MacDowell’s impulse toward significant
expression was not slow in declaring itself.
The first “modern suite” (o, the
earliest of his listed works, which at first glance
seems to be merely a group of contrasted movements
of innocently traditional aspect, with the expected
Praeludium, Presto, Intermezzo, Fugue, etc., contains,
nevertheless, the germ of the programmatic principle;
for at the head of the third movement (Andantino and
Allegretto) one comes upon a motto from Virgil Per
amica silentia lunae,” and the Rhapsodic
is introduced with the
“Lasciate ogni speranza,
voi ch’ entrate”
of Dante. The Praeludium of the
second piano suite, o, is also annotated, having
been suggested by lines from Byron’s “Manfred.”
In the “Zwei Fantasiestuecke”, o “Erzaehlung” and “Hexentanz” but
more particularly in the “Wald-Idyllen”
of o “Waldesstille,” “Spiel
der Nymphen,” “Traeumerei,”
and “Driadentanz,” a definite
poetic concept is implied. Here the formative
influence of Raff is evident. The works which
follow Drei Poesien” ("Nachts
am Meere,” “Erzaehlung aus
der Ritterzeit,” “Ballade"), and the
“Mondbilder,” after Hans Christian Andersen are
of a similar kind. The romanticism which pervades
them is not of a very finely distilled quality:
they are not, that is to say, the product of a clarified
and wholly personal vision of the vision
which prompted the issue of such things as the “Woodland
Sketches,” the “Sea Pieces,” and
the “New England Idyls.” In these
earlier works one feels that the romantic view has
been assumed somewhat vicariously one can
imagine the favourite pupil of Raff producing a group
of “Wald-Idyllen” quite as a matter of
course, and without interior conviction. Nor
is the style marked by individuality, except in occasional
passages. There are traces of his peculiar quality
in the first suite, in the 6/8 passage of
the Rhapsodie, for example, in portions
of the first piano concerto (the a piacere
passage toward the close of the first movement is particularly
characteristic), in the Erzaehlung, and in N (Traeumerei) of the Wald-Idyllen;
but the prevailing note of his style at this time was,
quite naturally, strongly Teutonic: one encounters
in it the trail of Liszt, of Schumann, of Raff, of
Wagner.
Not until one reaches the “Hamlet
and Ophelia” is it apparent that he is beginning
to find himself. This work was written before
he had completed his twenty-fourth year; yet the music
is curiously ripe in feeling and accomplishment.
There is breadth and steadiness of view in the conception,
passion and sensitiveness in its embodiment: It
is mellower, of a deeper and finer beauty, than anything
he had previously done, though nowhere has it the
inspiration of his later works.
The second piano concerto (o,
completed a year later, is fairly within the class
of that order of music which it has been generally
agreed to describe as “absolute.”
It is innocent of any programme, save for the fact
that some of the ideas prompted by “Much Ado
About Nothing,” which were to form a “Beatrice
and Benedick” symphonic poem, were, as I have
related in a previous chapter, incorporated in the
scherzo. Together with its companion work, the
first piano concerto; the “Romanza” for
’cello and orchestra; the concert study, o, and such conventional morceaux as the early
“Serenata” and “Barcarolle”
(of which, it should be noted, there are extremely
few among his productions), it represents the very
limited body of his writing which does not, in some
degree, propose and enforce a definite poetic concept.
Not elsewhere in his earlier work has MacDowell marshalled
the materials of his art with so confident an artistry
as he exhibits in this concerto. In substance
the work is not extraordinary. The manner derives
something from Grieg, more from Liszt, and there is
comparatively little disclosure of personality.
But the manipulation is, throughout, the work of a
music-wright of brilliant executive capacity.
In fundamental logic, in cohesion, flexibility, and
symmetry of organism, it is a brilliantly successful
accomplishment. As in all of MacDowell’s
writing, its allegiance is to the basic principles
of structure and design, rather than to a traditional
and arbitrary formula.
The succeeding opus (24), comprising
the “Humoreske,” “March,” “Cradle
Song,” and “Czardas,” is unimportant.
Of the four pieces the gracious “Cradle Song”
is of the most worth. The group as a whole belongs
to that inconsiderable portion of his output which
one cannot accept as of serious artistic consequence.
With the “Lancelot and Elaine” (o,
however, one comes upon a work of the grade of the
“Hamlet and Ophelia” music. MacDowell
had a peculiar affinity for the spirit of the Arthurian
tales, and he was happy in whatever musical transmutation
of them he attempted. This tone-poem is, as he
avows, “after Tennyson.” The work
follows consistently the larger action of the poem,
and musical equivalents are sought and found for such
crucial incidents as the meeting with Elaine, the tournament,
Lancelot’s downfall, his return to the court
and the interview with Guinevere, the apparition of
the funeral barge, and the soliloquy of Lancelot by
the river bank. The work is dramatically conceived.
