On The Bookshelf A new biography of Aaron Copland details the life of the composer who gave Americans their own musical language. TheVoiCe . ofikinerica, The I .ife and NkOrk of an I :nemontoo %Ian )N\ Aaron Copland: A distinctive musical voice in American concert music. were disappointed. A new — and at nearly 700 pages, downright massive — study of the composer lifts the Copland veil and probes the psyche of America's most beloved musician. Authoritative, scrupulously researched and often gracefully written, Howard Pollack's Aaron Copland: The Life and Work of an Uncommon Man (Henry Holt and Copland, who died in 1990, is a ven- erated figure today, as he was during much of his life. In honor of the centen- nial of his birth this November, concerts is name is the very defini- are being planned all over the world. tion of American music. Still, few are acquainted with Even those with a passing Copland's personal side. He remains a interest in the arts know benign, avuncular personage Aaron Copland. For many Above: without a strong identity. Americans, Rodeo, Billy the Aaron Copland, His plain but docile visage, Appalachian Spring Kid and left, with with its hawk nose and pro- define their country's Leonard Bernstein, truding teeth, is a familiar music. circa 1980. sight, but the man behind Even director Spike Lee the face remains obscure. liberally sprinkled Copland himself was never the type Copland's music throughout his 1998 to spill his guts. His two-part autobi- cinematic ode to basketball, He Got ography was, he stressed, a musical declaring: "When I listen to his Game, biography. Those seeking a glimpse music, I hear America, and basketball into the private world of Copland is America." GEORGE BULANDA Special to the Jewish News 7/2 1999 86 Detroit Jewish News Company; $37.50) is an eloquent and much-needed examination. Pollack's portrayal, like Copland's music, is well structured and emotion- ally restrained, although the author's tone is a wee bit reverential. Pollack, a music professor at the University of Houston and a biograph- er of composers Walter Piston and John Alden Carpenter, possesses a sound musical background, but his critical eye isn't as sharp as one would like. He tends to regard Copland's music, even his dense later scores, with too much awe and too little objectivity. Pollack writes that Copland was by nature discreet, someone who believed that one's personal life, after all, was private. Rumors circulated about Copland — particularly his sexuality — but the composer was always clever to deflect questions about his personal affairs. Copland never invited scandal, being from the old school that empha- sized tact and decorum. Pollack addresses Copland's private life dispassionately and without judg- ment. The'chapter titled "Personal Affairs" should sate the appetite of the curious. Copland was indeed a homosexual, but Pollack avers that Copland never once disavowed his sexual identity, nor did he try to "cover" it by getting mar- ried, a common subterfuge among gay men in the homophobic climate of his day. As early as the 1920s, he accepted his homosexuality, possibly, the author suggests, as the result of therapy. "God made me the way I am," the composer philosophically commented. We learn that Copland had several homosexual affairs, often with much younger artists and composers. And in a rare bit of titillation, Pollack suggest:', that Copland and Leonard Bernstein may have engaged in nooky in the early 1940s. Some implied, often obliquely, that Copland ignored his Jewish heritage. Copland was born in Brooklyn, but came from Lithuanian Jewish stock. His parents emigrated from Eastern Europe and settled first in Scotland. Lt/ was there that the author believes the original family name of Kaplan became Copland in the heavily accent- ed Scottish burr. Pollack attests that Copland did nothing to disguise his heritage; he simply never was a traditionally reli- gious person. Although Jewish music sometimes surfaces in Copland's scores, such as in Vitebsk and Music for the Theatre, his chief objective was to forge an American vernacular in his music. That language included an amal- gam of genres, including jazz, folk songs, cowboy tunes and so on. Copland deliberately strove to create a singularly American identity, charged with vigor and rhythmic invention. Pollack may lose the reader in his / c` sometimes pedantic discussions of Copland's music, but there are fasci- nating areas of analysis that have been neglected until now — namely Copland's film music. Pollack writes intelligently and tellingly about Copland's special ability to write for movies, which included The Red Pony, The Heiress and Our Town.