The story of Coolidge Auditorium, on the Library of Congress, is certainly one of American ingenuity, cultural integrity and a century of free concert events.
The Dalí Quartet, accompanied by Ricardo Morales on clarinet, performs in the course of the Library of Congress’ Stradivari live performance in Coolidge Auditorium in 2023. The Library was given a uncommon set of Stradivarius devices in 1935.
Shawn Miller/Library of Congress
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Shawn Miller/Library of Congress
The yr is 1925. The Nice Gatsby is revealed, the jazz age is swinging, and on October twenty eighth, a brand new live performance corridor opens at an unlikely spot — the Library of Congress, in Washington D.C. If solely its cream-colored partitions might discuss. For 100 years, performers of all stripes have graced the Library stage, from classical music luminaries like Béla Bartók and Igor Stravinsky to Stevie Marvel, Audra McDonald and Max Roach. At present, it stays one of many capitol metropolis’s most stunning, finest sounding and maybe finest stored secrets and techniques.
The concept for a live performance corridor on the Library of Congress didn’t stem from congress. It got here from philanthropist Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge — and one bespoke piece of bipartisan laws. “She was indefatigable and intrepid,” says Anne McLean, senior producer for concert events on the Library, “a exceptional lady, six ft tall, a superb pianist.” McLean is sitting with me on the stage, overlooking the empty auditorium. To mark the centennial, celebratory concert events and commissions have been heard within the corridor all yr. However not now. The federal government shutdown has compelled the corridor to shut its doorways, and except a deal is reached earlier than Tuesday, it’s going to be closed on the anniversary itself.
Coolidge was born right into a rich Chicago household in 1864. She studied music, traveled overseas, married a Harvard-trained orthopedic surgeon and, in 1924, got here to Washington to ascertain a foothold within the nation’s capitol. She approached Carl Engel, the Library’s music chief, about the potential of including a small live performance corridor to the Library’s voluptuous — and voluminous — Thomas Jefferson constructing, designed after the Paris opera home and accomplished in 1897. You possibly can’t see the corridor from the surface, because it’s tucked contained in the constructing’s Northwest Courtyard.
In 1924, Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge wrote her first test to the Librarian of Congress, Herbert Putnam, to start the development of a brand new auditorium.
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Wanting to get began, Coolidge wrote a test for $60,000 to the Librarian of Congress, Herbert Putnam, on Nov. 12, 1924. And but there was no authorized mechanism in place for a civilian to make such a financial present to the U.S. authorities. Congress labored shortly, taking solely slightly over a month to go a invoice permitting such a contribution.
It took lower than six months to construct the corridor itself — the intimate, 485-seat Coolidge Auditorium, with its heat exact acoustics. “There are lots of secrets and techniques to it,” McLean says. “The again wall of the auditorium is barely shaved to be concave and very conscious of string sound. Beneath the stage is hole. However that hollowness is an element, as is the cork flooring, which was very uncommon for its time.” McLean says the sound blossoms within the corridor. Eager to unfold the sound far and broad, Coolidge even had the constructing wired for the comparatively new medium of radio. She added to her preliminary sum to ascertain a fund for the commissioning of recent music. Engel dubbed her “The Fairy-God-Mom of Music.”
Development of Coolidge Auditorium, on the Library of Congress, started in Could, 1925. It was completed in time for the very first live performance on Oct. 28 of that yr.
Library of Congress
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Library of Congress
Coolidge was well-connected and fiercely advocated for music. In 1944, she took to the native Washington airwaves with one other daring thought. “I might want for music, the identical governmental safety that’s given to hygiene, training or public welfare,” she stated over WTOP. “How great, if we might have within the cupboard, a secretary of fantastic arts.”
Coolidge by no means bought her want, however what she had already created was arguably extra essential — a residing, respiration live performance corridor that serves as a cultural beacon — preserving historical past and cultivating new music by way of commissions.
The Martha Graham Dance Firm performs the world premiere of Aaron Copland’s Appalachian Spring on the stage of the Coolidge Auditorium on Oct. 30, 1944.
Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Basis Assortment / Library of Congress
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Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Basis Assortment / Library of Congress
Maybe essentially the most well-known fee turned certainly one of America’s most iconic items of music. Aaron Copland‘s ballet Appalachian Spring, written for dancer and choreographer Martha Graham, acquired its world premiere at Coolidge Auditorium on Oct. 30, 1944. “I feel folks knew what they have been listening to,” McLean says. The ballet would win the Pulitzer prize for music the next yr, together with the New York Music Critics Circle Award. It is arduous to think about a full ballet produced on Coolidge’s modestly-sized stage.
“Now that you just’re sitting on it, you may see how very small it’s,” McLean observes. “There’s little or no fly area for anybody to make an entrance, a lot much less dancing and main choreography. And the place you see the entrance row of our seats, that was the orchestra pit. It solely might match 13 folks.”
And the commissions preserve coming, thanks partially to beneficiant girls who adopted in Coolidge’s philanthropic footsteps. Composers commissioned for the a centesimal anniversary embody MacArthur fellows Tyshawn Sorey and Vijay Iyer, plus Pulitzer winner Raven Chacon, George Benjamin and the digital artist Jlin. Pulitzer-winning composer Tania León had her personal world premiere earlier on this a centesimal anniversary season. Para Violin y Piano was commissioned by the Library’s Leonora Jackson McKim Fund, an endowment targeted on items written for violin and piano.
On stage at Coolidge Auditorium, violinist Jennifer Koh and pianist Thomas Sauer play the world premiere of Tania León’s Para Violin y Piano.
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Library of Congress
“My expertise within the corridor is, in a approach, transcendental,” León says. “It is like touching the previous into the current. And the respect to be included within the roster of the entire composers could be very highly effective.” That roster of composers who’ve been commissioned by the Library is spectacular — from Stravinsky’s ballet Apollon Musagète (1928) and Bartók’s String Quartet No. 5 (1935), to Jennifer Higdon‘s Viola Concerto (2015), which gained a Grammy.
Located contained in the Library of Congress, Coolidge Auditorium advantages from the Library’s substantial acquisitions. Within the mid-Thirties, one other philanthropist, Gertrude Clarke Whittall, gave the Library a set of uncommon Stradivarius devices. On the time, such a set of uncommon string devices was distinctive at a public establishment within the U.S. “Once they have been first acquired, there wasn’t a resident ensemble. And the idea was, ‘How will we preserve them in nice form?’ So that they have been often hiring musicians to play them for $2.50 an hour,” McLean says with fun.
Starting in 1940, the Library did not have to fret about hiring musicians off the road. The famend Budapest String Quartet, fleeing World Battle II, turned the primary such ensemble to take up residency at Coolidge Auditorium. The group stayed for 22 years. The Juilliard Quartet picked up the mantle in 1962, routinely taking part in the dear devices in 560 concert events over a four-decade span.
The Budapest String Quartet at Coolidge Auditorium in 1938. The group was the Library’s first ensemble in residence and performed there from 1940 – 1962.
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Today, the Strads may be performed by any string quartet booked for a live performance on the Library. However McLean says there is a catch: The musicians want to point out up a pair days early to learn to management them. “The key of the devices is that they’re like racehorses, they’re thoroughbreds, they usually can get away from you if you do not have an opportunity to get used to them.”
Cellist Daniel McDonough and his bandmates within the Jupiter String Quartet bought used to them once they performed the Strads on the Library earlier this yr. I requested McDonough if taking part in one of many devices was something like discovering your self behind the wheel of a Ferrari.
“Sure, the automotive analogy is an effective one,” he says. “Typically I say it has a fifth gear. These devices, as a result of they have been performed for a whole lot of years and since they’ve aged and grown into themselves so superbly, have a sort of ringing tone that I feel no different instrument [has].” McDonough performed the “Castelbarco” cello, constructed by Stradivarius in 1697.
The “Castelbarco” cello, made by Antonio Stradivari in 1697, is among the few remaining Stradivarius cellos that has not been modified by chopping down the dimensions of the instrument.
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“One of many issues that is distinctive about that instrument is it is one of many few remaining Strad cellos that is not reduce down,” McDonough observes. “It is greater than devices in later years, when the cello turned extra standardized in its sample and dimension. So it has an enormous bass sound.” The explanation why some cellos have been trimmed down in dimension, McDonough provides, was to make virtuoso taking part in simpler.
