Welcome Matt Spangler and Lucy Mauro to the Sound Garden blog!
In this post, discover the fascinating story of American 19th/20th century composer Margaret Ruthven Lang. Be sure to check out the podcast "The Ladies Speak" to learn more about Lang and other American women composers from this time period!
About
Matt Spangler is a writer and podcaster. His latest series, "The Ladies Speak", explores the lives and achievements of the great American women classical composers of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Lucy Mauro is a Grammy-nominated pianist and Associate Professor of Piano at West Virginia University. She has written on Margaret Lang for Choral Journal and The Bulletin of the Society for American Music.
A Dramatic Entrance: Shining a Light on an American Classical Pioneer
"Tea room" - Charles Dana Gibson
The high society women and men, in their tailor-mades, nipped shirtwaists, tailcoats and bowlers, paid scant attention to the slender and petite young woman, her hair tied back in a chignon, as she made her way nervously down the gaslit corridors of the Boston Music Hall to her balcony seat. Little did the patrons know that the woman who slunk low in her blue and white moreen chair, her head swimming with thoughts of the million little things that could go wrong with the evening’s performance, was about to make music history.
The young woman was Margaret Ruthven Lang, and it was the evening of April 8, 1893. Under the baton of Arthur Nikisch, her Dramatic Overture became the first piece composed by a woman performed by a major American symphony orchestra. The score does not survive – likely tossed onto the hearth during one of Lang’s periodic purges of her work – but the programme, which has been preserved, frames the piece in terms of influences by the great male composers of the time.
Margaret Ruthven Lang, 1900
“The dramatic overture,” the programme note begins, “shows the same general tendency to adhere to the spirit of the sonata form, with a very free interpretation of the letter of the law, that we find in many of Schumann’s symphonic movements”. The note goes on to say the “overture is scored for the classical ‘grand orchestra’, with trombones, big drum, and cymbals, but without bass-tuba, bass-clarinet, English horn, or any of the unusual instruments that go to make up the modern ‘Wagnerian’ orchestra. It is especially noticeable, too, that the stronger brass instruments (trumpets and trombones) have been reserved for special effects, and often do not figure at all in fortissimo passages. In this the composer has followed both Beethoven and Wagner in one of their most characteristic veins in instrumentation".
The performance was met with great enthusiasm from the crowd, who, before the players could resume with the Haydn, Tchaikovsky, and Dvořák works that filled out the rest of the bill, called back Nikisch three times. It would be another three years, however, before the Boston Symphony’s celebrated programming of Amy Beach’s Gaelic Symphony (Symphony in E minor, Op. 32).
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Amy Beach
Like Beach, her Second New England School friend and colleague, Lang’s star gradually rose over the American Romantic era. Fuelled by her connections to Wagner and Liszt (Lang’s father was renowned Boston conductor B.J. Lang), and private instruction from George Chadwick (later named director of the New England Conservatory), Lang published approximately 150 orchestral and chamber music works, piano solos, arias, and songs between 1887 and 1917 (and is believed to have written some 30 other works that, like the Dramatic Overture, were destroyed).
Her compositions were performed on both side of the Atlantic, including the 1889 Exposition Universelle in Paris, which featured several of her songs; the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, which featured the Witichis Overture; and an 1896 performance of the Armida aria for soprano by the Boston Symphony. She sold nearly 121,000 copies of the sheet music for Irish Love Song, penned in 1895, and by 1897, according to one account, she had “attained a position which puts her among the four leading women composers of the time,” the others being Beach, Cécile Chaminade and Augusta Holmès.
Lang abruptly quit composing in 1917, at the age of 50, stating modestly she “had nothing to say” at that point. An Episcopalian, she devoted much of her remaining 55 years writing religious pamphlets she called “Messages from God,” which she distributed around the world using royalties from her music sales. Four years before her retirement, Stravinsky ignited a seismic change in music in Paris, and the work of Romantics like Lang quickly fell out of fashion and faded into obscurity.
Lang’s extant compositions can be heard on Delos’ All the Heart of Me: The Choral Music of Margaret Ruthven Lang; Love is Everywhere – Songs of Margaret Ruthven Lang, Vol. 1; New Love Must Rise: Selected Songs of Margaret Ruthven Lang, Vol. II; and From the Unforgetting Skies: The Piano Music of Margaret Ruthven Lang.
Listen to Lang's "Starlight" here, performed by Lucy Mauro:
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