Grand Pianola Music
Grand Pianola Music is a minimalist composition by American composer John Adams. It was written in 1982 and premiered by the San Francisco Symphony in San Francisco's Japan Center.
The work is in three movements:
- Part 1A (fast)
- Part 1B (slow)
- 'On The Dominant Divide' (fast)
It is a typical minimalist work in that it is distinctly tonal, has a slow harmonic rhythm and stays in harmonically stable areas, and has a steady regular rhythmic pulse. As with many compositions in this genre, it is creative through its formal architecture, dramatically changing in mood and texture throughout its 30-minute length, especially in the first and third parts which both rise to a succession of highly dramatic crescendoes.
The ensemble is a mixture of double woodwind, double brass with one tuba, three percussionists, three wordless female singers, and two pianos.
The work's inspiration was a mixture of two elements. At the time of its composition, the composer was beginning to pay more attention to the subject matter of his subconscious, such as dreams. In one dream, he describes driving along Interstate 5, when he was approached from behind by two black limousines. As the vehicles drew up beside him, they transformed into two incredibly long Steinway pianos, giving off volleys of E-flat and B-flat major arpeggios. It reminded him of walking down the hallways of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music, where he used to hear students practicing the piano, creating a "sonic blur of twenty or more pianos playing Chopin, Beethoven's Emperor Concerto, Hanon, Rachmaninov and much more." An example of this is clearly audible during Part I of the work, when the two pianos enter as soloists for the first time. Several of his other works, including his large-scale orchestral work, Harmonielehre, were inspired by similar visions.
The piece is at times very delicate but makes full use of the dynamic capabilities of its large ensemble in the fast movements. The woodwinds remain quiet for most of the time, gently repeating the rhythmic pulses while the two pianos play waves of arpeggios. The three female voices (described in the notes to the full score of the work as "the sirens") sing wordless harmony, at some times singing very long slow triads over the chugging ensemble, at other times imitating the short fast notes of the winds and brass.
Critical reception and history
Grand Pianola Music was booed by a significant proportion of the audience at its premiere. According to the composer,"True, it was a very shaky performance, and the piece came at the end of a long series of concerts, many of which featured serialist works from the Columbia Princeton school....Grand Pianola Music must have seemed like a smirking truant with a dirty face, in need of a severe spanking." Despite the reaction, Adams maintains that the piece was not intended to "thumb its nose" at the rest of the "high art" pieces being performed at the event. The composer admits being alarmed by the severity of its reception. Retrospectively, Adams finds that he is "impressed by its boldness".
The piece has enjoyed a successful performance history, being one of his most popular works from that period. It has also been recorded by several different artists, two of them in the presence of the composer.
Grand Pianola Music appears in the Modern Era soundtrack of the computer game Civilization IV, along with several other pieces by Adams.
External links
- Article on Grand Pianola Music on the composer's home page
- Grand Pianola Music page at its publisher, G. Schirmer
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