There are passages of impressive tenderness, as
in the incident of the approaching barge; of climactic
force, as in the passage portraying the
casting away of the trophies; and there are admirable
details of workmanship. The scoring is full and
adroit, though not very elaborate. As always
with him, the instrumental texture is richly woven,
although his utilisation of the possibilities of the
orchestra is far from exhaustive. One misses,
for example, the colouring of available harp effects,
for which he appeared to have a distaste, since the
instrument is not required in any of his orchestral
works. That he was not satisfied with the scoring
of the work is known. He remarked to Mr. Philip
Hale that it was “too full of horns”; and
in his own copy of the score, which I possess, he
has made in pencil numerous changes in the instrumentation,
much to its improvement; he has, for instance, in
accord with his expressed feeling, reduced the prominence
of the horns, allotting their parts, in certain important
instances, to the wood-wind, trombones, or trumpets.
The “Six Idyls after Goethe,”
for piano (o, are noteworthy as foreshadowing
the candid impressionism which was to have its finest
issue in the “Woodland Sketches,” “Sea
Pieces,” and “New England Idyls.”
The Goethe paraphrases, although they have only a tithe
of the graphic nearness and felicity of the later
pieces, are yet fairly successful in their attempt
to find a musical correspondence for certain definitely
stated concepts and ideas a partial fulfilment
of the method implied in the earlier “Wald-Idyllen.”
He presents himself here as one who has yielded his
imagination to an intimate contemplation of the natural
world, and who already has, in some degree, the faculty
of uttering whatever revelation of its loveliness
or majesty has been vouchsafed. At once, in studying
these pieces, one observes a wide departure in method
and accomplishment from the style of the “Wald-Idyllen.”
In those, it seemed, the poet had somehow failed to
compose “with his eye on the object”:
the vision lacked steadiness, lacked penetration or
it may be that the vision was present, but not the
power of notation. In the Goethe paraphrases,
on the other hand, we are given, in a measure, the
sense of the thing perceived; I say “in a measure,”
for his power of acute and sympathetic observation
and of eloquent transmutation had not yet come to
its highest pitch. Of the six “Idyls,”
three “In the Woods,” “Siesta,”
and “To the Moonlight” are memorable,
though uneven; and of these the third, after Goethe’s
“An den Mond,” adumbrates
faintly MacDowell’s riper manner. The “Silver
Clouds,” “Flute Idyl," and “Blue
Bell” are decidedly less characteristic.
His third orchestral work, the symphonic
poem “Lamia,” is based upon the fantastic
(and what Mr. Howells would call unconscionably “romanticistic”)
poem of Keats. Begun during his last year in
Wiesbaden (1888), and completed the following winter
in Boston, it stands, in the order of MacDowell’s
orchestral pieces, between “Lancelot and Elaine”
and the two “fragments” after the “Song
of Roland.” On a fly-leaf of the score
MacDowell has written this glossary of the story as
told by Keats:
“Lamia, an enchantress in the
form of a serpent, loves Lycius, a young Corinthian.
In order to win him she prays to Hermes, who answers
her appeal by transforming her into a lovely maiden.
Lycius meets her in the wood, is smitten with love
for her, and goes with her to her enchanted palace,
where the wedding is celebrated with great splendour.
But suddenly Apollonius appears; he reveals
the magic. Lamia again assumes the form of a serpent,
the enchanted palace vanishes, and Lycius is found
lifeless.”
Now this is obviously just the sort
of thing to stir the musical imagination of a young
composer nourished on Liszt, Raff, and Wagner; and
MacDowell (he was then in his twenty-seventh year)
composed his tone-poem with evident gusto. Yet
it is the weakest of his orchestral works the
weakest and the least characteristic. There is
much Liszt in the score, and a good deal of Wagner.
Only occasionally as in the pianissimo
passage for flutes, clarinets, and divided strings,
following the first outburst of the full orchestra does
his own individuality emerge with any positiveness.
MacDowell withheld the score from publication, at
the time of its composition, because of his uncertainty
as to its effect. He had not had an opportunity
to secure a reading of it by one of the Cur-Orchester
which had accommodatingly tried over his preceding
scores at their rehearsals; and such a thing was of
course out of the question in America. Not only
was he reluctant to put it forth without such a test,
but he lacked the funds to pay for its publication.
