompromising physical language and understood its focus on the heaviness and intensity of the human body.
Graham set Appalachian Spring in a Pennsylvania farmhouse, in the shadow of the Civil War. A couple is soon to be married. The wife-to-be is ambivalent, feeling joy and concern. There is tension as the couple clashes with a hellfire preacher.
Copland’s music reflects the varied influences of Graham’s story. Swing rhythms, hymns, and folk-tinged tunes mingle, while the melody “Simple Gifts” reflects Copland’s interest in the Shakers, an insulated Christian sectfocused on community, work, and simplicity.
He later made a suite from the ballet. Included is the hope of the morning, dances of celebration, ecstasy of religious experience. Gone is the darkness of the ballet’s second half: numbers like “Fear in the Night,” “Day of Wrath,” and “Moment of Crisis.”
The work’s title came from a Hart Crane poem, “The Dance.” The poem is baffling, but the “Appalachian spring” seems to refer to a water source as well as the annual season. When Copland asked if the poem had anything to do with the ballet, Graham answered, “No, I just liked the title and I took it.”
First performance: Original version, October 30, 1944, at the Library of Congress. This version, August 14, 1970, in Los Angeles, the composer conducting.
First SLSO performance: This version, July 3, 1975, Amerigo Marino conducting. Full orchestra version, October 30, 1952, Vladimir Golschmann conducting.
Most recent SLSO performance: This version, March 13, 2013, on tour at the University of California–Davis, David Robertson conducting.
Scoring: Flute, clarinet, bassoon, piano, 4 violins, 2 violas, 2 cellos, double bass
Approximate performance time: 23 minutes
Pastorale d'été (Summer pastoral)
Arthur Honegger
Born March 10, 1892, Le Havre, France
Died November 27, 1955, Paris, France
It is still dark when cellos and basses set out for a walk in the mountains. Melodies catch our ear, birds circle above, an alphorn sounds in the distance.
For much of his life, Arthur Honegger lived in Paris’s artistic district, Montmartre. He felt comfortable in the city’s rush and tumble. But to compose, he needed solitude.
One summer in his late twenties, Honegger escaped to the quiet of a village in the Swiss Alps. His career was about to take off, but he didn’t know that yet. Honegger loved the jolt of a new idea, and we might imagine him on a dawn walk in the mountains, ideas flooding his mind.
Above the opening of Pastorale d’été is the first line of Arthur Rimbaud’s poem, “Dawn.” The first lines of the poem read:
I have kissed the summer dawn. In front of the palaces, nothing moved. The water lay dead. Battalions of shadows guarded the forest road. I walked, waking the warm and sharp breaths, while stones watched, and wings rose soundlessly.
Rimbaud’s words—hallucinatory, dreamlike—are captured in the insistent pulsing, the hazy textures of Honegger’s music.
First performance: February 17, 1921, in Paris, Vladimir Golschmann conducting
First SLSO performance: November 11, 1922, Rudolph Ganz conducting
Most recent SLSO performance: June 3, 1979, David Stahl conducting
Scoring: Flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, horn, strings
Approximate performance time: 7 minutes
Le Carnaval des animaux (Carnival of the Animals)
Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns
Born October 9, 1835, Paris, France
Died December 16, 1921, Algiers, Algeria
The ensemble begins in hushed anticipation: trembling and murmuring. Suddenly, the pianists tumble up and down the keyboards, calling us to attention. The show is about to begin!
Camille Saint-Saëns was a curious soul, fond of a laugh, of parlor games, of creating light-hearted musical satires. He was also obsessed with animals: their intelligence, their individuality, their fearlessness.
Aged 51, Saint-Saëns was nursing the wounds of a disastrous concert tour. He escaped to a tiny Austrian village, where ideas for a suite of animal portraits tickled him. “It’s too much fun!” he wrote.
Carnival of the Animals was first heard during Paris’s carnival season, before Lent. Amid parades and parties were private house concerts, where Saint-Saëns’ joyful animal-portraits were given open-armed welcomes.
Saint-Saëns crams his score to the brim with musical in-jokes. Tortoises dream of a tortoise-paced “Can-can,” and an elephant attempts light-footed dances. A skeleton rattles along to nursery rhymes, and the pianists—those rare animals—struggle through scales.
Carnival also displays a unique musical imagination. The aquarium’s water seems to tremble and gleam, the donkeys hee-haw with experimental flourishes. And the swan stretches its long neck in music of infinite grace.
First performance: March 3, 1886, by cellist Charles Lebouc
First SLSO performance: February 9, 1923, Frederick Fischer conducting
Most recent SLSO performance: March 25, 2019, Gemma New conducting
Scoring: Two solo pianos, flute (doubling piccolo), clarinet, percussion (glocke, strings
Approximate performance time: 21 minutes
Tim Munro is the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra’s Creative Partner. A writer, broadcaster, and Grammy-winning flutist, he lives in Chicago with his wife, son, and badly behaved orange cat.
Program Notes are sponsored by Washington University Physicians.
Excellent performance!!! We in St. Louis are so fortunate to have such a great orchestra and venue.
So excited for live music!