Borges Music – Robert Parris
- At September 18, 2019
- By Great Quail
- In Borges
- 0
Robert Parris (1924–1999)
American composer Robert Parris was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and attended the University of Pennsylvania before enrolling in Juilliard. He studied under Otto Luening and Aaron Copland, but developed a highly individual style known for musical color and virtuosic demands on the players. Parris’ violin sonata is considered quite difficult, and composer-directors of CRI believed his trombone concerto was unplayable until they heard a recording of it! His most famous piece is Concerto for Five Kettledrums and Orchestra, composed in 1958 and championed by Mtislav Rostropovich.
Borges-Related Works
The Book of Imaginary Beings (1972)
Based on The Book of Imaginary Beings by Jorge Luis Borges and Margarita Guerro, this chamber work is a suite of seven musical portraits and a final reprise.
The Book of Imaginary Beings
On CRI 792, American Masters: Robert Parris
The Book of Imaginary Beings (1972)
For flute, violin, cello, piano, celesta, and percussion.
Track Listing
1. Concerto for Trombone – I. Nocturne (8:46)
2. Concerto for Trombone – II. Perpetual Motion (7:56)
3. Concerto for Percussion, Violin, Cello & Piano – I. Grave (8:26)
4. Concerto for Percussion, Violin, Cello & Piano – II. Allegro (4:16)
5. Concerto for Percussion, Violin, Cello & Piano – IIII. Cantabile ed agitato (5:22)
6. Fantasy & Fugue for Solo Cello – I. Fantasy (6:20)
7. Fantasy & Fugue for Solo Cello – II. Fugue (3:43)
8. The Book of Imaginary Beings – I. Amphisbaena (1:18)
9. The Book of Imaginary Beings – II. The Rain Bird (2:34)
10. The Book of Imaginary Beings – III. A King of Fire and His Steed (4:59)
11. The Book of Imaginary Beings – IV. A Bao a Qu (3:22)
12. The Book of Imaginary Beings – V. The Satyrs (3:53)
13. The Book of Imaginary Beings – VI. The Double (2:29)
14. The Book of Imaginary Beings – VII. Sirens (3:25)
15. The Book of Imaginary Beings – VIII. Amphisbaena Retroversa (1:21)
Musicians
Dorothy Skidmore, Flute
Joel Berman, Violin
William Skidmore, Cello
Evelyn Garvey, Piano and Celesta
Ronald Barnett, Percussion
Thomas Jones, Percussion
The Book of Imaginary Beings was released on CRI CD 792 as part of the “American Masters” series.
Review
As I was listening to The Book of Imaginary Beings, my wife—a fan of Italian opera as well as Shostakovich, so someone familiar with the extremes of tonal composition—walked into the room and laughed, “This is crazy music!” She returned a little while later and said, “Well, this is beautiful. It’s not the same work, is it?”
Yes, it was the same work, and she was right—this is crazy music, and also beautiful music, and occasionally both at once. A suite composed of eight pieces, Robert Parris’ The Book of Imaginary Beings is inspired by the fantastical creatures of its namesake, and the results are as imaginative and inventive as Borges’ original. Wisely, Parris treats his imaginary beings as “symbols of inner reality.” This allows him to explore states of mental being rather than simply crafting soundtrack cues. Parris has a reputation as an innovative composer with a highly individual voice and a generous sense of humor, and The Book of Imaginary Beings gives him the opportunity to indulge his diverse talents. Each of these animated profiles is a musical gem, perfectly cut and brilliantly colored. All elements of the ensemble are balanced marvelously, whether playing together or matched into intimate pairings.
Parris has named the violin his favorite instrument, and it plays a dominate role throughout The Book of Imaginary Beings, whether providing a cohesive narrative or engaging other instruments in playful duets. It is the first instrument heard in the suite, its frantic sawing cutting loose the “Amphisbaena,” the two-headed snake of Greek antiquity. An explosively kinetic piece, each instrument comes to life in a flickering maze of sound, bringing to mind the orchestrated chaos of Edgar Varèse or the later Frank Zappa.
