Frostiana
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Frostiana: Seven Country Songs is a piece for mixed chorus and piano composed in 1959 by Randall Thompson. It was premiered on October 18, 1959, in Amherst, Massachusetts. Thompson later scored the piece for chamber orchestra and chorus, in which version it was first performed on April 23, 1965.
Thompson was commissioned by the town of Amherst to write a piece commemorating its bicentennial in 1959. The town was known for its association with Robert Frost, who had lived there for some years. Frost had known Thompson for some time, and admired his music; accordingly, it was decided that the commemorative work would be a setting of some of Frost's poetry. The town suggested "The Gift Outright"; Thompson, however, feared that the text was inappropriate for the occasion, and asked to be allowed to choose his own texts. In the end, the composer selected seven poems, with which he constructed a seven-movement suite of choral art songs:
- "The Road Not Taken"
- "The Pasture"
- "Come In"
- "The Telephone"
- "A Girl's Garden"
- "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening"
- "Choose Something Like a Star"
Because the male and female choruses rehearsed separately, Thompson structured the work so that they sang together only in three of the seven movements; each of the other four was scored for either male voices or female voices alone.
Frost was present at the world premiere. Accounts vary as to his response to Thompson's musical rendition of his poetry. One asserts that at the end of "Choose Something Like a Star" Frost sprang from his seat and bellowed, "Sing that again!" Others assert that Frost was so disgusted by the abuse of his poetry that he forbade any of his verse from being set to music again.
A number of recordings of Frostiana exist, and it is still performed with some frequency.
[edit] References
- Randall Thompson. The Testament of Freedom/Frostiana. Manhattan Chamber Orchestra and New York Choral Society, Richard Auldon Clark, director. Recorded 1994; released on Koch International Classics in 1995.