Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T03:44:24.740Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Porgy and Bess: “An American Wozzeck

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2007

Abstract

George Gershwin greatly admired Alban Berg and his opera Wozzeck. He visited Berg in Vienna; the score he owned of Wozzeck was reputedly one of his prize possessions; and he traveled to Philadelphia in 1931 to attend the American premiere. This study argues that Gershwin's Porgy and Bess is heavily indebted to Berg's Wozzeck. The debts primarily involve structural processes—understanding structure as patterns of discrete events shared by the two operas. Motives and chords play a small role in the discussion, taking their place alongside musical events that range from the large—a fugue or a lullaby—to the small—a pedal, an ostinato, or some detail of counterpoint. Beyond the presence in both operas of a lullaby, a fugue, a mock sermon, and an upright piano, the greater relevance of these parallels and others is to be found in the ways in which Gershwin situated them in comparable musical contexts. Evidence, in the form of an overlooked interview and a previously unknown recollection by one of Gershwin's friends, supports this argument and leads to questions about how we are to understand Gershwin's use of Wozzeck.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© 2007 The Society for American Music

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

This article has grown out of my paper “Why ‘It Ain't Necessarily Soul’: On Porgy's Debts to Wozzeck,” read at the annual meeting of the American Musicological Society, Seattle, 2004. I derived the title from Richard Crawford's “It Ain't Necessarily Soul: Gershwin's Porgy and Bess as a Symbol,” Anuario Interamericano de Investigacion Musical 8 (1972), 17–38. Crawford surveys the rocky critical reception of Gershwin's American folk opera, examining the work from the standpoint of several critics who for various reasons—artistic, cultural, political–found the work lacking, especially with regard to its portrayals of African American life. My analytical arguments have been greatly buttressed by comments and assistance from Richard Crawford, Raymond Knapp, William Rosar, Wayne Shirley, and Lawrence Stewart. I am grateful to them all.Every effort has been made to secure necessary permissions to reproduce copyrighted material in this work. If any omissions are brought to our notice, we will be happy to include appropriate acknowledgments on reprinting in any subsequent edition.

References

Abbate Carolyn. “Tristan in the Composition of Pelléas.” 19th-Century Music 5/2 (Autumn 1981): 11741.
Armitage Merle, ed. 1938. George Gershwin. New York: Longmans, Green & Co.
Berg Alban. 1990 Wozzeck, English National Opera Guide 42, trans. Eric Blackall and Vida Harford. London: J. Calder.
Brisk Barry. “Leopold Stokowski and Wozzeck: An American Premiere in 1931.” Opera Quarterly 5/1 (Spring 1987): 7182.
Brodsky Warren. “Joseph Schillinger (1895–1943): Music Science Promethean.” American Music 21/1 (Spring 2003): 4573.
Brown Maurice. “Suggesting a Dramatic Declaration of Independence.” In Sayler, Revolt in the Arts: A Survey of the Creation, Distribution and Appreciation of Art in America, 2059.
Crawford Richard. 1972It Ain't Necessarily Soul: Gershwin's Porgy and Bess as a Symbol.” Anuario Interamericano de Investigacion Musical 8: 1738.Google Scholar
Forte Allen. “Reflections Upon the Gershwin-Berg Connection.” The Musical Quarterly 83/2 (Summer 1999): 15068.
Gershwin George. “The Composer in the Machine Age.” In Sayler, Revolt in the Arts: A Survey of the Creation, Distribution and Appreciation of Art in America, 26469.
Gershwin George. 1930Making Music.” Sunday World Magazine (New York), 4 May. Repr. in Suriano, Gershwin in His Time: A Biographical Scrapbook, 1919–1937, 77.Google Scholar
Gershwin George. 1935Rhapsody in Catfish Row: Mr. Gershwin Tells the Origin and Scheme for His Music in That New Folk Opera Called ‘Porgy and Bess.”’ New York Times, 20 October. Repr. in Armitage, George Gershwin, 7277.Google Scholar
Gilbert Steven. 1995. The Music of Gershwin. New Haven: Yale University Press
Goldberg Isaac. 1936. George Gershwin and American Music: From Tin Pan Alley to Opera House and Symphony Hall. Girard, Kans.: Haldeman-Julius Publications
Hamm Charles. 1999. “Towards a New Reading of Gershwin.” In The Gershwin Style: New Looks at the Music of George Gershwin, ed. Wayne Schneider, 318. New York: Oxford University Press,
Hamm Charles. “The Theatre Guild Production of Porgy and Bess.” Journal of the American Musicological Society 40/3 (Autumn 1987): 495532.
Johnson John A. 1996Gershwin's ‘American Folk Opera’: The Genesis, Style, and Reputation of ‘Porgy and Bess’ (1935).” Ph.D. diss., Harvard University.
Kimball Robert, and Alfred Simon. 1973. The Gershwins. New York: Atheneum
Knapp Raymond. 2005. The American Musical and the Formation of National Identity. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press
Levant Oscar. 1940. A Smattering of Ignorance. New York: Doubleday, Doran & Co.
Liebling Leonard. Untitled essay. In Armitage, George Gershwin, 12325.
Metzler David‘A Wall of Darkness Dividing the World’: Blackness and Whiteness in Louis Gruenberg's The Emperor Jones.” Cambridge Opera Journal 7/1 (March 1995): 5572.
Nauert Paul. “Theory and Practice in Porgy and Bess: The Gershwin-Schillinger Connection.” The Musical Quarterly 78/1 (Spring 1994): 933.
Perle George. 1980. The Operas of Alban Berg. Vol. 1, Wozzeck. Berkeley: University of California Press
Peyser Joan. 1993. The Memory of All That: The Life of George Gershwin. New York: Simon & Schuster
Rayno Don. 2003. Paul Whiteman: Pioneer in American Music. Vol. 1, 1890–1930. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press
Reich Willi. 1952A Guide to Wozzeck.The Musical Quarterly 38/1: 121.Google Scholar
Reynolds Christopher. 2003. Motives for Allusion: Context and Content in Nineteenth-Century Music. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press
Rosar William. 1996 Letter to the editor. The Musical Quarterly 80/1 (Spring): 18284.
Sayler Oliver M., ed. 1930. Revolt in the Arts: A Survey of the Creation, Distribution and Appreciation of Art in America. New York: Brentano's
Schneider Wayne, ed. 1999. The Gershwin Style: New Looks at the Music of George Gershwin. New York: Oxford University Press
Shirley Wayne. “‘Rotating’ Porgy and Bess.” In Schneider, The Gershwin Style: New Looks at the Music of George Gershwin, 2134.
Schiff David. 1997 Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Starr Lawrence. 1986Gershwin's ‘Bess, You Is My Woman Now’: The Sophistication and Subtlety of a Great Tune.” The Musical Quarterly 72/4: 42948.Google Scholar
Starr Lawrence. “Toward a Reevaluation of Gershwin's Porgy and Bess.” American Music 2/1 (Spring 1984): 2537.
Suriano Gregory R., ed. 1998. Gershwin in His Time: A Biographical Scrapbook, 1919–1937. New York: Gramercy Books
Stutsman Grace May. 1935Gershwin's Porgy and Bess Produced.” Musical America, 10 October.Google Scholar