“Four Saints in Three Acts”
Music by Virgil Thomson; lyrics by Gertrude Stein
Performed by Virgil Thomson et al
Premiered Feb. 7, 1934
Recorded June 1947
1 hour, 47 minutes
A whimsical piece of pure music – as its libretto makes no sense.
The author of the piece was the famous writer, American
expatriate Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) She was known for her experimental, nonsensical,
repetitive literary creations. She used language for its sound qualities only,
meaning that her works have no plots and indeed no linearity. It consists of
repeated phrases, as in the opera’s opening:
“To know to know to love her so. Four saints prepare for
saints. It makes it well fish. Four saints it makes it well fish. Four saints
prepare for saints it makes it well well fish it makes it well fish prepare for
saints.”
And, later: “Saint Teresa seated and not standing half and
half of it and not half and half of it seated and not standing surrounded and
not seated and not seated and not standing and not surrounded not not
surrounded and not not not seated not seated not seated not surrounded not
seated and Saint Ignatius standing standing not seated Saint Teresa not
standing not standing and Saint Ignatius not standing standing surrounded as if
in once yesterday. In place of situations.”
She wrote the piece in 1927. In 1928, Virgil Thomson
(1896-1989) set it to music. Thomson, originally from Kansas City, moved to
Paris in 1925. There he studied and wrote music until 1940, when he returned to
America.
Thomson set the piece for many voices, including various
saints, two separate choruses, and a “Commere” and a “Compere.” The music is
open and upbeat, in chords remindful of those found in hymns. Since the words
make no sense, Thomson is free to create his own, quite beautiful chain of
solos, duets, and choruses, liberated from the need to make sense.
The opera was first performed in 1934, utilizing a Black
cast. Thirteen years later, many of the principals reunited with Thomson to
record the work for posterity. It’s a pleasant if nonsensical exercise in tunefulness.
The National Recording
Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in
the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Next time: Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around.