An Ives Newsletter - 1 April 2004
After an inordinate break there is much news. Read on—enjoy! (Please submit to us your Ives-related news through the “Unanswered Questions” link on the Ives website.) And remember that May 19th this spring is the 50th anniversary of Ives’s death just short of age 80 in New York City (of a stroke following a successful operation for his double hernia).
Ives’s Legacy
Writing on Nov 3, 2003 on andante.com, Matthew Westphal reported: “The
American Academy of Arts and Letters has announced that Stephen Hartke will
receive the next Charles Ives Living Award, effective for a three-year term
beginning in July 2004. The $225,000 Ives Living is paid in annual installments
of $75,000; its purpose (as with the MacArthur Foundation's famous ‘genius
grant’ fellowships) is to free the recipient from the need to worry about
earning a living so that he or she can concentrate fully on composition. To
that end, the winner must agree not to accept any salaried employment for the
term of the fellowship. (Commissions may be accepted.)” Wrote Westphal,
“The Charles Ives Living was inaugurated in 1998, with Martin Bresnick
as the first three-year recipient. Chen Yi received the award in 2001; her term
ends next June. The fellowship is funded by royalties from Charles Ives's music,
bequeathed by his widow to the American Academy to establish a fund for prizes
in composition.”
Ives +50
The Juilliard School in New York City presented a week of Ives concerts under
the annual FOCUS! festival, January 23-30, 2004, directed by Joel Sachs. A wide
range of music was included, ranging from orchestral (e.g. Symphonies 3 &
4, Orchestral Set No. 1, and the NY premiere of the Emerson Overture/Concerto
for Piano and Orchestra), chamber ensemble (e.g. the two string quartets, Trio,
Violin Sonatas 2 & 4), keyboard works (Piano Sonatas 1 & 2, Three Quarter-tone
Pieces, and the extant organ pieces), and a raft of songs (a number of them
instrumentally accompanied).
The New York Philharmonic will present eleven concerts at Avery Fisher Hall in New York City centered on Ives’s music, May 11-29, 2004. Symphony No. 4 will be heard on May 15, 19, and 20. John Adams conducts on May 21, 22, and 25.
Ives online
Scott Mortensen has helped to establish an CEI discussion list at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/charlesives/
Scott says: “I’ve been surprise by the response, and we’ve
had some interesting discussion.” Scott
Mortensen maintains his own extraordinary Ives website at www.musicweb.uk.net/Ives/
Ives for the Birds?!
One tidbit viz-a-viz Symphony No. 4 comes forth from research for the new critical
edition. In the fourth movement Ives labels the little sparkles of woodwind
sound in measures 32 and 64 “Thrush”(and variously marks the notes
to try to capture the slight tremolo in the finishing pitch). You can contemplate
the bird sound in Michael Tilson Thomas’s Sony recording with the Chicago
Symphony at timings 4:36 and 7:17. The new critical edition is now in the (long)
process of engraving. A new performing edition is hoped for in 2006 or ’07.
Ives on the Record
Several new recordings have appeared recently, most importantly from Naxos the
premiere release of the Emerson Overture/Concerto for Piano and Orchestra as
reconstructed by David Porter (paired with Symphony No. 1 in the new edition);
James Sinclair conducting the National Symphony Orchestra of Ireland (Dublin).
Among the forthcoming CD projects that are “in the can” is the Blair String Quartet’s recording of the Ives quartets (Naxos).
Coming from New World Records in the fall is pianist and Ives editor Donald Berman’s go at a phenomenal list of works, many in their first recording: Studies No. 1, 2, 4, 5, 11; Impression of the ‘St. Gaudens’ in Boston Common; Invention in D; The Celestial Railroad; Waltz-Rondo; Varied Air and Variations; “Storm and Distress” [i.e. the cadenza from Scherzo: Over the Pavements]; Minuetto; March No. 1 with “Year of Jubilee”; March No. 2 with “Son of a Gambolier”; March No. 3 with “Omega Lamda Chi”; March in G and C with “See the Conquering Hero Comes”; March #5 with “Annie Lisle”; March: The Circus Band; March No. 6 with “Here’s to Good Old Yale”; and George Ives’s Fourth Fugue. Berman’s disc will also include the two-piano Three Quarter-Tone Pieces (with Stephen Drury).
New Photos Posted
Several new photos are posted on the Ives website. More to come. If you have
a unique Ives-related photo that you wish to share, feel free to submit it to
us through the website contact link.
Does length really matter?
Ned Rorem, in an essay on Maurice Ravel, offers some interesting, if believable,
statistics. We quote:
“Ravel, who worked constantly, didn't turn out more than eight hours'
worth of music, as contrasted with Debussy’s sixteen, Beethoven's thirty,
Wagner's fifty, Bach's seventy, Ives’s two thousand, or Webern’s
two.” (A Ned Rorem Reader [New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001], p.
142).
