January 9, 1963 0 PAULHINDEMITH:A REQUIEM11FORTHOSEWELOVE
"When Lilacs Last in the Dooryard Bloom'dn 11 When Lilacs La.st in the Dooryard BloomI d 11 -- a "Requiem I f or those we love 1 11 is a setting of the complete text of Walt Whitman's poem in memory of Abraham Lincoln. It was commissioned by The Collegiate Chorale in the winter of 1945 and completed April 20, 1946. It is Hindemith's first major choral work since 111Jas Unaufhorliche 0 (1931).
The twenty sections of Whitman's text pressed by the composer into eleven musical portioned among four major movements. The mentary -- ·the poet upon the musician, and
(Edition McKay: 1900) numbers, which again setting thus provides the musician upon the
have been comha~.re been apa reciprocal compoet.
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Whitman's first stanza is a prologue introducing the trinity of the symbols which are the motivating images of his elegy -- lilac, star and bird. In the three subsequent stanzas he qualifies them, assigning to each its own particular atmosphere: "Star" ••• fallen star ••• tearful night ••• harsh surrounding cloud; "Lilac" - with the perfume strong I love ••• in the dooryard. old farmhouse ••• and 11Bird 11 - thought of him I love .•• song of the bleeding throat ••• Death's outlet song of life. Before he approaches the text, the composer has provided a musical prologue in the form of a short orchestral prelude. It is based on a continuous pedal Csharp upon whose minor tonality the entire work is founded. Its initial theme (A-C-F-E) already suggests associated tonalities, and out of this theme grow lines of increasing and decreasing harmonic tension, embracing in their arch the temper and spiritual qualities of all that is to follow. The composer then binds the poet's first three stanzas into one musical structure beginning with a baritone narration-song ( C# minor), "When lilacs last . in the oocvyard bloom' d"; moving through a choral section, contrasting in mood (F minor) but preserving the thematic material, 110 powerful, western fallen star !11; and concluding with a return to the opening song, 11In the dooryard ••• stands the lilac bush". ( It is significant for Hindemith I s larger forms that each section is complete in itself, but at the same time integrated into an organism of the whole, which respect they have in comrr:onwith Bach I s choral works and Mozart's operas. ) Thus, the composer moves to the poet 1 s fourth stanza (his own No. 2) he builds an alto ar!l.oeo-, rounded in itself, but preserving the tonality and musical materials of the beginning ••• "A shy and hidden bird ••• warbling a song. 11 The poet up to this point has set a stage - has painted an atmospheric landscape. He now (in Stanzas 5 through 7) moves to a second general section and pictures a coffin passing through an earthly landscape. first
In a larger line, the composer makes these stanzas the concluding part of his great moverrent, awakening in us the thought of the identity of the two land-