This energy is passed on to “The Rain Bird,” a whirling dance of violin and flute that ends in a rain of chiming notes. The next piece is the longest, “A King of Fire and His Steed.” A mysterious melodic line is introduced by the violin and picked up by the flute. Conjuring the ghostly horseman from William Morris’ poem The Ring Given to Venus, violin and flute weave around each other like cold, spectral flames above a cantering percussion. “A Bao a Qu” is even more ethereal. One of Borges’ most abstract creatures, this spirit of possession and enlightenment is embodied by the violin, floating above a subdued drumbeat and the hazy meanderings of a celesta. Otherworldly and beautiful, it feels like a musical apparition, a mesmerizing cloud of ectoplasm that vanishes in a shimmer of cymbals.
A gong announces the arrival of “The Satyrs.” As a flute unspools a lazy and formless melody, spasms of percussion serve as reminders of the satyr’s bestial nature. While it may be too simple to reduce the piece to syrinx and hoofbeat, it’s the most obviously programmatic piece in the suite, and ends with a listless tapering off—perhaps these satyrs succumbed to wine rather than lust? “The Double” announces itself with a quick drumroll. The cello and piano play the melody from Saint-Saëns’ “The Swan,” itself a creature from another musical suite, The Carnival of Animals. This lovely melody is cheerfully battered by the rest of the orchestra—shrieking strings, tubular bells, stuttering drumbeats. Charles Ives’ Putnam Camp marching band turned loose in a nineteenth century salon, “The Double” is a cheeky study of unresolved oppositions. In the end, neither order nor chaos are triumphant, the only resolution being a mutual agreement to wind down together.
The spirited frenzy of “The Double” is followed by the languid timelessness of “The Sirens.” Once again the violin offers the principal melodic line, floating above an eerie soundscape of celesta and flute. A spell of dreamy paralysis, “The Sirens” evokes a strange mixture of beauty and dread, Ulysses lashed helplessly to the mast as his sailors succumb to a fatal illusion. The Book of Imaginary Beings concludes with “Amphisbaena Retroversa,” the introductory piece played in reverse, closing the loop with a musical palindrome.
Liner Notes
Liner Notes from the 1999 CRI CD
Just as imaginary beings are, almost by definition, symbols of inner reality, the eight pieces that constitute The Book of Imaginary Beings are expressions of elusive, vague, mysterious and occasionally mystical states of feeling evoked by associative imagery. Its literary source is the book of the same name by Jorge Luis Borges—a compendium, really, of the more illustrious creatures of the mind. Here are the superscriptions to the several movements, (and occasional bracketed remarks by the composer) adapted from Borges’s bestiary:
I. AMPHISBAENA. “The amphisbaena is a serpent having two heads, the one in its proper place and the other in its tail; and it can bite with both… Amphisbaena, in Greek, means ‘goes both ways.’’ [The ferocious amphisbaena’s end is not really its beginning: its shape is a line, not a circle. But since this opening movement reappears in retrograde as No. 8, it is a musical palindrome as well as a bestial one, which is, after all, a very good reason for being an imaginary being.]
II. THE RAIN BIRD. “When rain is needed, Chinese farmers have at their disposal…the bird called the ‘shang yang’… The tradition runs that the bird drew water from the rivers with its beak and blew it out as rain on the thirsting field.”
III. A KING OF FIRE AND HIS STEED. “This almost unimaginable fancy was attempted by William Morris in the tale ‘The Ring Given to Venus’…
As a white flame his visage shown,
Sharp, clear-cut as a face of stone;
But flickering flame, not flesh it was;
And over it such looks did pass
Of wild desire, and pain, and fear,
As in his people’s faces were,
But tenfold fiercer…
IV. A BAO A QU. “There has lived since the beginning of time a being sensitive to the many shades of the human soul. It lies dormant…until at the approach of a person some secret life is touched off in it, and deep within the creature an inner light begins to glow.” [The poetical source for the almost constant drumbeat lies in the inanimate being brought to life—its heart made to pulsate. The more prosaic source was the beating in my clogged ears during a bad cold.]
V. THE SATYRS. “Satyrs were thickly covered with hair and had short horns, pointed ears, active eyes, and hooked noses. They were lascivious and fond of their wine. They set ambushes for nymphs…and their instrument was the flute.”
VI. THE DOUBLE. “The ancient Egyptians believed that the Double, the ‘ka,’ was a man’s exact counterpart, having his same walk and his same dress. Not only men, but gods and beasts…had their ‘ka.’ In Yeats’s poems the Double is…the one who complements us, the one we are not nor will ever become.” [This piece is a gloss on a pretty piece by Saint-Saëns: his music represents the bird’s superficial beauty; mine, its latent inner ferocity, both aspects in collage. The white swan and the black swan, as it were.]
