James Friskin
          and Irwin Freundlich describe Fine’s Suite in
          E-flat Major: “Warm, lyric Prelude; stately
          Sarabande with florid melody; dainty Gavotte; quiet Air;
          short, crisp Gigue to close.” Composed during
          Fine’s second period (1937-44), and paralleling the
          wane of the American experimental movement and the rise
          of neoclassicism, the Suite reflects Fine’s
          dramatic shift in tonality from her earlier atonal
          composition. It is modeled on a traditional baroque
          keyboard suite and is composed of five dance movements: a
          majestic Prelude; a stately Sarabande with ornamented
          melody; a charming Gavotte; a serene Air; and an animated
          Gigue to conclude. The Suite, premiered in 1946 by Vivian
          Fine, incorporated Fine’s individualized harmonic
          language while underscoring her affinity for counterpoint
          and love of lyric melodies. It is only one of many jewels
          that may be discovered within Fine’s varied and
          challenging solo piano repertoire.
          –Leslie Jones, Ph.D., program notes
          for a performance
          
           
          Fine’s
          selection of the suite as a vehicle for her solo piano
          writing in this period reflects Roger Session’s
          influence and that of the neoclassical movement. Though
          modeled on the traditional Baroque keyboard suite, it
          incorporates Fine’s individual harmonic language,
          melodic experimentation, and intervallic preferences.
                 Though Fine
          retains many characteristics of the traditional Baroque
          suite, one immediately notices the absence of two
          standard movements, the allemande and courante. Instead,
          Fine includes such optional movements as the prelude,
          gavotte, and air. She clearly establishes the key of
          E-flat major at the outset, and operates within an E-flat
          framework throughout, using dissonance for color and
          expressive purposes. The melodic style of this work
          reflects Sessions’ contributions to Fine’s
          development, as her melodic lines become longer and more
          lyric. Rhythm plays a subservient role to the more
          important harmonic and melodic elements; thus the complex
          rhythmic structures and irregular meter of her earlier
          period are missing. The Suite seems much more homophonic
          than her previous solo piano works (except Music for
          Study), yet we will discover that the music’s
          dissonant component results from Fine’s continued
          linear approach to composition.
                 The melodic
          elements of this prelude are more crucial to its
          construction than in Fine’s previous solo piano
          works. Sessions influenced her greatly in this respect,
          as we see longer, more lyric, and more clearly delineated
          melodic lines. The opening theme exhibits this new
          melodic treatment with its conjunct melodic movement.
          Fine continues to approach composition in a linear
          manner, and her melodies, despite the underlying
          dissonances in the vertical structures, retain their
          conjunct movement or use intervals that have chordal
          implications.
                 Sarabande, the
          second movement of Fine’s Suite, embraces the
          standard characteristics of Baroque sarabande: triple
          meter, slowly stately character, emphasis placed on the
          second beat of a measure, and cadences on weak beats. The
          lento tempo indication and expression marking, espressivo
          e legato, represents the dignified and elegant nature of
          Fine’s sarabande.
                 The gavotte,
          the longest movement (46 mm.) of the Suite, emulates the
          Baroque model with its light, humorous character and
          distinctive rhythmic features. The piece, in simple duple
          meter, begins with two quarter-note upbeats and contains
          short phrases. Rhythmically, there is nothing unusual
          about this gavotte, but Fine uses this traditional
          rhythmic scheme to create a charming yet harmonically
          adventurous movement. 888 This seemingly innocent,
          beautiful air is a highly complex study and demonstrates
          how Fine draws upon elements from the other Suite
          movements to shape a new mode of expression; melody with
          simple accompaniment. From the gavotte, Fine learns how
          to coordinate a homophonic texture and counterpoint. From
          the sarabande, she extracts the warm, lyric melodic line.
          From the prelude, she experiments with recurrent thematic
          sections. The common thread to the entire Suite, though,
          continues to be the relationship of E-flat and
          D-flat.
                 Although the
          air incorporates many of the elements used in the
          Suite’s movements, Fine’s gigue engenders a
          more satisfying conclusion and resolution to the complete
          work with its bright, quick tempo and clear sense of
          tonality.
                 The Suite
          exemplifies Fine’s changing compositional style,
          resulting from her study with Roger Sessions and from the
          shifting musical climate. From Sessions she learned a
          more refined craftsmanship, exhibited in longer, lyric
          melodies, a tonal fabric integrated with nonharmonic
          tones, and a formal and melodic sense of symmetry.
          Although Fine experiments with homophonic textures
          throughout the Suite, a linear approach continues to
          dominate her writing style (as was also the case with
          Sessions). Her reference to “harmonies falling
          where they fall” reiterates this linear
          compositional approach, and often tonal or harmonic
          ambiguity results.
                 In each of the
          Suite’s movements one sees important structural,
          harmonic, and melodic points delineated by means of this
          relationship. In addition to the harmonic characteristics
          described above, Fine features short, simple rhythmic
          motives, varying articulations, two or three-layer
          textures, and traditional formal schemes (such as ABA) in
          the Suite. She fully exploits the various Baroque suite
          characteristics, yet with a compositional language that
          is distinctly Vivian Fine.
          
          –Leslie Jones, “The Solo Piano Music of
          Vivian Fine,” Doctor of musical arts thesis,
          University of Cincinnati, 1994