Archive for January, 2009

Opus 101

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Another month and not nearly enough time spent with Beethoven.  Many composers tell me that their New Years resolutions are to get more score study in, but that it never seems to happen.  I guess I’m in that club, too.  With that in mind, I’m going to confine myself to what has become by favorite movement of Op. 101 this month:  the second, Lebhaft.

I suppose this movement falls into the Scherzo-and-Trio category, although it isn’t particularly schero-like in its character.  It has the ternary form that one expects, and some other very interesting aspects.  I’m going to skip over to the trio–the B-flat major section.  Canon is the name of the game here.  Hadyn and Mozart occasionally wrote minuet movements in their sonata cycles that were strictly canonic in construction, and Beethoven once again reveals himself to be a classical composer in outlook by doing the same thing.  This two-page trio is filled with interesting exercises in canon and invertible counterpoint.  There are no fewer than four canons–beginning in the 6th, 11th, 16th and 25th measures–and two uses of invertible counterpoint (the same material, appearing in the 3rd and 23rd measures). 

For all this, Beethoven still manages to make music.  There is both craft and art here, and one need not notice the canonic stucture to appreciate the good work that has gone on.  An especially interesting moment is in the second and third canonic sections, when, rather than the very static harmony often generated in this type of piece, Beethoven uses the canon to move, first, away from the home key, and then, back to it–from Bb to C by falling thirds, then through a funny little progression back to the dominant-function. 

Meanwhile, the economy of motive is staggeringly brilliant–only three or perhaps four motives account for the material of the trio, and they are mostly derived from the head-motive, which itself is derived from the material found in the march.  In the fall, I will be teaching form and analysis, and I can promise my students that they will be looking into this piece.

Next month is the big one–the piece that I has loomed over me since the start of this project.  The next sonata is No. 29, Opus 106, the “Hammerklavier.”

Anathem

Monday, January 26th, 2009

For the last week, I’ve been reading Neal Stephenson’s latest novel, Anathem.  I don’t even know where to begin, but it doesn’t always happen that the book I’m reading distracts me from everything else, and I can’t remember it happening in a long time.

I’ve been reading a great deal of non-fiction the last few years.  I don’t know why, exactly, it’s just been what has appealed to me.  But this book…I was somehow drawn to it from the moment I saw an ad for it in the New Yorker a couple of months ago.  I didn’t buy it the first time I saw it in the store, but when I went back to the bookstore after Christmas, and it was half-off, I figured I’d get it.  At nearly 900 pages, plus three appendices and a glossary, it’s hefty, but that has never intimidated me.

I’d never read any of Stephenson’s books before, so I didn’t know what to expect, but I was (and am) absolutely blown away by this book.  I’m a long-time reader of science-fiction, and I wonder if this is one of those books that may transcend mere genre fiction and head firmly in the direction of literature.  There are a few others that I think of in this category–Orson Scott Card’s Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus is the first that comes to mind, as does Robert Heinlein’s immortal Stranger in a Strange Land.

As a composer, “successful projection,” (to borrow a phrase from Vincent Persichetti) is often achieved when a piece creates a world that draw the listener in and compels them to stay.  Stephenson has done much the same thing here.  The world he creates is vivid, and wonderfully close enough to ours to be relevant, familiar and cautionary all at once.  The beauty of good science-fiction is that it presents things as they might be–it is really under the same constraints of believability that all fiction labors under.

The characters begin in splendid isolation, in a university-cum-monastery whose doors open only at certain intervals to allow them to mingle with the outside world.  The flow of information is restricted–an interesting idea, as the glut of low-quality in our society is already a problem (and I would include this blog in that category).  The academics inside the monastery grow their own food and live a very ascetic life, owning everything in common, but also study advanced mathematics and physics, astronomy and, presumably, most of the other trappings of science.