VII. SIRENS. “The Odyssey tells that the Sirens attract and shipwreck seamen, and that Ulysses, in order to hear their song and yet remain alive, plugged the ears of his oarsmen…and had himself lashed to the mast…In the sixth century, a Siren was caught and baptized in northern Wales…”
VIII. AMPHISBAENA RETROVERSA.
The Book of Imaginary Beings was written in 1971–72 for the players who are heard on this recording, and who gave the first performance on May 7, 1972 at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. during the American Music Festival under the direction of Richard Bales.
Interview Excerpts
From a Robert Parris interview conducted by Bruce Duffie in 1988
Parris: I’ve written some funny music, some very funny music. There’s a piece you have on a record, which is No. 6 from The Book of Imaginary Beings is called The Double. When I wrote that piece, I read the superscription that is appended to it, and it’s actually one of the fables of Borges in his book of the same name, and apparently animals, just as people, have two sides to themselves. [Jorge Francisco Isidoro Luis Borges KBE (24 August 1899—14 June 1986), was an Argentine short-story writer, essayist, poet and translator, and a key figure in Spanish-language literature.] The Double represents the opposite nature from this obvious self. Whether it’s your true self or not, no one knows. The first thing I thought of was how could I do this in music, and I thought of the silly Swan of Camille Saint-Saëns, and how this blithe creature sits practically motionless on the water, but is so idyllic. But the fact is everybody knows that there’s a lot of aggression to that animal. It’s really a mean beast, so don’t tangle with any swans. So I put together my idea of the ferocity of the swan, and I simply copied over, note for note, the original Saints-Saëns, not abrogating nor breaking any copyright laws, I assume. Actually it wasn’t quite the original because he wrote it for two pianos, and I have it played by one. I can’t hear it today without laughing. It’s one of the funniest things I’ve ever heard in my life. So yes, I hope my music is sometimes funny, and sometimes entertaining in the light sense, and lots of times otherwise.
Duffie: Tell me more about The Book of Imaginary Beings.
Parris: Well, that’s a little difficult. I tend to forget pieces the day after I write them.
Duffie: OK… Is it something that must be played always complete, or can we play a few of them?
Parris: I don’t see why you couldn’t play a few of them. I’ve never heard it done like that, but there’s certainly nothing in the way. The last movement, Amphisbaena Retroversa, is the first movement absolutely backwards—with a couple of tiny exceptions because it simply couldn’t be arranged like that. That was symbolic because the Amphisbaena is this animal who not exactly has two heads, but it has teeth in its head and its tail. It was a kind of living and breathing palindrome, you might say, so that was symbolic. It would eat you up with either end, so it should be able to go backwards and forwards. What surprised me, at least in this performance, the running it through backwards was slightly more successful than the original. I don’t know why that should be. It may have been after something like seven or eight hours of recording time, everybody was so happy to get it out of the way, so they simply played it better and said, “Come on, let’s go out for dinner.” [Laughs] I remember this was a long, long session we had at the University of Maryland, but the players were just marvelous, and they wanted to do it over and over and over again to get things exactly right, which they did.
Additional Information
The Book of Imaginary Beings, Parts 1-4 — You can listen to the first half of Parris’ suite on YouTube.
The Book of Imaginary Beings, Parts 5-8 — You can listen to the second half of Parris’ suite on YouTube.
ACA Parris Page — The American Composer’s Alliance maintains a small Robert Parris page with details on his work.
Wikipedia Parris Page — Wikipedia maintains a small page on Robert Parris.
Parris Interview — Conducted on 22 October 1988 by Bruce Duffie, and the source of the interview excerpt above. Among other things, Parris and Duffie discuss The Book of Imaginary Beings.
Complete Liner Notes — New World Records has a PDF of the complete packaging of the 1999 CRI compact disc that features The Book of Imaginary Beings.
The Ring Given to Venus — William Morris’ poem from which Borges took “A King of Fire and His Steed.”
The Swan — From Camille Saint-Saëns’ suite Le Carnaval des Animaux, this pretty piece forms the template for Parris’ “The Double.”
Author: Allen B. Ruch
Last Modified: 19 September 2019
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