Cummings Ist Der Dichter
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' (''Cummings is the Poet'') is a 1970 composition for mixed choir and instrumental ensemble by
Pierre Boulez Pierre Louis Joseph Boulez (; 26 March 19255 January 2016) was a French composer, conductor and writer, and the founder of several musical institutions. He was one of the dominant figures of post-war contemporary classical music. Born in Montb ...
, based on a poem by
E. E. Cummings Edward Estlin Cummings (October 14, 1894 – September 3, 1962), commonly known as e e cummings or E. E. Cummings, was an American poet, painter, essayist, author, and playwright. During World War I, he worked as an ambulance driver and was ...
.


Background

Boulez was initially introduced to the poetry of Cummings in 1952 by
John Cage John Milton Cage Jr. (September 5, 1912 – August 12, 1992) was an American composer and music theorist. A pioneer of indeterminacy in music, electroacoustic music, and Extended technique, non-standard use of musical instruments, Cage was one ...
during a visit to a New York bookstore. Boulez recalled that he immediately felt that he "had a pretty direct relationship with the poetry of Cummings," but "did not feel sufficiently well acquainted with the English language to tackle one of his poems." During the late 1960s, he considered setting five Cummings poems to music, and began composing a ''Cantate pour Baryton et petit Orchestre'', using the poem that would eventually appear in ''Cummings ist der Dichter''. However, he became dissatisfied with the piece, and subsequently reworked the instrumental passages into '' Domaines''. In 1970, Boulez completed the first version of ''Cummings ist der Dichter'', a ten-minute work for mixed choir and instrumental ensemble, based on a poem titled "birds( here inven/", taken from Cummings's 1935 collection '' No Thanks''. The poem is typical of Cummings's work in that it employs an unusual layout on the page, with a highly personal use of word fragmentation and parentheses. Boulez later reflected: "what interests me is not to transcribe Cummings's discoveries literally into music, but to find a transcription of his world in my own." He described the resulting work as having "a form which has its roots in the poem but which, of course, can also be grasped completely independently from the poem." The 1970 version requires two conductors who at times function somewhat independently, and, like a number of other compositions of this period, it employs
aleatoric Aleatoricism (or aleatorism) is a term for musical compositions and other forms of art resulting from "actions made by chance". The term was first used "in the context of electro-acoustics and information theory" to describe "a course of sound ...
techniques in sections. In 1986, Boulez completed a revised version of the piece which requires 16 solo voices or a mixed choir of up to 48 voices, plus an expanded ensemble. In addition, the performance indeterminacies in this version were eliminated and replaced with fully written-out passages. ''Cummings ist der Dichter'' is unique in that it was Boulez's first and only setting of English poetry. Writer Peter F. Stacey stated that Cummings's poems "made a refreshing change from the terse and complex poetry of Mallarmé," while Boulez himself would later note that his exposure to the poems helped him "a great deal in rediscovering a certain freshness." Musicologist
Susan Bradshaw Susan Bradshaw (Monmouth, 8 September 1931 – London, 30 January 2005) was a British pianist, teacher, writer, and composer. She was mainly associated with contemporary music, and especially with the work of Pierre Boulez, several of whose writi ...
described the work as "an almost autobiographical reflection of the progressive developments in Boulez's musical thinking during this period: developments that were soon to explode in the creative revival of the 1970s."


Instrumentation

1970 version: * mixed choir of 16 voices * one flute * four oboes * one bassoon * three horns * two trumpets * two trombones * one violin * three violas * three cellos * one double bass * three harps Source: 1986 version: * 16 solo voices or mixed choir of up to 48 voices * two flutes * one oboe * one cor anglais * two clarinets * one bass clarinet * two bassoons * two horns * two trumpets * two trombones * one bass tuba * three violins * two violas * two cellos * one double bass * three harps Source:


Premiere and publication

''Cummings ist der Dichter'' was premiered during September 1970 at a concert in
Ulm Ulm () is the sixth-largest city of the southwestern German state of Baden-Württemberg, and with around 129,000 inhabitants, it is Germany's 60th-largest city. Ulm is located on the eastern edges of the Swabian Jura mountain range, on the up ...
, Germany, with
Clytus Gottwald Clytus Gottwald (20 November 1925 – 18 January 2023) was a German composer, conductor, and musicologist who focused on choral music. He was considered by music critics to be a key figure in contemporary choral music, and is known for his arra ...
conducting the Schola Cantorum Stuttgart and Boulez conducting the instrumental ensemble. Both versions were published by
Universal Edition Universal Edition (UE) is an Austrian classical music publishing firm. Founded in 1901 in Vienna, it originally intended to provide the core classical works and educational works to the Austrian market. The firm soon expanded to become one of t ...
.


Origins of title

According to Boulez, prior to the premiere in Ulm, the concert organizers contacted him and requested the title of the work so that they could print the programs in advance. He replied, in his then-rudimentary German: "I have not yet found a title for the work but all that I can tell you now is that Cummings is the poet I have chosen." The organizer interpreted this to mean that the work's title was "Cummings is the poet" (in German, "Cummings ist der Dichter"), and printed the program as such. Boulez allowed the mistake to stand, noting: "I felt there could not possibly be a better title than that, which had come about completely by accident."


Reception

In a 1977 review,
Arnold Whittall Arnold Whittall (born 1935) is a British musicologist and academic. Whittall's research areas have primarily been centred around the musical analysis of 20th-century music and aspects of the nineteenth-century, such as the music of Richard Wagner. ...
described the form of the work as "fluid yet precise, unpredictable and therefore intensely dramatic," and commented: "No other work of Boulez's, not even the early cantata ''
Le Soleil des eaux (''The Sun of Waters'') is a two-movement cantata for soprano, choir and orchestra by Pierre Boulez, based on two poems by René Char, and having a total duration of about nine minutes. Background Boulez first encountered Char's poetry in 1945 ...
'', seems to me to demonstrate so clearly his personal synthesis and transformation of stylistic elements that derive from both Webern and Debussy." Reviewing a 2016 Proms concert, Mark Berry of ''Seen and Heard International'' wrote: "I had the impression of a combination of certain qualities of Boulez's earlier choral music... with the different concerns of somewhat later musical language.... There was a true sense... of cummings-like wonder."


References

Sources * * * * * * * * * {{Pierre Boulez Compositions by Pierre Boulez 1970 compositions 20th-century classical music Serial compositions Choral compositions Adaptations of works by E. E. Cummings