He came to realise in later years, of course, that
the music was immature and far from characteristic,
though he still had a genuine affection for it.
In a talk which I had with him a year before his collapse,
he gave me the impression that he considered it at
least as good a piece of work as its predecessors,
“Hamlet and Ophelia” and “Lancelot
and Elaine,” though he made sport, in his characteristic
way, of its occasional juvenility and its Wagneristic
allegiances. He intended ultimately to revise
and publish the score, and he allowed it to remain
on the list of his works. After his death it
was concluded that it would be wise to print the music,
for several reasons. These were, first, because
of the fear lest, if it were allowed to remain in
manuscript, it might at some future time suffer from
well-meant attempts at revision; and, secondly, because
of the chance that it might be put forward, after the
death of those who knew its history, in a way which
would seem to make unwarranted pretensions for it,
or would give rise to doubts as to its authenticity.
In a word, it was felt that its immediate publication
would obviate any possible misconception at some future
time as to its true relation to MacDowell’s
artistic evolution. It was, therefore, published
in October, 1908, twenty years after its composition,
with a dedication to Mr. Henry T. Finck.
In “Die Sarazenen” and
“Die Schoene Alda,” two “fragments”
for orchestra after the “Song of Roland,”
numbered o, a graver note is sounded. These
“fragments,” originally intended to form
part of a “Roland” symphony, were published
in 1891 in their present form, the plan for a symphony
having been definitely abandoned. “Die
Sarazenen” is a transcription of the scene in
which Ganelon, the traitor in Charlemagne’s
camp through whose perfidy Roland met his death, swears
to commit his crime. It is a forceful conception,
barbaric in colour and rhythm, and picturesquely scored.
The second fragment, “Die Schoene Alda,”
is, however, a more memorable work, depicting the
loveliness and the grieving of Alda, Roland’s
betrothed. In spite of its strong Wagnerian leanings,
the music bears the impress of MacDowell’s own
style, and it has moments of rare loveliness.
Both pieces are programmatic in bent, and, with excellent
wisdom, MacDowell has quoted upon the fly-leaf of
the score those portions of the “Song of Roland”
from which the conception of the music sprang.
Like the “Idyls” after
Goethe, the “Six Poems” after Heine (o, for piano, are devoted to the embodiment of a
poetic subject, with the difference that
instead of the landscape impressionism of the Goethe
studies we have a persistent impulse toward psychological
suggestion. Each of the poems which he has selected
for illustration has a burden of human emotion which
the music reflects with varying success. The
style is more individualised than in the Goethe pieces,
and the invention is, on the whole, of a superior order.
The “Scotch Poem” (N is the most
successful of the set; the
“... schoene, kranke Frau,
Zartdurchsichtig und marmorblass,”
and her desolate lamenting, are sharply
projected, though scarcely with the power that he
would have brought to bear upon the endeavour a decade
later. Less effective, but more characteristic,
is “The Shepherd Boy” (N. This
is almost, at moments, MacDowell in the happiest phase
of his lighter vein. The transition from F minor
to major, after the fermata on the second page,
is as typical as it is delectable; and the fifteen
bars that follow are of a markedly personal tinge.
“From Long Ago” and “From a Fisherman’s
Hut” are less good, and “The Post Wagon”
and “Monologue” are disappointing the
latter especially so, because the exquisite poem which
he has chosen to enforce, the matchless lyric beginning
“Der Tod, das ist die
kuehle Nacht,” should, it seems, have offered
an inspiring incentive.
In the “Four Little Poems”
of o one encounters a piece which it is possible
to admire without qualification: I mean the music
conceived as an illustration to Tennyson’s poem,
“The Eagle.” The three other numbers
of this opus, “The Brook,” “Moonshine,”
and “Winter,” one can praise only in measured
terms although “Winter,” which
attempts a representation of the “widow bird”
and frozen landscape of Shelley’s lyric, has
some measures that dwell persistently in the memory:
but “The Eagle” is a superb achievement.
Its deliberate purpose is to realise in tone the imagery
and atmosphere of Tennyson’s lines an
object which it accomplishes with triumphant completeness.
As a feat of sheer tone-painting one recalls few things,
of a similar scope and purpose, that surpass it in
fitness, concision, and felicity. It displays
a power of imaginative transmutation hitherto undisclosed
in MacDowell’s writing. Here are precisely
the severe and lonely mood of the opening lines of
the poem, the sense of inaccessible and wind-swept
spaces, which Tennyson has so magnificently and so
succinctly conveyed. Here, too, are the far-off,
“wrinkled sea,” and the final cataclysmic
and sudden descent: yet, despite the literalism
of the close, there is no yielding of artistic sobriety
in the result, for the music has an unassailable dignity.
