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Herbert
Elwell
Composer
1898-1974
Herbert Elwell was born in Minneapolis in 1898, the height of the
romantic era. One of the first American composers to study with
master teacher Nadia Boulanger in France, he wrote his most frequently
performed work, The Happy Hypocrite, in 1925, when he was
a fellow at the American Academy in Rome. Based on a story by Max
Beerbohm, the ballet music sparkled with the wit and charm that
characterized the composer and his music.
Throughout his creative career, Elwell constructed his compositions
with neoclassical clarity. But he was a romantic at heart. As a
young pianist, he accompanied his father, an amateur musician who
enjoyed singing parlor songs at home. Elwell once wrote that he
died a thousand deaths because of his father's preference
for sentimental ballads, such as Too-ra-loo-ra-loo-ra
and Roamin' in the Gloamin'. Yet, the composer's own
art songs are suffused with warm sentiment.
Attuned
to the meter and inflection of English-language poetry, Elwell excelled
at shaping melodies that perfectly fit words by Shakespeare, Robert
Frost, John Gould Fletcher and others. His lyrical tunes and tonal
harmonies put him at variance with the radical revolutionaries
of the present, wrote a Cleveland critic in 1946. Although
Elwell was aware that he was out-of-step with aggressive contemporary
innovations, he believed the pendulum of taste would swing back
to his preference for the sweeter sensibilities rooted in 19th-century
romanticism.
Among
Elwell's finest vocal works are Blue Symphony (1945) for
soprano and string quartet, Pastorale (1948), a setting of
Old Testament texts for soprano and orchestra, and The Forever
Young, (1953) a 30-minute ritual based on passionate
anti-war poems by Pauline Hanson. These works were inspired by Elwell's
muse, Cleveland soprano Marie Simmelink Kraft. In his Sunday columns
for the Plain Dealer, which he served as music critic for
32 years, the composer praised the soprano so effusively that executive
editor Philip W. Porter once admonished him to stop making love
to Mrs. Kraft in print. Elwell impishly replied, Would you
prefer that I make love to her out of print?
In
the 1930s, Elwell walked a fine line as Cleveland's leading composer,
influential music critic, composition teacher and program annotator
for the Cleveland Orchestra. A perceptive critic who was credited
with raising Cleveland's musical standards, he wrote reviews that
sometimes won him a frosty reception at Severance Hall. During the
reign of George Szell, Elwell did not hesitate to take the imperious
music director to task. In one review, he described Szell's Germanic
interpretation of Debussy's La Mer as Das Mer. Despite
the barbs, Szell respected Elwell as a composer, and he performed
his music at home and on tour. When Elwell retired from The Plain
Dealer in 1964, he referred to Szell as my friend. . .regardless
of what I may have said at one time or another. The following
year, Szell programmed The Happy Hypocrite on the Cleveland
Orchestra's tour to Russia and Western Europe.
Elwell's symphonic music was also championed by conductors Artur
Rodzinski, Leopold Stokowski, William Steinberg and Howard Hanson.
His chamber music was performed by leading soloists, including violinist
Sidney Harth, soprano Lois Marshall and pianists Arthur Loesser,
Beryl Rubinstein and Beveridge Webster. One of Elwell's earliest
pieces, Quintet for Piano and Strings (1924), won more praise
in Paris than George Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, which was
premiered on the same concert.
Elwell began his advanced music education at the University of Minnesota,
then studied with Swiss composer Ernest Bloch in New York before
traveling to France to attend the American Conservatory at Fontainebleau.
At the recommendation of Bloch, Elwell came to Cleveland in 1928
to teach composition and music theory at the Cleveland Institute
of Music. A faculty member there until 1945, he subsequently
taught for nine years at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music. He spent
summers teaching at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester,
New York, and recharging his batteries at Yaddo, the artists' community
in Saratoga Springs, New York. Among his pupils were Bain Murray,
Walter Aschaffenburg and Howard Whittaker. In the 1960s, Elwell
participated in the University of Southern California's Project
for the Training of Music Critics, the program that brought dance
and music critic Wilma Salisbury to The Plain Dealer.
Winner
of the first Cleveland Arts Prize for Music in 1961, Elwell also
received the Paderewski Prize, the Marjorie Peabody Waite Award
from the National Institute of Arts and Letters and honorary doctorates
from the University of Rochester and Western Reserve University.
Following his death in 1974, Elwell's widow Maria gave his manuscripts,
published scores and papers to the Cleveland State University Library.
In 1979, the catalogued materials were made available via the On-Line
Computer Library Center.
One
of the most enduring images of Elwell was penned in 1964 by a Plain
Dealer editorial writer, who characterized him as raconteur,
linguist, teacher, and, although Minneapolis-born, possessor of
a certain Old World charm that gives a vague impression that he
is carrying a walking stick and wearing an Inverness cape. Herb
Elwell. . .a man apart.
text by
Wilma Salisbury
Summer 2004
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