Through the book, as the result of outside events, one wall after another is pulled down, sometimes literally, and our academics are thrust into the wider world with little more than their wits and their acquired knowledge, all theoretical.  What follows (in the second half of the book) is yet another variation on a very old science-fiction subject–contact by an alien civilization.  It is quite possible that the characters are prepared by their previous isolation (and its end) to deal with these events in idealized, rational ways; the second half of the book is a playing out of the ramifications of the first half.

This is not an easy book… Stephenson has a wide-ranging historical scope, and you will need to understand quite a bit of science-fact, along with a little philology (in that sense, the book is similar to Burgess’ A Clockwork Orange) and the conventions of hard-sf writing.  The author does not lead you by the hand and explain every little thing (this would get quite tedious), so I found myself checking the glossary from time to time.

I can’t overemphasize my enthusiasm for this book.  It’s story burrowed into my brain this last week, and I haven’t been much interested in anything else since about last Wednesday–it was a pain to leave it at home when I went to work (if I brought the books I read for pleasure to work, I would rapidly be unemployed).  I can’t remember the last book that pulled me in thus–the last few years, when I have picked up fiction, it has often been Harry Turtledove, whose style is atrocious and forces me to pull myself through the text to find out what alternate history he has worked out; I may be done with Turtledove.  What I need to figure out is whether I am drawn to this book because of its interest in the things I am interested in–academia, science, religion, music, cosmology–or because it is just a good book.  That is why I’ve decided to do something I hardly ever do with books I’ve picked up just for pleasure–now that I’m done, I’m going to reread it.  I can’t even remember the last time I did this with a novel; I was probably in middle school.  I know that in 900 pages there are things that I missed, and things I need to revisit in light of the entire story, though.

Into the Wild Blue Yonder…

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

On Friday (January 2), my father and I visited the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio.

This is something of a pilgrimage for the two of us, who have been there together several times.  My father was in the Air Force in the mid-1970s, and is a sometime volunteer at the museum.  The first time we went was in about 1986.  We always go to an IMAX movie, eat lunch in the cafeteria, look at Glenn MIller’s trombone and generally see what’s new.  Sometimes we have to try to figure out what it is that we’re looking at together, and other times, my father is able to explain it to me off that bat.  I always bring back astronaut ice cream for my wife.

If you haven’t been there, you need to go, whether you are into military hardware or not.  There are notable aircraft on display–the B-29 that dropped the atomic bomb on Nagasaki, the Apollo 15 command module.  Really, if you name an aircraft flown by the US Air Force or its predecessor organizations in the Army, they probably have it, with detailed descriptions so you can understand what you are seeing.  The preservation staff at the museum is excellent, and it is really one of the best museums I have been to of any kind, right up there with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Field Museum in Chicago and the Carnegie in Pittsburgh.

Over the last twenty years, this place has only gotten better in terms of quantity (triple the square footage) and quality.  In the Viet Nam section, there is an exhibit about the Wild Weasels, a unit that trained to go into hostile airspace ahead of other aircraft to get the enemy to disclose the location of their antiaircraft defenses.  Not only is the role of these pilots documented, but you feel like you understand what it was like to fly over North Viet Nam with the intention of being shot at.  This is what museums need to do.

I am always shocked and awed (no pun) by the hardware associated with the war that we didn’t fight–World War III.  There are the bombers, of course.  The B-29, the B-36, an enormous plan built to carry the hydrogen bomb; the B-52, and the last generation of them–the ones that beat the Soviets by outspending them.  The B-1 to fly nukes in faster and lower than ever, and the B-2 “Stealth Bomber” that just doesn’t show up on radar.  Scarier still are the missiles.  You can look at Titans and Minutemen and the Peacemaker–the MX, as it was called in the press.  There is a training simulator for the commanders of balistic missiles–with the two keys 12 feet apart, just like the movies.  How many times do you practice launching the missiles before they put you down in a bunker with the real thing?  Next to the MX was a  MIRV–multiple independent reentry vehicle–a device that allowed one missile to carry eight nuclear weapons, each headed toward a different city.  One weapon to kill thirty million people or so.  Then, tucked in a corner next to the boosters was a little globe, about the size of a large microwave oven.  You can’t tell what it is without reading the sign.  If the military command was cut off from the guys in the field, a few of these little globes would have been launched into the upper atmosphere to broadcast the launch codes as a last resort.  They thought of everything.

