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Symphony No. 1 (1999)
Although he has been composing for barely ten years, Michael Hersch has
already established a reputation as one of America's most talented young
composers, all the more remarkable as he didn't compose a single note until
he was 19. Hersch had no idea what he wanted to do in life until his
younger brother, a horn-player with the Singapore Symphony Orchestra, played
him a tape of Sir Georg Solti conducting the Chicago Symphony in a
performance of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. Hersch watched the tape hundreds
of times, noting, "It was like someone had opened a hydrant valve full
force inside me, and everything in my whole life came gushing out."
Hersch went on to study at the Moscow Conservatory in Russia and the Peabody
Conservatory in Baltimore, as well as private studies with John Corigliano,
George Rochberg and Crhistopher Rouse. He won the Morton Gould Young
Composer Awards, presented by the ASCAP Foundation, in 1999.
Hersch has composed orchestra works, pieces for chamber ensemble and solo
instrumental works. His most recent works include ...and I am plunged
into darkness, commissioned and first performed by the Colorado Symphony
Orchestra under Marin Alsop, and Ashes of Memory, commissioned by the
Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and introduced on January 14, 2000 under music
director Mariss Jansons. His latest chamber work is a horn quartet
commissioned by the Orchestra of St. Luke's and introduced in New York on
April 19, 2000. In 1998 the Cabrillo Music Festival performed the world
premiere of Hersch's Prelude and Fugue.
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The Dallas Symphony Orchestra commissioned Hersch's Symphony No. 1 with
funding from the Susan W. Rose Fund for Music. It was composed between
February and May 1999 and introduced on November 18, 1999 by the Dallas
Symphony under Alan Gilbert. The Cabrillo Music Festival performance is a
West Coast premiere. The following comments are taken from the Dallas
performance.
My works thus far have focused on darker, more painful human emotions. Pieces such as Recollections of Fear, Hope and Discontent, or On Sorrow, Anger and Reflection have been direct reactions to something that happened externally in my life. The symphony is the opposite. This is an expression of the kind of things I've wrestled with internally, but it's also a summation of sorts. I look at it as the end of a period of my music that's unrelenting, delving into the most painful and dark places of my psyche. There are violent and frenzied outbursts, sustained allegros, but also quite a big of reflective, slow and melancholy passages.
I perceive the symphony as a dense canvas, both in the complexity of the
ideas and in the way those ideas build upon one another in layers. Within
the first five minutes, four key musical building blocks are set forth: the
opening chimes in a dissonant minor ninth; a pulsing of open fifths in the
lower strings, rather like a funeral march; an elongated first theme; and a
combination of the funeral march with a condensed version of the first theme
stated by flute and first violins. Everything in the piece comes from those
ideas, even the chorales that come later.
At the head of the score there is a quatrain by the Russian poet Ovsip Mandelstam:
not recorded Program notes by Lawrence Duckles ![]() |
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