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Musical Ekphrasis:
Composers Responding to Poetry and Painting

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments

xiii

Introduction

xv


PART I:
Mapping the Territorial Boundaries of Musical Ekphrasis


Music and the Sister Arts

5


Ekphrasis

5


Representation

9


Narration

20


Musical Ekphrasis Versus Program Music

27


Poems or Paintings... And Music? In Music? Into Music?

35


The Challenge of Verbal Mediation

49


Variations of Ekphrastic Stance: Once Again, Poems on Paintings

55


Transposition

57


Supplementation

64


Association

67


Interpretation

72


Play

77


Literature and Painting Imitating Music

81


Literature and Painting as Music, or like Music

82


Literature and Painting about Music

94

 

PART II
From Word to Sound: Non-vocal Music Responds to a Literary Text


Maeterlinck’s Death Drama in Two Musical Depictions

107


Death in the Works of Maurice Maeterlinck

107


Tintagiles—Tintagel

110


Maurice Maeterlinck, La mort de Tintagiles

113


Symphonic Responses

117


Bohuslav Martinu, Smrt Tintagilova:
Music to Maurice Maeterlinck’s Marionette Drama

119


Charles Martin Loeffler, La mort de Tintagiles:
Poème dramatique d’après le
drame de Maeterlinck

123


Summary: Two Ways of Portraying the Incomprehensible

140


Schoenberg’s Musical Representations of Fateful Love Triangles

141


Arnold Schoenberg and His Poets

141


Maurice Maeterlinck’s Innocent ménage à trois

143


Symbolism and Allusion in Pelléas et Mélisande

146


Dehmel’s Verklärte Nacht: Anxiety, Reassurance, and Symmetry

149


Frames and Voices in Schoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht

159


The Woman’s Voice

163


The Man’s Voice

167


The Third Voice

170


The Unfolding of the Tragedy in Pelleas und Melisande

172


The Protagonists and Their Threefold 3 + 1 Motifs

178


Motifs of the Fate, Jealousy, Love, and Death

188


Summary: Schoenberg’s Characters and Their Development

193


Elliott Carter’s American Narratives

195


A Composer Exploring Complementary View of America

195


Saint-John Perse’s Vents (Winds)

200


Structure and Texture, Themes and Voices

206


Elliott Carter’s Concerto for Orchestra

212


Summary: Carter’s Modes of Transmedializing Perse

219

 

 PART III
From
Image to Sound: Music on Works of Visual Art


A Twentieth-Century Composer’s Quattrocento Triptych

223


Musical Transmedializations of Visual Narratives

223


Respighi’s Affinity to Botticelli

224


Botticelli’s Primavera

226


Respighi’s "Primavera"

231


Botticelli’s Adorazione dei Magi

242


Respighi’s "Adorazione dei Magi"

247


Botticelli’s Nascita di Venere

253


Respighi’s "Nascita di Venere"

256


Summary: Respighi’s Trittico botticelliano

262


Music for Blessings in Stained Glass

269


Chagall’s Stained-Glass Windows

269


John McCabe, The Chagall Windows

286


Jacob Gilboa, The Twelve Jerusalem Chagall Windows

288


Two Musical Readings of Chagall’s Visual Interpretations

291



Prelude: Music about Images in Stained Glass


Reuben


Simeon


Levi


Judah


Zebulun


Issachar


Dan


Gad


Asher


Naphtali


Joseph


Benjamin

Summary: McCabe’s and Gilboa’s Musical Responses to Chagall

291

294

300

306

309

315

319

324

329

335

340

345

352

358


The Twittering Machine: Sound Symbol of Modernity

361


The Artist-Musician

361


Paul Klee and His Zwitschermaschine

362


Peter Maxwell Davies’s Joyful, Crank-Assisted Bird Concert

366


Gunther Schuller and the Pitfalls of Mechanized Bird Song

372


Giselher Klebe’s Four Twittering Creatures in Distress

376


Summary: Three Ways of Listening to Birds Hooked to a Crank

380


 

PART IV
The Faun and the Virgin, the Saint and the Reaper: Multi-tiered Transmedializations


Two Pictorial Cycles and Their Mediated Paths Towards Music

383


Claudel in Basel, Hindemith in Florence: How the Stories Began

383


The Dance of Death—The Dance of the Dead

385


The Early Woodcuts after the Dance of Death at Basel

390


Hans Holbein’s Woodcuts

394


The Spirit and Theology of Claudel and Honegger’s
Danse des morts

399


Reframing Ezekiel: Dialogue (I) and God’s Reply (V)

