Edward MacDowell eBook

Lawrence Gilman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 150 pages of information about Edward MacDowell.

Edward MacDowell eBook

Lawrence Gilman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 150 pages of information about Edward MacDowell.

Of Wagner:  “His music-dramas, shorn of the fetters of the actual spoken word, emancipated from the materialism of acting, painting, and furniture, must be considered the greatest achievement in our art.”

Concerning Form in music, he observed:  “If by the word ‘form’ our purists meant the most poignant expression of poetic thought in music, if they meant by this term the art of arranging musical sounds so that they constituted the most telling presentation of a musical idea, I should have nothing to say.  But as it is, the word in almost its invariable use by theorists stands for what are called ’stoutly-built periods,’ ‘subsidiary themes’ and the like, a happy combination of which in certain prescribed keys is supposed to constitute good form.  Such a principle, inherited from the necessities and fashions of the dance, and changing from time to time, is surely not worthy of the strange worship it has received.  In their eagerness to press this great revolutionist [Beethoven] into their own ranks in the fight of narrow theory against expansion and progress, the most amusing mistakes are constantly occurring.  For example, the first movement of this sonata [the so-called “Moonlight"]—­which, as we know, is a poem of profound sorrow and the most poignant resignation alternating with despair—­has, by some strange torturing, been cited as being in strict sonata-form by one theorist (Harding:  Novello’s primer), is dubbed a free fantasy by another (Matthews), and is described as being in song-form by another:  all of which is somewhat weakened by the dictum of still another theorist that the music is absolutely formless!  A form of so doubtful an identity can surely lay small claim to any serious intellectual value....  In our modern days we too often, Procrustes-like, make our ideas to fit the forms.  We put our guest, the poetic thought, that comes to us like a homing bird from out of the mystery of the blue sky—­we put this confiding stranger straightway into that iron bed:  the ’sonata-form’—­or perhaps even the ‘third-rondo form,’ for we have quite an assortment; and should the idea survive, and grow, and become too large for the bed, and if we have grown to love it too much to cut off its feet and thus make it fit (as did that old robber of Attica), why then we run the risk of having some wiseacre say, as is said of Chopin:  ’Yes—­but he is weak in sonata-form’! ...  Form should be nothing more than a synonym for coherence.  No idea, whether great or small, can find utterance without form; but that form will be inherent in the idea, and there will be as many forms as there are adequately expressed ideas in the world.”

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Edward MacDowell from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.