Hermit Thrush at Eve, Op. 92 No. 1

by Amy Beach

Romantic Advanced
Composed 1921
Published 1922
Duration 4 min

Instrumentation

Piano

Collections

Musical Terms (4)

  • bird call notation English
    Beach's practice of transcribing actual birdsong and incorporating it into the piano texture. In both Hermit Thrush at Eve and Hermit Thrush at Morn, she notated the hermit thrush's call precisely (including octave transpositions) and placed it in the upper register of the piano over atmospheric accompaniment figures.
    The bird-call passages in the Hermit Thrush pieces should be played with a pure, bell-like tone — distinct from the accompaniment but never harsh. A gentle, floating touch in the upper register, with the sustain pedal held lightly. Let the calls ring as if heard across still water.
  • American Romantic style English
    The musical language of Beach and the Boston/New England school of the late 19th century: tonally grounded, late-Romantic harmony influenced by Brahms and the German tradition, with rich chromaticism, lyrical melody, and large-scale formal ambition. Beach was the first American woman to compose a symphony performed by a major orchestra, and her piano writing reflects this cultivated, European-inflected Romantic tradition.
    Approach Beach's music as you would late Brahms or early Strauss: full, singing tone; rich pedalling that sustains the harmonic wash; flexible rubato within a firm rhythmic framework. Avoid a light or detached touch — the music wants weight and warmth.
  • MacDowell Colony English
    An artists' retreat in Peterborough, New Hampshire founded in 1907. Beach was a frequent summer resident from 1921 onward, and the colony's natural surroundings directly inspired several of her late piano works, including the Hermit Thrush pieces (Op. 92) and the Three Pianoforte Pieces (Op. 128), whose programme notes specify particular chipmunks, birches, and hummingbirds observed on the grounds.
  • nature imagery English
    A recurring thread in Beach's piano music — she consistently drew on natural subjects (birdsong, fireflies, water, seasons, flowers) for her programmatic titles. The connection is not merely literary: in the Hermit Thrush pieces she notated the bird's actual call and wove it into the musical texture, and she kept records of natural sounds she observed at her summer retreats.
    When playing Beach's nature pieces, let the image guide your tonal palette. The Hermit Thrush pieces call for a floating, transparent upper register; Fireflies requires a rapid, flickering lightness; Arctic Night demands deep stillness. Use the programme as a sonic target, not just a title.

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