404


The Frolicking of the Dead (II)

414


Laments and Sobs (III, IV)

421


Hope and Affirmation (VI, VII)

425


The Symbolic Usage of Instrumentation and Vocal Textures in
La danse des morts

431


Saint Francis of Assisi and the Early Writings about His Life

435


Giotto’s Depictions of Saint Francis

438


Hindemith and Massine’s Design for a Ballet on Saint Francis

446


Hindemith’s Music for the Ballet Nobilissima Visione

452


The Musical Forms and Their Messages

453


The Musical Representation of Characters and Conflicts

456


The Development of Saint Francis’s Motifs

462


Summary: Pictorial Cycles Mediated Into Music

466


Two Mallarmé Poems and Their Way through Music to Dance

469


The Symbolist Poet

469


The "Scène" from Hérodiade: Fragment of a Lyrical Drama

471


Hérodiade: The Tale and Its Background

473


The Introduction of the Protagonist

475


Scène (text and prose translation)

476


The Dialogue

482


The Themes

483


The Symbols

488


Hérodiade and L’après-midi d’un faune: Sister Poems

494


The Background of the Faun Story

494


The Tale, Told One Hot Afternoon

495


L’après-midi d’un faune (text and prose translation)

498


Form and Language

502


Hérodiade and L’après-midi d’un faune: Parallels and Contrasts

505


Poetic Transformations, Further Transmedialized

509


Debussy and Mallarmé

512


Debussy’s Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune

514


Hindemith’s Approach to Mallarmé

523


Where are the Words?

527


Hindemith’s "orchestral recitation," Hérodiade

529


From Music to Dance: Martha Graham and Vaslav Nijinsky

543


L’après-midi d’un faune: Mallarmé, Debussy, Nijinsky

548


Summary: Mallarmé’s Poems and Their Transmedializations

557


PART V
Musical Re-presentations
of Visual and Verbal Works of Art


Depiction and Reference

561


Inherent or Acquired Signification in Musical Devices

561


The Listener’s Contribution

563


The Object of Musical Representation: Form and Content

563


Means of Musical Transmedialization

566


Rhythmic Signifiers

566


Pitches, Intervals, and Contours

567


Timbres, Conventional and Circumstantial

569


Structural and Textural Means

571


Allusions and Quotations

572


Variations of Ekphrastic Stance

575


Transposition

575


Supplementation

576


Association

578


Interpretation

580


Playfulness

582


Musical Ekphrasis and the Benefit of the Given Topic

583

APPENDIX

Biographical Sketches I: The Artists

589


Giotto, Painter of Saint Francis

589


Sandro Botticelli and Neoplatonic Aesthetics

590


Hans Holbein, Portraitist of Death’s Clients

591


Marc Chagall: Rediscovering the Bible

592


Paul Klee, Artist and Musician

595


Biographical Sketches II: The Poets

597


Stéphane Mallarmé and Symbolist Poetry

597


Maurice Maeterlinck and Symbolist Drama

599


Paul Claudel and the Renewal of Faith

603


Richard Dehmel and Confident Sensuality

605


Saint-John-Perse and Hart Crane: Interpreting America

606


Biographical Sketches III: The Composers

608


C.M.T. Loeffler and B. Martinu: Chronicling a Child’s Death

608


Arthur Honegger: Staging the Totentanz

612


Ottorino Respighi: Assembling a Mythological Triptych

614


Elliott Carter: Sonic Quests for America

616


Jacob Gilboa and John McCabe: Translucent Pictures

618


G.Schuller, G.Klebe, and P.M.Davies: Imaging Mechanization

621


Biographical Sketches IV: The Choreographers

626


Vaslav Nijinsky: Sublimated Sexual Ecstasy

626


Léonide Massine: Liturgical Ballets

628


Martha Graham: Exploring a Woman’s Feelings

631


Bibliography

633


Primary Sources

633


Secondary Sources

635


On Ekphrasis, Representation, and Program Music

635


Some Collections of Ekphrastic Poetry

637


On the Painters

638


On the Poets

641


On the Composers

644


On the Choreographers

649


On Saint Francis of Assisi

650


Lists of Plates, Figures, and Musical Examples

651

Index

657

About the Author

669