Together with the Strads, 5 in all, the Library homes some 26-million different musical objects — 1700 flutes and woodwinds, authentic manuscripts and memorabilia — a few of that are displayed at every live performance.
Among the many library’s huge assortment of devices is the crystal flute as soon as owned by President James Madison, which Lizzo performed whereas visiting the Library in 2022. The instrument, given to Madison in 1813, was rumored to have been rescued from the White Home a yr after the British set fireplace to the constructing.
Shawn Miller/Library of Congress
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Shawn Miller/Library of Congress
At a Kronos Quartet efficiency final yr, Susan Vita, chief of the music division, who has since died, informed the viewers earlier than the present that the Library’s holdings have been about to get slightly bigger. “We’re elated to announce,” she stated from the Coolidge stage, “that the Kronos Quartet archive will probably be coming to the Library of Congress.” After that announcement, Kronos launched right into a live performance of American music, capped with its beloved model of “Purple Haze” by Jimi Hendrix.
Kronos founder and violinist David Harrington has lengthy been a fan of the Library. “The Coolidge Auditorium is a mythic, iconic place for music and musicians,” he writes in a ahead to an upcoming e-book in regards to the a centesimal anniversary. He first realized of the corridor in 1975 when his instructor gifted him a 1940 live performance recording by pianist and composer Béla Bartók and violinist Joseph Szigeti taking part in Beethoven‘s “Kreutzer” sonata. The 2 Hungarians had fled war-torn Europe. “There may be an urgency and completeness mixed with a stupendous freshness in each observe they performed on April 13, 1940,” Harrington writes. “All over the live performance it was clear that this efficiency was a journey, an important examination of tradition and expression distinctive in recorded historical past.”
Whereas Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge envisioned her corridor primarily for classical chamber music, the venue has performed host, even early on, to a broad vary of kinds. In 1926, simply over a yr after the corridor opened, Black composer R. Nathaniel Dett introduced within the 80-voiced Hampton Institute Choir to sing spirituals and Christmas carols. Music by W.C Helpful was featured within the corridor’s first jazz live performance in 1929, and in 1938, early jazz pioneer Jelly Roll Morton took to the stage, together with folklorist Alan Lomax, to sing and inform some R-rated tales of his life and instances. In 2006, an enormous set of the Jelly Roll Morton recordings, over 9 hours, made on the Coolidge stage, gained two Grammys – for finest historic album and finest liner notes. It is an interesting oral historical past of the daybreak of the jazz age.
Grammy-winning jazz vocalist and songwriter Gregory Porter greets the viewers at Coolidge Auditorium at his live performance on March 8, 2014.
Kimberly T. Powell/Library of Congress
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Kimberly T. Powell/Library of Congress
In 1940, the corridor celebrated the seventy fifth anniversary of the thirteenth Modification with a sequence of concert events that includes Black artists and music, with soprano Dorothy Maynor, tenor Roland Hayes and guitarist Josh White, who joined the acclaimed vocal group, the Golden Gate Quartet. In 1993, the Library acquired the Charles Mingus assortment and marked the event with a efficiency by his large band.
“We’re grateful to have the ability to current unimaginable musicians from many walks of life, many genres,” McLean says. Through the peak of the pandemic, when the corridor was closed, the Library launched a sequence of video shows, from Cuban vocalist Daymé Arocena and Argentine pianist-composer Pablo Ziegler to the New Orleans-based funk, rock and soul group Tank and the Bangas.
For a century, the partitions of Coolidge Auditorium have soaked up the music and the spirit of numerous musicians from throughout the globe — from that very first live performance, with its commissioned piece by Charles Martin Loeffler to Bartók’s impassioned taking part in to Stevie Marvel accepting the Library’s Gershwin Prize. The corridor that Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge constructed represents a historical past of American ingenuity, a free and public cultural useful resource, unmatched in its holdings.
“The place itself is resonant with tales like this,” McLean says. “The stage the place you might be proper now has been crammed with nice music and nice musicians for 100 years, and we hope one other hundred.”
