Jump to Navigation Jump to Content

Log in to Your Account

  • LA Phil
  • Hollywood Bowl

Hollywood Bowl

  • Concert Tickets
    • Concert Tickets
    • Calendar
    • Season Schedule
    • Subscribe
    • Buy 5 or More Concerts
    • Groups 10+
    • Seating Chart
    • Box Office Location & Hours
    • LA Phil Gift Cards
    • Customer Service
    • Lease Events
  • Visit
    • Visit
    • Guide for Newcomers
    • Información en Español
    • Getting to the Bowl
    • Bowl Area Map
    • Patina Restaurants
    • Picnicking at the Bowl
    • Accessibility Information
    • Theater Policies
    • Hollywood Bowl Museum
    • Green Initiatives
  • Watch + Listen
    • Watch + Listen
    • Hollywood Bowl Videos
    • What Happened Last Night
    • Broadcasts
  • Blog
    • Bandshell
    • Story in Every Seat (2011)
  • Connect
    • Connect
    • Email Newsletters
    • Hollywood Bowl Mobile
    • RSS Feeds
    • The Bandshell Blog
  • Philpedia
    • Philpedia
    • The Los Angeles Philharmonic
    • Gustavo Dudamel
    • Lionel Bringuier
    • John Adams
    • Esa-Pekka Salonen
    • Herbie Hancock
    • Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
    • Music and Musicians Database
    • Dudamel Fellows 2012/13
    • Hollywood Bowl History
    • Los Angeles Philharmonic Archives
    • Hollywood Bowl Orchestra Auditions
    • Art & Music Links
  • Education
    • Education
    • Program Directory
    • Youth Orchestra LA (YOLA)
    • Concerts for Youth
    • Summersounds
    • School Programs
    • Young Musicians
    • LA Phil in Communities
    • Education Funders
    • Contact Us
  • Give
    • Give
    • Individual Donors
    • Corporate, Foundations, and Government Funders
    • Endowment & Planned Giving
    • Volunteer
    • Special Events
    • Contact
  • Shop
    • Gustavo Dudamel
    • Walt Disney Concert Hall
    • Music CDs & DVDs
    • Books
    • Jewelry & Accessories
    • Gifts
    • Children's Section
    • Hollywood Bowl
    • Sale
    • Gift with Purchase
    • Gift Wrap

You are here

Home » Philpedia » Music and Musicians Database

Share

About the Piece

An American in Paris

George Gershwin

Gershwin: Prelude for Piano no. 2

Last Modified: May 14, 2012

Composed: 1928
Length: c. 17 minutes
Orchestration: 3 flutes (3rd = piccolo), 2 oboes, English horn, 2 clarinets, bass clarinet, 3 saxophones (alto, tenor, and baritone), 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion (bass drum, bells, cymbals, snare drum, taxi horns, tom-toms, triangle, xylophone), celesta, and strings
First Los Angeles Philharmonic performance: January 15, 1931, Artur Rodzinski conducting

Since his early teens George Gershwin had been enamored with the music he heard uptown in Harlem, a region that was quickly becoming the center of the jazz universe. Indeed, his first attempt at a more serious composition – a mini-opera called Blue Monday – was a story about characters in a Harlem nightclub. Its first presentation was on Broadway, however, with white singers performing in blackface; it was a flop and received only one performance.

Undisturbed, Gershwin’s next try at a classical/jazz merging was the so-called “Experiment in Modern Music” (as it was billed for its 1924 premiere): Rhapsody in Blue. He followed this with his Concerto in F, which some writers called “The Jazz Piano Concerto.” These two works were popularly successful, though critics were still guarded with their praise.

It was a trip abroad that inspired Gershwin to work in earnest on a recent commission he had received from the New York Philharmonic. His idea for the new work solidified as he was shopping for Parisian taxi-horns to take back to the US: capture the tumult of Paris’ streets in music and create a concert work that didn’t center around the piano.

Back in New York, Gershwin finished An American in Paris, which he subtitled “A Tone Poem for Orchestra.” In an interview in the August 18, 1928 edition of Musical America, he said of the work: “this new piece, really a rhapsodic ballet, is the most modern music I have ever attempted.” He also gave a brief “program note” of the work:

“The opening gay section is followed by a rich blues with a strong rhythmic undercurrent. Our American… perhaps after strolling into a café and having a couple of drinks, has succumbed to a spasm of homesickness. The harmony here is both more intense and simpler than in the preceding pages. This blues rises to a climax, followed by a coda in which the spirit of the music returns to the vivacity and bubbling exuberance of the opening part with its impression of Paris. Apparently the homesick American, having left the café and reached the open air, has disowned his spell of the blues and once again is an alert spectator of Parisian life. At the conclusion, the street noises and French atmosphere are triumphant.”

Though still not a critical success, An American in Paris was wildly successful with audiences – and Hollywood – and established Gershwin as an original voice in concert halls worldwide, a voice that resonates to this day.

Dr. Dave Kopplin is an Associate Professor of Music at Cal Poly Pomona, Director of the Cal Poly Jazz Band, and writes for performing arts organizations across the country.

  • Philpedia
  • The Los Angeles Philharmonic
  • Gustavo Dudamel
  • Lionel Bringuier
  • John Adams
  • Esa-Pekka Salonen
  • Herbie Hancock
  • Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
    • Musician Roster
  • Music and Musicians Database
    • Browse Artists
    • Browse Composers
    • Browse Conductors
    • Browse LA Phil Musicians
    • Browse Music by Composer
    • Browse Music by Title
  • Dudamel Fellows 2012/13
  • Hollywood Bowl History
    • Symphonic Music & Opera
      • Symphonic Music by Decade
      • Symphonic Music Highlights
      • Opera
    • Rock, Pop & Jazz
      • Jazz, Musical Theater & World Music
    • Dance
    • History and Architecture
      • Architecture
      • First Organizers
      • Movies & TV
    • Postcards
    • Program Covers
    • Share Your Bowl Memories
  • Los Angeles Philharmonic Archives
  • Hollywood Bowl Orchestra Auditions
  • Art & Music Links
  • Site Map
  • About
  • Press
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2013 Los Angeles Philharmonic Association. All rights reserved.

Back to Top