Wow.  I don’t know whether to be indignant or grateful or angry or what when I see these things.  Congratulations to the US Air Force for presenting their history in such a meaningful and thought-provoking way.

Winter Reading

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Nothing like a couple of weeks off to get some long-delayed reading in.  With ten days of plane rides and hotel rooms, there was plenty to be had.  Here’s what’s been through my brain:

I finally finished Joseph Campbell’s The Hero With a Thousand Faces.  I’ve been working on it since October, and through a combination of being busy, tired and, unfortunately, not as interested as I hoped, I finally finished it before we left for Christmas.  Campbell’s thesis is quite compelling, but perhaps I came to this book too late.  When one watched as many sitcoms as I did when I was a kid, one realizes that there are only so many stories.  For all the heroic myths to be basically the same myth… well, sure.  I buy it.  On the other hand, I could do without the Freudian psycho-sexual mumbo-jumbo.  That’s what I get for reading a book written in the 1940s.  Some things to think about though, even though the book felt like assigned reading toward the end.

Next up was Walter Isaacson’s biography of Albert Einstein.  I would highly recommend this.  I was never a great student in physics in either high school or college, due more to distraction than anything else, but Isaacson does a reasonably good job of explaining the science while never letting it get in the way of the story of the man.  Particularly interesting to me was the role that music played in Einstein’s free time, and even in his humanitarian work.

Then came John Adams’ new memoir, Hallelujah Junction.  I will have to reread parts of this to try to gain insight from the composer’s descriptions of how he works–I think our approaches may be similar.  In all, well-written, if a bit self-indulgent (but then, it’s a memoir).  I sometimes got the impression that Adams was trying to pronounce on certain issues that he felt were required, and there were several sections that seemed to run “That’s what I think about composer Y, now this is what I think of composer Z, and in a minute I’ll tell you all about composer X.”  But–really nice to read a memoir by a living composer that isn’t sensational or mean or tell-all in nature.  I’ve never met John Adams, but his book makes him seem like someone with whom I could have a really good conversation, with me doing most of the listening.

Now, if you haven’t read Thomas L. Friedman’s new book, Hot, Flat and Crowded, you must go get it.  I hope Friedman wins another Pulitzer, because he makes the case for saving the planet and then proceeds to show how we can do it, without saying that it will be easy, or that we won’t have to make sacrifices.  If our leaders will read this book and overcome politics to get on top of this problem, Friedman makes it seem like we will be living in a Star Trek world by the middle of the century.  If you think environmentalism is just recycling and hugging trees and wearing sandals, or just preachiness from Al Gore, you must read this book.  There is money to be made.  Can a national approach to tackling global warming have the benefit of getting us out of this recession?  It sure seems that way.  I hope someone gave Barak Obama this book for Christmas.

Then, yesterday, I started Brian Fagan’s 2000 book The Little Ice Age.  It’s good so far, although I’m not sure the author is clear enough about the way that ocean currents and prevailing weather systems work together to drive climate…I may have to look for some clarification on that.  I’m also afraid that I may have spoiled my supper on this one by watching a History Channel (I think) documentary, Little Ice Age: Big Chill.  Oh well.

On deck–The Best American Short Stories 2008, the latest Music Theory Spectrum, and the rest of the counterpoint textbook I’ll be teaching from this semester.  I’ll also be rereading the Bible.  If anyone has recommendations, I’d love to hear them.  I’ll be travelling quite a bit the next few months.