CHAPTER 13 | A MUSICAL REVOLUTIONARY: RUTH CRAWFORD SEEGER 311
In this and other compositions of
the 1930s and later, Copland found
a way to merge his modernist inter-
ests with music that appealed to
conservative tastes. Four large-scale
works of the period reveal a New
World stamp by borrowing Ameri-
can folk and popular melodies. In
two ballets about the West, Billy the
Kid (1938) and Rodeo (1942), cowboy
and western tunes appear. A Lincoln
Portrait (1942) for orchestra, featur-
ing a narrator who speaks words of
Abraham Lincoln, quotes Stephen
Foster’s “Camptown Races” and a
New England folk song, “Spring-
fi eld Mountain.” Appalachian Spring
(1944), a ballet set in rural Pennsylvania during the nineteenth century, contains
a set of variations on the Shaker tune “Simple Gifts.”
Thomson, Harris, and Copland in these years all belonged in the camp of stylis-
tic conservatism. Yet each had his own sound and approach, and each found ways
to advance his musical language in the direction of modernism without alienating
the general audience for music. The more conservative aspects of their music can
be understood as a response to the political and cultural mood of Depression-era
America. Similar political concerns, however, are also evident in one of the most
important ultramodernist composers of the 1930s: Ruth Crawford Seeger.
A MUSICAL REVOLUTIONARY:
RUTH CRAWFORD SEEGER
In 1914 a thirteen-year-old girl in Jacksonville, Florida, wrote a poem in which
she imagined her future as a novelist, a poet, and a musician not only perform-
ing on “a great opera stage” but also “singing to children my own.” Though she
would produce no novels or poems as an adult, young Ruth Crawford seemed
somehow aware of her future as a composer, an author of books of musical
arrangements, and a mother and stepmother to three important musicians. Her
adolescent poem also anticipated the tug-of-war between professional and fam-
ily demands that would shape her career.
W hile studying piano and composition at the American Conservatory of
Music in Chicago during the 1920s, Crawford heard lectures and concerts by
visiting musicians Henry Cowell and Dane Rudhyar (see chapter 12), and she
began writing piano pieces inspired by Rudhyar’s mystical liberation of dis-
sonance. When some of her pieces were included on League of Composers
and Copland-Sessions programs, Crawford was drawn into the circle of New
York ultramodernists. In 1929 she moved to New York to study with Charles
Seeger, and in 1930–31 she lived in Berlin and Paris, where she met such leading
European modernists as Alban Berg and Béla Bartók. By the time she married
Aaron Copland on Composers and Audiences
in the 1930s
T
he old “special” public of the modern-music concerts [of the
1920s] had fallen away, and the conventional concert public
continued apathetic or indifferent to anything but the established
classics. It seemed to me that we composers were in danger of working
in a vacuum. Moreover, an entirely new public for music had grown
up around the radio and phonograph. It made no sense to ignore them
and to continue writing as if they did not exist. I felt it was worth the
effort to see if I couldn’t say what I had to say in the simplest possible
terms.
In their own words
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