THE DAISES
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the_daisies.pdf |
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Samuel Barber (1910 - 1981)
(b. West Chester, Pennsylvania, March 9, 1910; d. New York, Jan. 23, 1981)
American composer Samuel Barber was a nephew of the celebrated contralto Louise Homer and a protege of the composer Sidney Homer, who caught on to young Samuel's gifts when, at the age of 9, he began work on his first opera. In 1924, Barber enrolled in the newly opened Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where he studied piano with Isabelle Vengerova, composition with Rosario Scalero and conducting with Fritz Reiner. It was at Curtis that he met another young composer, Gian-Carlo Menotti, who was to become his lifelong companion and professional collaborator. Early works from Barber's student days still hold a place in the repertoire, including Dover Beach— a setting of a Matthew Arnold poem for voice and string quartet; Barber, who had become quite a capable baritone, sang the world premiere — and his graduation exercise, the Overture to The School for Scandal. These works established him as "the one to watch" in his generation of American composers, a status confirmed by his receipt of the Prix de Rome and a Pulitzer traveling grant in 1935, when he was 25.
His music caught the ear of Arturo Toscanini, who led the premieres of two works: the Essay for Orchestra (later retitled First Essay for Orchestra) and the Adagio for Strings, one of the best-known works of the 20th century. The essay form — Barber's own creation, something of a musical "argument" in which one "thought" or melody is the seed from which an entire single movement springs — would be something the composer would return to at subsequent points in his life, composing a Second Essay in 1942 and a Third Essay in 1978. His beautifully lyric Violin Concerto (1940) is one of the finest string concertos of the 20th century, with a razzle-dazzle finale and a richly expressive opening movement. He also wrote a piano concerto (which won him a Pulitzer Prize) and a cello concerto. For Vladimir Horowitz, he composed the Piano Sonata in E-flat minor (1949), making it as challenging as possible. Barber's other works for the piano include the Nocturne (Homage to John Field) of 1959 and the beautiful Excursions, Op. 20 (1942-44).
Barber's most exquisite achievements were in the realm of vocal music, particularly the songs of Op. 10 and 13 and his 1947 setting of James Agee's Knoxville: Summer of 1915 for soprano and orchestra, commissioned by soprano Eleanor Steber. He also wrote a song cycle called Hermit Songs (1953), in which he set old anonymous Irish texts taken from the walls of monasteries.
In recognition of his preeminent place in American music, the Metropolitan Opera commissioned Barber to compose an opera, Antony and Cleopatra (based on Shakespeare), for the opening of its new home at Lincoln Center in 1966. While not a success in its original production, the opera, which featured Leontyne Price in the role of Cleopatra, manifested yet again Barber's unique mastery of line and color, and his extraordinarily imaginative way of setting a text.
(Ted Libbey is the author of "The NPR Listener's Encyclopedia of Classical Music")
American composer Samuel Barber was a nephew of the celebrated contralto Louise Homer and a protege of the composer Sidney Homer, who caught on to young Samuel's gifts when, at the age of 9, he began work on his first opera. In 1924, Barber enrolled in the newly opened Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where he studied piano with Isabelle Vengerova, composition with Rosario Scalero and conducting with Fritz Reiner. It was at Curtis that he met another young composer, Gian-Carlo Menotti, who was to become his lifelong companion and professional collaborator. Early works from Barber's student days still hold a place in the repertoire, including Dover Beach— a setting of a Matthew Arnold poem for voice and string quartet; Barber, who had become quite a capable baritone, sang the world premiere — and his graduation exercise, the Overture to The School for Scandal. These works established him as "the one to watch" in his generation of American composers, a status confirmed by his receipt of the Prix de Rome and a Pulitzer traveling grant in 1935, when he was 25.
His music caught the ear of Arturo Toscanini, who led the premieres of two works: the Essay for Orchestra (later retitled First Essay for Orchestra) and the Adagio for Strings, one of the best-known works of the 20th century. The essay form — Barber's own creation, something of a musical "argument" in which one "thought" or melody is the seed from which an entire single movement springs — would be something the composer would return to at subsequent points in his life, composing a Second Essay in 1942 and a Third Essay in 1978. His beautifully lyric Violin Concerto (1940) is one of the finest string concertos of the 20th century, with a razzle-dazzle finale and a richly expressive opening movement. He also wrote a piano concerto (which won him a Pulitzer Prize) and a cello concerto. For Vladimir Horowitz, he composed the Piano Sonata in E-flat minor (1949), making it as challenging as possible. Barber's other works for the piano include the Nocturne (Homage to John Field) of 1959 and the beautiful Excursions, Op. 20 (1942-44).
