Aaron Copland’s Fanfare For The Common Man (1942)

In May 1942, soon after the Unit­ed States had entered World War II after Pearl Har­bor, F D Roosevelt’s Vice Pres­i­dent James A Wal­lace deliv­ered the speech of his life, in which he cast a future world peace as mean­ing “a bet­ter stan­dard of liv­ing for the com­mon man, not mere­ly in the Unit­ed States and Eng­land, but also in India, Rus­sia, Chi­na, and Latin America–not mere­ly in the Unit­ed Nations, but also in Ger­many and Italy and Japan”

Some have spo­ken of the “Amer­i­can Cen­tu­ry”. I say that the cen­tu­ry on which we are entering—the cen­tu­ry which will come into being after this war—can be and must be the cen­tu­ry of the com­mon man.”

As well as being trans­lat­ed into 20 lan­guages and mil­lions of copies being dis­trib­uted around the world, the speech also inspired the leader of the Cincin­nati Sym­pho­ny Orches­tra, Eugene Goossens, to com­mis­sion a fan­fare. He asked Amer­i­can com­posers to sub­mit patri­ot­ic pieces to sup­port the war effort, repris­ing a sim­i­lar ini­tia­tive dur­ing World War I and each one to pre­cede the CSO’s orches­tral con­certs. A total of eigh­teen fan­fares were sub­mit­ted, includ­ing Fan­fare for Para­troop­ers, Fan­fare for the Med­ical Corp, Fan­fare for Air­men, and one that became very famous, Aaron Copland’s Fan­fare for the Com­mon Man.

The fan­fare is writ­ten for four horns, three trum­pets, three trom­bones, tuba, tim­pani, bass drum, and tam-tam, and is as stir­ring a piece of brass sound­scape as one can imag­ine. It cap­tures won­der­ful­ly the spir­it of Wallace’s opti­mistic theme of ush­er­ing in a just future world. Below, let’s watch this dra­mat­ic ren­der­ing by the Dutch Radio Phil­har­mon­ic Orches­tra, and then lis­ten to the bril­liant prog rock ver­sion released in 1977 by Emer­son Lake and Palmer (and which was my first expo­sure to Copland’s music).

Aaron Cop­land

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *