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- Sunday, May 13, 2001
- Icy Response to a Musical Frost
- By ELIZABETH MEHREN, Times Staff
Writer
- Poetry: When a N.Y. publisher
licensed three works to be reworked as songs, the bard's loyal
followers were appalled.
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- WAITSFIELD, Vt.--The hills are
alive with the sound of conflict.
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One side of this melodic controversy features Elisabeth
von Trapp, singing the words of Robert Frost.
Opposing her are scholars who study Frost, as well as groups
of his admirers. The poet's own granddaughter has expressed doubts.
In the middle, sort of, is Frost's New York publisher. In
granting Von Trapp permission to set three Frost verses to music,
Henry Holt & Co. inadvertently triggered apoplexy among some
Frost purists. Two other poems in Von Trapp's "Frost Project"--due
out later this year--are in the public domain.
The great bard is a national treasure and altering his verse
through music amounts to poetic sacrilege, many scholars and
admirers say.
"There is a lot in Frost's writing to suggest that
he would find this appalling," said Robert Pinsky, a former
U.S. poet laureate.
As a member of the famous family from "The Sound of
Music," Von Trapp herself has a name with worldwide recognition.
Her grandmother, Baroness Maria von Trapp, yodeled through the
Alps as she led the family out of war-torn Austria. Classically
trained, Elisabeth von Trapp, 46, is the only relative in her
generation to become a professional singer.
With her haunting soprano voice, Von Trapp has performed
folk music in unusual settings, such as the New York subway system,
sponsored by the Metropolitan Transit Authority. She has serenaded
Red Sox fans with the national anthem at Boston's Fenway Park.
She and her husband, Ed Hall, produced CDs of her work.
In one recent CD, Von Trapp sought and received permission
to attach her own melody to the 1928 Frost poem, "A Minor
Bird." She found a powerful truth in the brief work's final
stanza:
"And of course there must be something wrong
In wanting to silence any song."
Nearly 40 years after his death at age 88, Frost has a robust
literary following. The college audience alone accounts for many
thousands of book sales each year, according to the publisher.
Societies devoted to Frost thrive worldwide. The Poetry Society
of America annually awards a Frost Medal, one of its most coveted
prizes.
Three New England states vie to claim Frost as their own.
Massachusetts notes that he grew up in Lowell, briefly attended
Harvard University and taught at Amherst College. New Hampshire
counters that he also taught at Dartmouth College and was a chicken
farmer in Derry. Vermont rejoins that the peripatetic poet lived
in South Shaftsbury, taught at Middlebury College and is buried
in Bennington.
He has California roots, too: Robert Lee Frost was born
in San Francisco on March 26, 1874.
An entire social era also attaches itself to the poet, whose
white hair billowed in the cold November wind when he read at
a memorable presidential inauguration. "Camelot claims [Frost],
because of John F. Kennedy, even though he was a Republican and
a friend of Eisenhower's," said Middlebury professor Jay
Parini, author of a recent Frost biography.
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Parini was prepared to hate Von Trapp's rendition of Frost.
He had visions of cheery vocalists in dirndls. But he agreed
to listen to Von Trapp's adaptation because he so admired "Frostiana,"
a 1959 choral composition by Randall Thompson.
Parini played Von Trapp's sample CD and thought: "My God,
this is actually better than I imagined." Still, he sounded
a skeptical note. Poetry is an internal experience, dependent
on "silence around the words," Parini cautioned. "To
add another element is extremely precarious."
Fellow Frost scholar William H. Pritchard agreed: "The
Frost poems are so idiomatic and so much a product of complicated
tones of voice and speech and turnings of phrases, it seems to
me they are just destined not to do well when you try to turn
them into a song."
Carole Thompson, president of the Friends of Robert Frost,
based in Bennington, said emphatically: "Mr. Frost did not
like having his poems set to music. He said, 'It spoils my fun.'
"
Frost's granddaughter, Lesley Francis, confirmed the poet
loathed translation. Francis, a professor of Spanish, said her
grandfather relied on what he called "the sound of sense,"
the rhythm of his own language. Poetry, he often said, "is
what's lost in translation."
So in setting his verse to music "you may gain something
else, but you lose the poetry," she said. "This is
not meant to denigrate [Von Trapp] or her intentions or the product
she comes up with. But it is not Robert Frost's poems."
To Von Trapp and her husband--a lawyer and also her manager--the
objections are understandable.
"So many people feel as though Robert Frost belongs
to them," Hall said. "In the couple of years that we've
been working toward this, we've found that you can stop people
on the streets and they can quote Robert Frost."
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Growing up in Vermont, Von Trapp pointed out, "every
child better know a poem by Robert Frost." She studied his
life in sixth grade. If Frost had meaning for her then, the poet
and his words resonate still. Melody, she maintains, provides
another link to Frost.
"I would think that there would be an understanding
that I have connected with him--and I have connected with the
poem on my level," she said. "Creatively, by having
a melody to it, that's my way of interpreting it. And it might
not be another person's way of interpreting it."
She returns to the last stanza of "A Minor Bird,"
the part about never silencing a song.
Those words, she said, "brought me to a new level of
courage."
Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times