Samuel Barber's
Adagio for Strings has become an unofficial
anthem of
mourning, particularly in
America. It
was played at the funerals of
President's
Kennedy and
Roosevelt and it was also played at
Princess Grace's funeral. Barber originally wrote this piece as the second movement of a
string quartet in
1936, however just two years later he arranged it for
string orchestra and it is this arrangement that was to become his most popular and widely known work.
Baber's
Adagio for Strings has a very distinctive opening, and it instantly recognisable by the first few bars, which start
softly and
slowly build. It continues to build, and build, and build, until it ultimately reaches its peak in a spectacular climax. The rest of the piece is effectively the journey down the other side, back to a soft and slow end. The piece is based upon
musical sequence, which is a collection of notes repeatedly played either slightly higher or slightly lower than the preceding collection. This form of musical composition is exceedingly basic and it generally distained by serious
composers, only to be used occasionally. Barber on the other hand uses it to form the extended twisting themes that make his
Adagio so powerful.
Its use is rather striking in
popular culture, it is the main theme in the movie '
Platoon' however it also features in '
Elephant Man' and '
Lorenzo's Oil'. The version from 'Lorenzo's Oil' is an unaccompanied vocal choir arrangement Barber did later in life, to the words of '
Agnus Dei'. It's use in '
remixes' has increased in recent years, Sean "
Puffy" Combs used the vocal arrangement on his
The No Way Out CD in 1997 and
William Orbit released a remix on his
Pieces in a Modern Style album in early 2000.
There is a genuine
simplicity to Barber’s Adagio, and on the surface it is hard to see what makes it so powerful. Barber doesn’t use any music tricks; he doesn’t try and do anything spectacularly new or original. The whole piece is simple in its design and I think that people take note of that and treasure it for what it is, a
modern classic.