Mass in E-flat (Beach)

Amy Beach was the first major American female composer, and the Mass in E, Op. 5, was her first acclaimed success. It was the first mass written by an American woman. The Mass is a 75-minute work for chorus, quartet, organ, and orchestra.[1]

Composition

Beach began work on her Mass in E in 1886.

The Handel and Haydn Society premiered the Mass in Boston in 1892.[2] The same group had performed Luigi Cherubini's Deuxième Messe Solenelle in D minor in 1883 and played selections from Bach's Mass in B minor in 1887. There are parallels in overall structure, and in some phrases, between Beach's Mass and Cherubini's.[3] Beach's Mass was not performed again until the 1980s. It has been recorded (see the Discography).

The Mass is in five sections: Kyrie, Gloria in 4 movements, Credo in 4 movements, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei. Written in a Romantic style, the Mass is rich in harmony and tonality. It was praised for its contrast in instrumentation and the solos for harp, cello, English horn, and oboe.

Beach was apparently unfamiliar with how Latin is stressed, as accents in the music may not agree with those in expected in words such as 'altissimus'.[4]

Influences

The Kyrie

In movements of the Gloria, most prominently in the "Quoniam", Beach uses characteristic double-dotted rhythms - which also appear in Cherubini's Kyrie.[5] These rhythms give a march-like quality to the movement; they are paired with trumpets and drums to evoke a sense of the church militant. Beach's use of modulating to third-related keys can be seen in "Laudamus te", in which she uses the keys of E major, G major, E minor, and C major. Beach frequently uses C major to indicate heaven or light, and it is used appropriately here, referring to divinity.

Reception

For the premiere in 1892, there were reviews in 27 newspapers, 18 in Boston and 9 "out of town". One criticism of note was that the opening solo trio in the "Laudamus te" had "pitch and ensemble problems".[6] These may have been due to insufficient instrumental support, or just the fact that this was a first performance.[7] In general, critics agreed that the work placed Beach "among the foremost rank of American composers".[7]

One recording of Beach's Mass, by the Michael May Festival Chorus in 1989, was not done with a full orchestra. The performance was criticized for inaccurate tempos, inappropriate rearrangements, and overall interpretation.[8] No scholarly reviews have been made of the other recording, from 1995, by the Stow Festival Chorus and Orchestra.

Discography

  • Amy Beach: Grand Mass in E major. Performed by the Michael May Festival Chorus. Compact disc, 1989, Newport Classic 60008
  • Amy Beach: Grand Mass in E major. Performed by the Stow Festival Chorus and Orchestra. Albany Records, 1995, TROY 179

References

  1. American Composers.org
  2. H. Earle Johnson, Hallelujah, Amen!: The Story of the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston (Boston: B. Humphries, 1965), 162-4
  3. Block, 1998, p. 65
  4. Block 1998, p. 67
  5. Block, 1998, p. 65
  6. Block, 1998, p. 70
  7. 1 2 Block,1998, p. 71
  8. Block, 1992.

Sources

  • Fried Block, Adrienne: Amy Beach, Passionate Victorian: The Life and Work of an American Composer, 1867-1944. New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
  • Fried Block, Adrienne: "St. Peter: an oratorio and Grand Mass in E Major" (in Record Reviews) American Music, Vol. 10, No. 2 (Summer, 1992), pp. 229–232. (St. Peter: an Oratorio is a work by John Knowles Paine, 1839-1906)
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