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3 - Entropic Suffering and Ars Combinatoria: 1962–70

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Summary

So [World War II] was in the atmosphere when my husband wrote the Third Symphony. The war was so ferocious, and what brought it about was even more ferocious.

—Gene Rochberg (2013)

If one were only to consider his professional achievements, the years 1956 to 1969 could easily qualify as the most productive of Rochberg's entire career. In addition to enjoying the positive critical reception of three major works—the Symphony no. 2 (1956), Contra Mortem et Tempus (1965), and Music for the Magic Theater (1965)—he also received two Guggenheim Fellowships a decade apart (1956 and 1966), was awarded the prestigious Naumberg Recording Award in 1961, and earned an academic position at the University of Pennsylvania that allowed him to devote more time to composing. Over the course of these thirteen years, Rochberg completed twenty-five works, including four major orchestral compositions, three works for small chamber orchestra, nine instrumental chamber works, five settings for vocalists, and four solo keyboard works, including the well-known Nach Bach (1966). It was a prolific period of accomplishment that would have been the envy of any young composer entering his prime.

Privately, however, his emotional world felt as if it were spiraling out of control. As he noted in his autobiography, the “war experience had etched itself deep into my soul, and afterward I lived with an ever-sharpening awareness of … the abyss I saw, in a world coming apart at the seams.” In 1956, directly after the completion of his Second Symphony, Rochberg struggled with a foreboding sense of doom that adversely impacted his ability to compose. The political state of the world—specifically the collapse of colonial power in Egypt—had made him fearful for Western culture and the positive cultural values he believed it espoused. “The West is breaking up. We are the last generations,” he lamented in his journal. “What an agony to live between music and the world. In music we order the conditions of the world. We free ourselves from bonds, from restraints the world imposes on us as humans.”

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George Rochberg, American Composer
Personal Trauma and Artistic Creativity
, pp. 68 - 99
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2019

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