Dvorak’s Prophecy Vol.2: Charles Ives’ America (DVD)
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Label: Naxos - DVD
Cat No: 2110701
Format: DVD
Number of Discs: 1
Release Date: 21st January 2022
Contents
Works
Concord Sonata (excerpts)Songs
Symphony no.2
The Housatonic at Stockbridge
Three Places in New England
Artists
William Sharp (baritone)Steven Mayer (piano)
Paul Sanchez (piano)
Conductors
James SinclairKenneth Schermerhorn
Works
Concord Sonata (excerpts)Songs
Symphony no.2
The Housatonic at Stockbridge
Three Places in New England
Artists
William Sharp (baritone)Steven Mayer (piano)
Paul Sanchez (piano)
Conductors
James SinclairKenneth Schermerhorn
About
Written and produced by Joseph Horowitz
Visual presentation by Peter Bogdanoff
‘The six Dvořák’s Prophecy films I have created with Peter Bogdanoff are an act of advocacy.
‘As in my companion book Dvořák’s Prophecy and the Vexed Fate of Black Classical Music, my premise is that the “standard narrative” for classical music in the US – the one I grew up with, popularized by Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein – shortchanges the American achievement. Following W.E.B. Du Bois, who called the “sorrow songs” of Black America “the singular spiritual heritage of the nation,” and Antonín Dvořák, who prophesied that “negro melodies” would find a “great and noble” American school, I begin not with Copland and the modernists, but with Dvořák and his protégé Harry Burleigh, who turned “Deep River” into a sublime concert song. I treat Charles Ives as an American creative genius comparable to Whitman and Melville. The standard narrative makes no room for a morbid Romantic like Bernard Herrmann – to my ears, the most under-rated 20th-century American composer, and not just for his terrific film scores. It omits William Levi Dawson’s Negro Folk Symphony – forgotten following its galvanizing 1934 premiere by Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra. And it fails to reckon with Lou Harrison, whose majestic Piano Concerto may be the most formidable by any American. The films therefore argue for a longer, more eventful New World odyssey, documenting both democratic ideals and the legacy of slavery.’
Steeped in nostalgia, in his Danbury childhood and the New England Transcendentalists with whom he profoundly identified, in the American experience of race which he absorbed from his Abolitionist grandparents, Ives used the past with consummate empathy and brave artistry. The music at hand here includes his Second Symphony (a milestone in culling the vernacular to set beside Huckleberry Finn), The Housatonic at Stockbridge (possibly the most sublime nature reverie in the American orchestral repertoire), and The St Gaudens in Boston Common (a singular ghost dirge in tribute to Colonel Robert Gould Shaw’s Black Civil War regiment). We also hear portions of Ives’s Concord Sonata performed by Steven Mayer (an interpretation seasoned by a lifetime of advocacy) and half a dozen Ives songs peerlessly sung (in live performance with Paul Sanchez) by William Sharp.
Playing time: 64 minutes
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