By DARLENE
SUPERVILLE
WASHINGTON (AP) - FBI file 100-HQ-370562 begins simply enough.
On July 21, 1950, the subject, thought "to be self-employed as a composer
of music," is reported linked to communist front groups. Within six
months, he is classified outright as a communist.
So begins the government's surveillance of Aaron Copland, one of the country's
most important composers, creator of such stirring music as "Appalachian
Spring,""Fanfare for the Common Man,""Billy the Kid"
and the patriotic "Lincoln Portrait."
The government, using informants, spends the next two decades and more
monitoring Copland's whereabouts, analyzing his comments and taking note of his
friends and associates.
The result is an inch-thick FBI file, replete with blacked-out passages,
released to The Associated Press in response to a Freedom of Information Act
request from late 1997.
The papers make clear that the government's interest in Copland did not end
with his 1953 testimony at Sen. Joseph McCarthy's anticommunist hearings -
transcripts of which were released this month.
Copland (pronounced COPE'-land) died in 1990 at age 90.
In dry bureaucratic language, the file discloses that the FBI wanted to
prosecute Copland for perjury and fraud for denying he was a communist, and
that Director J. Edgar Hoover got involved by enlisting the CIA's help in
tracking the composer's travels.
"Copland has been abroad for some time and on June 25, 1951, he arrived in
New York from Bombay, India, on TWA flight 6022-C," Hoover wrote to the
CIA chief. "It would be appreciated if you would furnish the bureau any
information you have received concerning Copland's activities while
abroad."
Copland's music was pulled from President Eisenhower's inaugural concert in
1953 due to the suspicions about his politics. He denied ever being a communist
when called to testify to Congress.
After the perjury-fraud investigation was dropped, Copland sought State
Department guidance in 1956 on an invitation to attend an expenses-paid
convention of Soviet composers. He asked whether the department encouraged U.S.
citizens to accept such trips.
"Although I am free to go," Copland wrote, "I would not wish to
attend the convention without the advice of the Department." The file
suggests he did not make the trip.
Copland was deleted from the FBI's "security index" in 1955. In 1958,
its "security-type investigation" of the composer was put on
"closed status" but remained "subject to being reopened."
But the scrutiny of his activities continued. For nearly two decades after
that, memos and newspaper clippings trickled in with details of Copland's
doings.
The investigation ended in 1975. A three-page FBI memo concluded there was
"no additional pertinent information concerning the captioned
individual."
Left unanswered, however, is the question of whether Copland, who never married
and left no immediate survivors, ever was a communist.
Terry Teachout, a New York-based music critic and commentator, said there is no
question in his mind that the man sometimes called the "dean of American
music" was a communist sympathizer.
"He was involved with the Communist Party up to his ears," Teachout
said. "Whether or not he was an actual card-carrying member of the party,
nobody knows." Teachout noted, among other things, a 1934 speech by
Copland to Minnesota farmers suspected of being communists.
Copland also supported the 1936 Communist Party presidential ticket, the FBI
file says.
"The espousal of the presidential and vice-presidential candidates of the
Communist Party surely means some degree of Communist sympathy."
But Vivian Perlis, an American music historian at Yale University who spent
hours interviewing Copland for a two-volume autobiography, said he was not a
communist - and was not political at all.
Quincy Hilliard, a composer and University of Louisiana-Lafayette music
professor who has studied Copland's life and music, laughed at the notion of
him as a closet communist.
Unlike other beginning musicians who studied abroad in the 1920s, Hilliard said
Copland returned from his first study trip to Paris bent on composing music
that did not sound European.
Copland "was very interested in writing music that sounded American and
that most people would recognize as American," he said. Indeed, Copland
blended jazz rhythms of the South, Appalachian folk songs and cowboy tunes from
the prairie to create a distinctly American brand of classical music.
That did not seem to matter much to the government.
Confidential government sources and newspaper reports helped document Copland's
alleged communist involvement in the 1930s and 1940s, suggesting guilt by
association.
One newspaper report says he was as "one of 450 persons who signed a
statement urging the president and Congress to defend the rights of the Communist
Party." The FBI file also includes a list of more than 40 "communist
projects" to which the composer was linked.
Scrutiny of Copland peaked on May 26, 1953, with a two-hour, closed-door
hearing before McCarthy's investigations subcommittee, which was examining
communism in the United States.
Copland repeatedly denied affiliating knowingly with communists and said he
withdrew from some organizations when they were branded as
communist-controlled. Copland said he signed many petitions in support of
liberal causes, but told McCarthy that his involvement was superficial.
"I spend my days writing symphonies, concertos, ballads, and I am not a
political thinker," he said.
Copland was called to testify because he had been hired by the State Department
to lecture overseas, and he complained at the hearing about having to appear
just days after receiving a subpoena.
Copland seemed to take that period of his life in stride.
"I became a victim of a political situation," he said in his memoirs.
"I tried to carry on as usual. But I lost a great deal of time and energy
(not to mention lawyers' fees) preparing myself against fictitious
charges."
"It was not a happy time. What can one do but go through it and carry
on."
Copland declined to discuss McCarthy in the interviews with Perlis.
"He was just very proud of his honesty and his integrity, and I think he
was very hurt by the whole thing," Perlis said.
Three months after the hearing, Copland again denied being a communist in an
affidavit submitted with a passport application. The statement went against
information provided by the government informants, and formed the basis of the
FBI's perjury and fraud investigation.
Copland had said he began cutting his ties to leftist groups after learning
some of them might be "communist or communist front." This may
explain why the FBI ultimately dropped the perjury investigation.
In December 1955, Assistant Attorney General William Tompkins concluded in a
memo that there was "insufficient evidence to warrant prosecution."