IVES Symphonies Nos 3 & 4
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Charles Ives
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Seattle Symphony Media
Magazine Review Date: 04/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 71
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: SSM1009
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony No. 4 |
Charles Ives, Composer
Charles Ives, Composer Ludovic Morlot, Conductor Seattle Symphony Orchestra |
(The) Unanswered Question |
Charles Ives, Composer
Charles Ives, Composer Ludovic Morlot, Conductor Seattle Symphony Orchestra |
Central Park in the Dark |
Charles Ives, Composer
Charles Ives, Composer Ludovic Morlot, Conductor Seattle Symphony Orchestra |
Symphony No. 3, 'The Camp Meeting' |
Charles Ives, Composer
Charles Ives, Composer Ludovic Morlot, Conductor Seattle Symphony Orchestra |
Author: Philip Clark
Ives’s music is a counterpoint of simultaneously developing continuities against structural disjoints, a fact Litton soft-pedals but which Morlot makes the focus of his performance. From the start of the Fourth Symphony, the Seattle engineers raise the piano in the mix, its basso profundo low register punching above its weight as expressionistic strings swarm. And you begin to get an inkling of the symphony’s vistas and perspectives: solo strings, then flute, join the piano in invoking the chamber music sections of the Concord Sonata as the orchestra and chorus muscle up the volume. The second movement is especially fine, the ragtime rhythmic energy of the opening frogmarched towards thunderous burn-out as Morlot keeps subliminal details ticking over: the microtonal skid of a honky-tonk piano shyly peeks above the orchestral frame before dragging a solo violin into its orbit, all abruptly snuffed out by a loud-mouthed, raucous marching band.
If Morlot’s Fourth Symphony is boldly modernistic and hot-blooded, leaving other recent contenders in the shade, his performance of the Third Symphony is too overtly Brahmsian for my taste – Bernstein’s 1965 NYPO performance might not be the most elegantly played, but what poetic fantasy he communicates.
The two symphonies bookend The Unanswered Question and Central Park in the Dark, Morlot’s hyper-misterioso performances reminding us that Ives originally paired the works together as Two Contemplations. David Gordon’s trumpet is soulful and crooning in the first work; and the typically close-and-personal recording walks you deep inside the harmonic mists swirling around Central Park in the Dark.
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