MURFREESBORO — An expert on composer Aaron
Copland’s dramatic works will present a free public lecture on his opera “The
Tender Land” Wednesday, Nov. 11, in Hinton Hall inside MTSU’s Wright Music
Building.
The 3
p.m. lecture by Dr. Ryan Jones, associate professor at the University of
Wisconsin, Eau Claire, will include the origins, reception and interpretation
of the work as well as Copland’s run-in with U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy during
its composition and the hallmarks of formal design and musical style that
define his artistic approach.
“The
focus of my presentation will demonstrate the ways in which a reading of a work
from the peak of a quintessential American composer’s career — initially deemed
a critical failure — may reflect his thoughts and concerns for a nation in
political turmoil,” Jones said.
Dr.
Joseph Morgan, professor of musicology at MTSU, said Copland’s music “is often
considered the prototype of the American sound in classical music” with works
like “Appalachian Spring,” “Billy the Kid” and “Fanfare for the Common Man.”
“The
Tender Land” tells the story of a farm family in the Midwest, a narrative that
Copland was inspired to set to music after reading James Agee's “Let Us Now
Praise Famous Men” and seeing Walker Evans’ Depression-era photographs included
in it.
He
composed the work between 1952 and 1954 for the NBC Television Opera Workshop,
but the producers rejected it for TV, Morgan said. The New York City Opera
finally premiered the work in 1954.
Copland
was in the middle of composing the opera in 1953 when he was forced to testify
before McCarthy’s House Un-American Activities Committee. The composer had been
added to the FBI’s list of artists thought to have communist associations but
denied any affiliations, testifying, “I spend my days writing symphonies,
concertos, ballads, and I am not a political thinker.”
The MTSU
Opera Workshop will present “The Tender Land” next March 18 and 20 in conductor
Murry Sidlin's 1987 revival version, which effectively reduces the orchestra to
an ensemble of 13 instruments.
A
searchable campus map with parking details is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParking2015-16. Off-campus visitors attending the event
should obtain a special one-day permit from MTSU’s Office of Parking and
Transportation at http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.
For more information, please contact H. Stephen
Smith, director of the MTSU Opera Workshop, at h.stephen.smith@mtsu.edu or 615-898-2504.
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