Babbitt/Diamond/Persichetti Orchestral Works
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Vincent Persichetti, Milton (Byron) Babbitt, David (Leo) Diamond
Label: New World
Magazine Review Date: 7/1991
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 58
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 80396-2
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Relata I |
Milton (Byron) Babbitt, Composer
Juilliard Orchestra Milton (Byron) Babbitt, Composer Paul Zukofsky, Violin |
Symphony No. 5 |
David (Leo) Diamond, Composer
Christopher Keene, Conductor David (Leo) Diamond, Composer Juilliard Orchestra |
Night Dances |
Vincent Persichetti, Composer
James DePreist, Conductor Juilliard Orchestra Vincent Persichetti, Composer |
Author: Peter Dickinson
What justification for bringing Babbitt, Diamond and Persichetti on to a single CD? You may have guessed—they were born within a year of each other in 1915-16. It may still seem odd planning until one realizes that this is part of the Juilliard American Music Recording Institute (JAMRI) series on New World. Like earlier couplings the new release shows off the Juilliard Orchestra splendidly and the works are well chosen to bring out the best of each composer in a substantial and characteristic piece
Babbitt's Relata I had an uncomfortable start. It was written in 1965 and first performed by the Cleveland Orchestra the following year under Gunther Schuller. Rehearsal time was woefully inadequate and there was some hostility from the players—an oboist suggested that his high notes might be transferred to the piccolo! It is a measure of what progress has been made in a quarter of a century that a fine conservatoire can turn out a scintillating performance of such a problematic piece which can now be given the test of repeated hearings adding usefully to the amount of Babbitt available on CD.
I may have seemed rather negative about Persichetti's Piano Concerto and Symphony for Strings when reviewing this same label's recording of these works last month, finding the writing over-inflated or nondescript. This is not the case with his Night Dances (1970) where a set of seven movements is each based on a line of poetry from various modern poets. The scoring is subtly expert and varied from movement to movement. Track 3 is a Nocturne—''Sleep to dreamier sleep be wed'' (James Joyce)—redolent of Britten, it is followed by a suitably apocalyptic treatment of a line from Dylan Thomas, and the swirling gestures of the rapid finale make a strong ending.
David Diamond is enjoying something of a revival. His Second Symphony was broadcast by the BBC last December and now the much less sprawling Fifth is recorded—and the Second and Fourth as well (reviewed in April). Diamond spent a long time on his Fifth, he started the work in 1951 and it was finished in 1964, after the Sixth, Seventh and Eighth, when Bernstein was interested in performing it. When he gave the Fifth with the NYPO he found it to be ''a work that revives one's hopes for the symphonic form''. This is a good performance by the young Juilliard Orchestra: what stands out is the near-Elgarian rapture of some of the eloquent string-writing. The coda for solo cello is striking, too. The faster music derives from Hindemith, especially the fugues, which Diamond is proud of, but the overall structure is elusive.'
Babbitt's Relata I had an uncomfortable start. It was written in 1965 and first performed by the Cleveland Orchestra the following year under Gunther Schuller. Rehearsal time was woefully inadequate and there was some hostility from the players—an oboist suggested that his high notes might be transferred to the piccolo! It is a measure of what progress has been made in a quarter of a century that a fine conservatoire can turn out a scintillating performance of such a problematic piece which can now be given the test of repeated hearings adding usefully to the amount of Babbitt available on CD.
I may have seemed rather negative about Persichetti's Piano Concerto and Symphony for Strings when reviewing this same label's recording of these works last month, finding the writing over-inflated or nondescript. This is not the case with his Night Dances (1970) where a set of seven movements is each based on a line of poetry from various modern poets. The scoring is subtly expert and varied from movement to movement. Track 3 is a Nocturne—''Sleep to dreamier sleep be wed'' (James Joyce)—redolent of Britten, it is followed by a suitably apocalyptic treatment of a line from Dylan Thomas, and the swirling gestures of the rapid finale make a strong ending.
David Diamond is enjoying something of a revival. His Second Symphony was broadcast by the BBC last December and now the much less sprawling Fifth is recorded—and the Second and Fourth as well (reviewed in April). Diamond spent a long time on his Fifth, he started the work in 1951 and it was finished in 1964, after the Sixth, Seventh and Eighth, when Bernstein was interested in performing it. When he gave the Fifth with the NYPO he found it to be ''a work that revives one's hopes for the symphonic form''. This is a good performance by the young Juilliard Orchestra: what stands out is the near-Elgarian rapture of some of the eloquent string-writing. The coda for solo cello is striking, too. The faster music derives from Hindemith, especially the fugues, which Diamond is proud of, but the overall structure is elusive.'
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