CSO show highlights legacy of Anderson

By Marc Shulgold, Rocky Mountain News

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

June 29 marks the 100th birthday of American composer Leroy (pronounced Le-ROY) Anderson, best known for such instantly recognizable pops favorites as Sleigh Ride, The Syncopated Clock, Blue Tango, The Typewriter and many others. On Saturday, Carl Topilow will lead the Colorado Symphony in a full evening of Anderson ’s music. Rocky music writer Marc Shulgold spoke with the composer’s widow, Eleanor, 89, and his son, Rolf, 55.

Anderson ’s biggest hits were written more than 50 years ago but are still played and enjoyed. Why is that?

Rolf: “There is a timeless quality to them, although this was very much music of its day (in the ’40s and ’50s). It became popular not as concert music or commercial music. People danced to it. Ballroom was big back then, and his music was suited to that. Things like Blue Tango. Early on, Dad played bass in a dance band.

“There was a time when pops programs were looked down upon by orchestras. But thanks to people like Arthur Fiedler (leader of the Boston Pops), the format became a staple. Fiedler liked Dad’s arrangements and encouraged him to compose. Dad was derided for wanting to write pop music. He loved ‘serious’ music but was drawn to music that would make people happy. He was a joyful person, with a great sense of humor.”

Eleanor: “His music was an expression of his love of life. He came out of the Harvard Band (which he directed), and that was a fun-loving group. There was something instantly likeable about his music. A lot of it was first played at recording sessions, and I remember how some of the musicians would leave the session whistling those new tunes.”

Perhaps his most popular song is Sleigh Ride. This past Christmas season, it was once again in the Top 10 on national radio airplay lists. How did that piece come into being?

Rolf: “He always thought of it as simply a winter piece, his response to Mozart’s Sleigh Ride. But there’s a funny story about how he came to write it. Mom and Dad had just moved to Woodbury ( Conn. ) in July of 1947. It was a particularly hot day, and as luck would have it, our spring had run dry. He was out looking for a water pipe — as far removed from composing as you can imagine — and the refrain just came to him. He didn’t compose at the piano. I think the piano tuner played it more than he did. Dad composed in his head, usually after supper, when he’d pace around the house trying out tunes in his head.”

Eleanor: “I think what helped make Sleigh Ride a hit was that during Christmas of 1948 — soon after it was premiered — the music was played in Macy’s holiday window display. It was true that he never sat at the piano to compose, because he felt that the fingers would simply fall into the same old patterns. So, he’d walk around, sometimes half-singing to himself. He’d never play a piece for me, though we might discuss a title.”

The Colorado Symphony concert includes plenty of favorites, but there are some rare works, such as the Piano Concerto (included in a new all-Anderson CD from Naxos ). Did he get frustrated that audiences only wanted to hear the hits?

Rolf: “Dad was always surprised by the popularity of some of his shorter works. He once said, ‘My music has gone beyond me.’  When his popularity slid (in the late ’60s), it did depress him. But his star rose after his death (in 1975). We weren’t sure how his music would move forward after he died. Then (pops conductors) Newton Wayland and Erich Kunzel came along, and then some CD re-issues and the Internet. Suddenly, we realized that his music was still being performed around the world.”

Eleanor: “When the Piano Concerto was premiered (in 1953), it was not well-received. So Leroy withdrew it, saying he wanted to revise the first movement, but he never did. We published it posthumously, and it’s getting a nice number of performances (Simon Tedeschi will play it with the CSO on Saturday). One thing is clear: This music is not going away. We know of about 80 ( Anderson ) concerts this year. There’s a big one in Kristianstad , Sweden , where Leroy’s father was born. I just may go to hear that one.”

Subscribe to the Rocky Mountain News

 

 


© Carl Topilow. Top photo of Carl conducting by Roger Mastroianni.
All Rights Reserved.