American Composers Orchestra
America in Weimar: On the Margins
Part of: Fall of the Weimar Republic: Dancing on the Precipice
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Performers
American Composers Orchestra
Rei Hotoda, Conductor and Piano
Chrystal E. Williams, Mezzo-Soprano
Jerod Impichcha̲achaaha' Tate, Narrator and Vocals
Felipe Hostins, Accordion
Alexandra Cuesta, Video Design
Program
ANTHEIL Jazz Symphony
ELLINGTON "Sophisticated Lady" (arr. M. Gould)
WEILL/BRECHT "Pirate Jenny" from The Threepenny Opera (arr. Felipe Hostins; World Premiere)
JOHN GLOVER / KELLEY ROURKE Right Now (World Premiere)
ELLINGTON "Solitude" (arr. M. Gould)
TONIA KO Her Land, Expanded (World Premiere, co-commissioned by Carnegie Hall)
JEROD IMPICHCHA̲ACHAAHA' TATE "Clans" from Lowak Shoppala' (NY Premire)
Event Duration
The printed program will last approximately 90 minutes, including one 20-minute intermission.Mix and Mingle
Join us for a free drink at a post-concert reception in Zankel Hall’s Parterre Bar.
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This Concert in Context
The 1920s bore witness to an explosion of interest in jazz, especially in Germany where many listeners and composers alike could not get enough of America’s latest cultural export. The experimentation and improvisation inherent to the genre lent itself all too well to a cultural mood of Weimar Germany that prized modernist innovation and iconoclasm. Determined to make a name for himself as a modernist composer par excellence, American George Antheil could think of no better place to settle than Berlin and spent a year in the German capital in 1922. Antheil’s Jazz Symphony would appear three years later and receive its world premiere at Carnegie Hall in 1927.
Musical influences ran in both directions. When Kurt Weill fled Germany upon the Nazi seizure of power in 1933 and settled in New York City, he immediately threw himself into working within American idioms, such as musical theater. His song “My Ship” from the musical Lady in the Dark dates from the beginning of 1941, at a time when America remained firmly on the sidelines of the Second World War unfolding in Europe and Asia. Musical groups like the internationally renowned Comedian Harmonists performed countless works by American jazz composers like Duke Ellington, whose standards “Sophisticated Lady” and “Solitude” appeared in 1932 and 1934, respectively.
—Brendan Fay, author of Classical Music in Weimar Germany