No one knows how much music Ives actually wrote, but the Naxos complete Ives project expects to finish (some distant day) with 26 discs (that are generally a hour each in length). Not exactly Rorem’s guess, but impressive enough.
Special Recognitions
Stetson University held forth on Ives, January 29-31, featuring Ives Society
president, Ives author, and Indiana University professor J. Peter Burkholder,
the Blair String Quartet (who are recording the Ives string quartets), mezzo-soprano
Mary Ann Hart, music historian Michael Broyles, musicologist Denise Von Glahn,
and students and faculty of Stetson (which is in DeLand, Florida, near Orlando).
It was organized by Associate Dean Kari Juusela, a composer. There were four
concerts (including the string quartets, Hart's song recital, a song recital
by
Stetson students, and an all-comers concert by Stetson student ensembles and
faculty), along with lectures and panels. The Juilliard School devoted its annual
FOCUS! concerts to a week of Ives
Pittsburgh, June 8–13
The opening session on Wednesday, June 9 of the first National Performing Arts
Convention (comprising the annual conferences of the American Symphony Orchestra
League, Dance/USA, Chorus America, Opera America, and many smaller organizations)
will be called “Variations on America: A Work in Progress”. It’s
being conceived by opera and theater designer John Conklin, and will include
material on Ives, Whitman and others. Apparently the only Ives work being performed
is Variations on America (arr. Wm. Schuman). Here’s the blurb:
Join your colleagues at a “performance collage” to launch the first
National Performing Arts Convention. “Variations on America - A Work in
progress” will feature performances by a distinguished roster of soloists
and ensembles and includes music, movement, text, and images that juxtapose
the many ways the performing arts play a galvanizing role in times of celebration,
crisis, and change. For more information on the convention, go to www.performingartsconvention.org.
Correspondence coming
Tom C. Owens is wrapping up years of work on a selected correspondence of Charles
Ives. The University of California Press expects to publish the 450-page tome
in 2005.
Ives As a Movie Star
We get regular inquiries about how to order Theodore Timreck’s 1976 TV
docu-drama “A Good Dissonance Like a Man.” This remarkable hour-long
show first broadcast by PBS deservedly won a Peabody Prize. The sole source
is Facets Multimedia Inc. at 800 331 6197 or www.facet.org (search “Charles
Ives”). Available only in VHS.
Ives on the Trail
Danbury’s The News-Times recently ran a story on the development of an
“Ives Trail” in the Danbury area. To read, coy this link:
http://www.newstimes.com/cgi-bin/dbs.cgi?&db=news&view_records=1&id=60783&email=1
Ives Inspires
A fan of Charles Ives’s music passes his Ives inspired poem on to us:
Charles Ives: On the Completion of “The Housatonic at Stockbridge”
Do you remember the hymn, Dorrnance
Sailing to us across the river,
To our side of the Housatonic,
Harmony? Do you recall the white
Clapboard steeple
On the edge of the bank
The Congregationalist windows
The hidden people?
Soprano to the lapping water
Each pitch cleared a trail through the elms.
And I’’ve captured it, Darling,
In this very score, our walk
Through the trees tangled shadows
That moment of our sweet romance
My heart went soaring
To the noontide
tolling of bells.
-- Robin Freund <freund@mindspring.com>
Ives tunes on tour?
Eleanor Merton <ermerton@hotmail.com>
writes:
I've recently become Chairman of an orchestra in London, which glories in the
name of London Phoenix Orchestra (as a result of a revamp two years ago), but
is in fact the 80 year old “Insurance Orchestra.”
The Insurance Orchestra was set up in London by orchestral musicians who worked
in the Insurance Industry which centered around the City of London. It had a
very high profile for quite a considerable time. It is currently going through
a renaissance!
As part of this re-surge in passion and enthusiasm, and for the obvious reason
that Charles Ives embodied the link between the Insurance and Classical musical
worlds, I wondered if the Charles Ives Society might like to invite our orchestra
to America to perform, perhaps in 2005 as part of our 80th anniversary celebrations
(which we kick off in Sept 2004)?
If that is too soon, perhaps we could announce some plans during our 80th season,
and then do the tour in 2009 to coincide with our 85th anniversary, and 135th
anniversary of Ives' birth? Or something along those lines!
We would only be able to come to America for a few days - one week maximum -
since everyone has a day job and wouldn't be able to take a lot of annual leave.
The musicianship is very high and we would be really delighted to play a couple
of Ives symphonic works. Plus we have access to some exceptionally talented
young soloists, in case we want to perform a concerto. We could also put on
a couple of chamber music concerts featuring Ives work.
Funding would be interesting. We have the backing of various insurance companies
in London, but we need to find a focus to boost their involvement. If we could
entice American insurance companies to assist with tour funding, it might be
rather successful. Also, since we have rebranded ourselves the orchestra of
the “Financial Services Industry” we can pull on other types of
financial institution, both in England and the US.