Copland Symphonies
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Aaron Copland
Label: Red Seal
Magazine Review Date: 6/1996
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 67
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 09026 68292-2
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony for Organ and Orchestra |
Aaron Copland, Composer
Aaron Copland, Composer Leonard Slatkin, Conductor Simon Preston, Organ St Louis Symphony Orchestra |
Short Symphony (No. 2) |
Aaron Copland, Composer
Aaron Copland, Composer Leonard Slatkin, Conductor St Louis Symphony Orchestra |
Dance Symphony |
Aaron Copland, Composer
Aaron Copland, Composer Leonard Slatkin, Conductor St Louis Symphony Orchestra |
Orchestral Variations |
Aaron Copland, Composer
Aaron Copland, Composer Leonard Slatkin, Conductor St Louis Symphony Orchestra |
Author: Edward Seckerson
It was immediately after the premiere of Copland’s Organ Symphony (later revamped sans organ as Symphony No. 1) that the conductor Walter Damrosch made his famous remark: “Ladies and gentlemen... if a gifted young man can write a symphony like this at 23, within five years he will be ready to commit murder!”. He should have added – premeditated with special circumstances. It arrives by stealth, this timely roar from the roaring twenties. A short, reflective cello and flute-led prelude promises springtime (with or without the attendant rites). Nadia Boulanger and Igor Stravinsky look on. The organ’s phantom presence suggests a kind of crystal cathedral: ethereal, sensuous, lavish and very French. But then the American in Paris (and suddenly he’s not hiding his identity) is kicking open the door on a scherzo whose bright, snappy rhythmic displacements are pure jazz-age fancy. The first big tutti raises hell – a bronco bucking rowdy which Leonard Slatkin brings on with a rude lick of his Saint Louis trombones.
There are plenty more surprises where that one came from: the quiet distraction of the trio, for one – strangely removed from its raucous context. And the finale, too inquisitive, too searching (how curious that fleeting reverie with its elfin fanfares), too rebellious to be grandly conclusive. It’s an oddly eclectic mix born of oddly eclectic elements. Russian immigrant parents, a French teacher, jazz – the new national identity: all have a hand in the composition. But still the voice which emerges most strongly is American. Something stirs in the great outdoors but, as yet, it’s untamed and more than a little unpredictable. Which brings us back to Walter Damrosch.
I suppose you could say that the Dance Symphony fulfilled a murderous promise, despite its innocuous title. It wasn’t always thus: Grohg, Copland’s unpublished and never-performed ballet, was the basis for it. You may recall the Svengali-meets-Petrushka scenario: Grohg, the vampire magician with a choreographic blood-lust. Not that it’s important. The spirit of the dance rules, and through it young Copland taps once more into his French connections, to indulge himself, to bring on the cornets and two harps, to lend a Berlioz-like enchantment to the solo bassoon; the second movement’s shadowy waltz is the one that never made it into the Symphonie fantastique. There is an intoxicating climax which might (in this context) be described as Bartok’s Mandarin having got his second wind. The fact is that the real Copland, the Copland we instantly recognize and love, only fully emerges with the Short Symphony (No. 2) of 1932-3. The Stravinsky factor is strong, of course (wiry, angular, busy neo-classical tone and a folkloric homespun quality), but the true grit is entirely Copland’s. The shrill, chiselled colours with the distinctive solo piano presence are here established as key features of his musical DNA. The rhythmic bounce, the sometimes belligerent syncopations, are all his, too. Slatkin and his band are as spry as can be on that score.
The most exciting item on the disc, however, comes last in the chronology. Nearly three decades after Copland famously got tough with his Piano Variations (1930), he laid them out for orchestra. And they came up sounding like a brand-new piece – a born orchestral piece. This is Copland outreaching himself, theoretical ingenuity allied to vision. It’s the spirit of resource that built downtown America. And rather like this sharp, smart, punchy performance, the overriding impression is of evolution – onwards and upwards.'
There are plenty more surprises where that one came from: the quiet distraction of the trio, for one – strangely removed from its raucous context. And the finale, too inquisitive, too searching (how curious that fleeting reverie with its elfin fanfares), too rebellious to be grandly conclusive. It’s an oddly eclectic mix born of oddly eclectic elements. Russian immigrant parents, a French teacher, jazz – the new national identity: all have a hand in the composition. But still the voice which emerges most strongly is American. Something stirs in the great outdoors but, as yet, it’s untamed and more than a little unpredictable. Which brings us back to Walter Damrosch.
I suppose you could say that the Dance Symphony fulfilled a murderous promise, despite its innocuous title. It wasn’t always thus: Grohg, Copland’s unpublished and never-performed ballet, was the basis for it. You may recall the Svengali-meets-Petrushka scenario: Grohg, the vampire magician with a choreographic blood-lust. Not that it’s important. The spirit of the dance rules, and through it young Copland taps once more into his French connections, to indulge himself, to bring on the cornets and two harps, to lend a Berlioz-like enchantment to the solo bassoon; the second movement’s shadowy waltz is the one that never made it into the Symphonie fantastique. There is an intoxicating climax which might (in this context) be described as Bartok’s Mandarin having got his second wind. The fact is that the real Copland, the Copland we instantly recognize and love, only fully emerges with the Short Symphony (No. 2) of 1932-3. The Stravinsky factor is strong, of course (wiry, angular, busy neo-classical tone and a folkloric homespun quality), but the true grit is entirely Copland’s. The shrill, chiselled colours with the distinctive solo piano presence are here established as key features of his musical DNA. The rhythmic bounce, the sometimes belligerent syncopations, are all his, too. Slatkin and his band are as spry as can be on that score.
The most exciting item on the disc, however, comes last in the chronology. Nearly three decades after Copland famously got tough with his Piano Variations (1930), he laid them out for orchestra. And they came up sounding like a brand-new piece – a born orchestral piece. This is Copland outreaching himself, theoretical ingenuity allied to vision. It’s the spirit of resource that built downtown America. And rather like this sharp, smart, punchy performance, the overriding impression is of evolution – onwards and upwards.'
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