It remains, even to-day, one of MacDowell’s
most characteristic and admirable performances.
Of the “Romance” for ’cello
and orchestra (o, the Concert Study (o,
and “Les Orientales” (o, three
morceaux for piano, after Victor Hugo, there
is no need to speak in detail. “Perfunctory”
is the word which one must use to describe the creative
impulse of which they are the ungrateful legacy an
impulse less spontaneous, there is reason to believe,
than utilitarian. Perhaps they may most justly
be characterised as almost the only instances in which
MacDowell gave heed to the possibility of a reward
not primarily and exclusively artistic. They
are sentimental and unleavened, and they are far from
worthy of his gifts, though they are not without a
certain rather inexpensive charm.
The “Marionettes” of o are in a wholly different case. Published
first in 1888, the year of MacDowell’s return
to America, they were afterward extensively revised,
and now appear under a radically different guise.
In its present form, the group comprises six genre
studies “Soubrette,” “Lover,”
“Witch,” “Clown,” “Villain,”
“Sweetheart” besides two additions:
a “Prologue” and “Epilogue.”
Here MacDowell is in one of his happiest moods.
It was a fortunate and charming conceit which prompted
the plan of the series, with its half-playful, half-ironic,
yet lurkingly poetic suggestions; for in spite of
the mood of bantering gaiety which placed the pieces
in such mocking juxtaposition, there is, throughout,
an undertone of grave and meditative tenderness which
it is one of the peculiar properties of MacDowell’s
art to communicate and enforce. This is continually
apparent in “The Lover” and “Sweetheart,”
fugitively so in the “Prologue,” and,
in an irresistible degree, in the exceedingly poetic
and deeply felt “Epilogue” one
of the most typical and beautiful of MacDowell’s
smaller works. The music of these pieces is, as
with other of his earlier works that he has since
revised, confusing to the observer who attempts to
place it among his productions in the order suggested
by its opus number. For although in the list of
his published works the “Marionettes”
follow immediately on the heels of the Concert Study
and “Les Orientales” the form in which
they are now most generally known represents the much
later period of the “Keltic” sonata a
fact which will, however, be sufficiently evident
to anyone who studies the two versions carefully enough
to perceive the difference between more or less experimental
craftsmanship and ripe and heedful artistry.
The observer will notice in these pieces, incidentally,
the abandonment of the traditional Italian terms of
expression and the substitution of English words and
phrases, which are used freely and with adroitness
to indicate every shade of the composer’s meaning.
In place of the stereotyped terms of the music-maker’s
familiarly limited vocabulary, we have such a system
of direct and elastic expression as Schumann adopted.
Thus one finds, in the “Prologue,” such
unmistakable and illuminating directions as:
“with sturdy good humour,” “pleadingly,”
“mockingly”; in the “Soubrette” “poutingly”;
in the “Lover” in the “Villain” “with
sinister emphasis,” “sardonically.”
This method, which MacDowell has followed consistently
in all his later works, has obvious advantages; and
it becomes in his hands a picturesque and stimulating
means for the conveyance of his intentions. Its
defect, equally obvious, is that it is not, like the
conventional Italian terminology, universally intelligible.
The “Twelve Studies” of
o are less original in conception and of less
artistic moment than the “Marionettes.”
Their titles among which are a “Hunting
Song,” a “Romance,” a “Dance
of the Gnomes,” and others of like connotation suggest,
in a measure, that imperfectly realised romanticism
which I have before endeavoured to separate from the
intimate spirit of sincere romance which MacDowell
has so often succeeded in embodying. The same
thing is true, though in a less degree, of the suite
for orchestra (o. It is more Raff-like not
in effect but in conception than anything
he has done. There are four movements: “In
a Haunted Forest,” “Summer Idyl,”
“The Shepherdess’ Song,” and “Forest
Spirits,” together with a supplement, “In
October,” forming part of the original suite,
but not published until several years later.
The work, as a whole, has atmosphere, freshness, buoyancy,
and it is scored with exquisite skill and charm; but
somehow it does not seem either as poetic or as distinguished
as one imagines it might have been made. It is
carried through with delightful high spirits, and
with an expert order of craftsmanship; but it lacks
persuasion lacks, to put it baldly, inspiration.
Passing over a sheaf of piano pieces,
the “Twelve Virtuoso Studies” of o
(of which the “Novelette” and “Improvisation”
are most noteworthy), we come to a stage of MacDowell’s
development in which, for the first time, he presents
himself as an assured and confident master of musical
impressionism and the possessor of a matured and fully
individualised style.