Barber's most exquisite achievements were in the realm of vocal music, particularly the songs of Op. 10 and 13 and his 1947 setting of James Agee's Knoxville: Summer of 1915 for soprano and orchestra, commissioned by soprano Eleanor Steber. He also wrote a song cycle called Hermit Songs (1953), in which he set old anonymous Irish texts taken from the walls of monasteries.
In recognition of his preeminent place in American music, the Metropolitan Opera commissioned Barber to compose an opera, Antony and Cleopatra (based on Shakespeare), for the opening of its new home at Lincoln Center in 1966. While not a success in its original production, the opera, which featured Leontyne Price in the role of Cleopatra, manifested yet again Barber's unique mastery of line and color, and his extraordinarily imaginative way of setting a text.
(Ted Libbey is the author of "The NPR Listener's Encyclopedia of Classical Music")
About the poetry
Music by Samuel Barber, composed 1927 Text by poet James Stephens Written when he was only seventeen years old and a student at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, Samuel Barber’s “The Daisies,” from Three Songs, Op. 2, features a simple, lyrical vocal line set to a charming text by James Stephens. While this song was composed early in Barber’s career, it displays the lyricism that would later become the hallmark of his compositional style, particularly in his songs.
It is very likely that Barber was introduced to the poetry of James Stephens through his uncle, Sidney Homer, who was also a composer. Homer, in fact, set Stephens’s “The King of the Fairy Men” (from Songs of the Clay; London and New York: Macmillan, 1915) in his own collection of Seventeen Songs (New York: G. Schirmer, [1917] 1943). Stephens’s poem “The Daisies” first appeared in Songs of the Clay, but was later published in his Collected Poems (1926), which was probably the source Barber used for the text.
“The Daisies” was published by G. Schirmer in 1936 as the first of Barber's Three Songs, op. 2. It is followed by “With Rue my Heart is Laden” (text by A. E. Housman) and “Bessie Bobtail” (text again by James Stephens). Although “The Daisies” was dedicated to Barber’s mother, Marguerite McLeod Beatty Barber (who was called Daisy), it received one of its earliest hearings by his aunt, Louise Beatty Homer, who would become one of the leading contraltos of the Metropolitan Opera. The song was also championed by Rose Bampton, one of Barber’s classmates at the Curtis Institute of Music and also a Metropolitan Opera singer.
The charm of “The Daisies” lies in the combination of the graceful melody with the asymmetrical textual underlay. Barber’s “The Daisies” proves a worthy addition to a singer’s repertoire.
--Stephanie Poxon, Ph.D.
The Daisies
by James Stephens
In the scented bud of the morning O,
When the windy grass went rippling far!
I saw my dear one walking slow
In the field where the daises are.
We did not laugh, and we did not speak,
As we wandered happ'ly, to and fro,
I kissed my dear on either cheek,
In the bud of the morning O!
A lark sang up, from the breezy land;
A lark sang down, from a cloud afar;
As she and I went, hand in hand,
In the field where the daisies are.
It is very likely that Barber was introduced to the poetry of James Stephens through his uncle, Sidney Homer, who was also a composer. Homer, in fact, set Stephens’s “The King of the Fairy Men” (from Songs of the Clay; London and New York: Macmillan, 1915) in his own collection of Seventeen Songs (New York: G. Schirmer, [1917] 1943). Stephens’s poem “The Daisies” first appeared in Songs of the Clay, but was later published in his Collected Poems (1926), which was probably the source Barber used for the text.
“The Daisies” was published by G. Schirmer in 1936 as the first of Barber's Three Songs, op. 2. It is followed by “With Rue my Heart is Laden” (text by A. E. Housman) and “Bessie Bobtail” (text again by James Stephens). Although “The Daisies” was dedicated to Barber’s mother, Marguerite McLeod Beatty Barber (who was called Daisy), it received one of its earliest hearings by his aunt, Louise Beatty Homer, who would become one of the leading contraltos of the Metropolitan Opera. The song was also championed by Rose Bampton, one of Barber’s classmates at the Curtis Institute of Music and also a Metropolitan Opera singer.
The charm of “The Daisies” lies in the combination of the graceful melody with the asymmetrical textual underlay. Barber’s “The Daisies” proves a worthy addition to a singer’s repertoire.
--Stephanie Poxon, Ph.D.
The Daisies
by James Stephens
In the scented bud of the morning O,
When the windy grass went rippling far!
I saw my dear one walking slow
In the field where the daises are.
We did not laugh, and we did not speak,
As we wandered happ'ly, to and fro,
I kissed my dear on either cheek,
In the bud of the morning O!
A lark sang up, from the breezy land;
A lark sang down, from a cloud afar;
As she and I went, hand in hand,
In the field where the daisies are.