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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Little-Known American Master,
By A Customer
This review is from: Henry Kimball Hadley: Symphony No. 4, The Ocean, and The Culprit Fay (Audio CD)
I've just come back to this disc after listening to and reviewing Edward MacDowell's two orchestral suites on Naxos 8.559075, and I'm more impressed than ever with Hadley's symphonic accomplishments represented on the current CD. While the most impressive music here comes in "The Culprit Fay," a tone poem based on a long poem by the American Joseph Rodman Drake, all three works are fine and deserve a hearing."The Culprit Fay" reminds me a bit of Granville Bantock's "Pierrot of the Minute," though as I recall, Bantock's piece is a little airier, less Germanically weighty than Hadley's. Still there is enough of spooky spiritualism about "The Culprit Fay," starting with the ghostly little violin figure that opens the work and returns as a sort of motto, to make this a worthy companion to the musical fairy worlds of Mendelssohn, Humperdinck, et al. Wonderful use of the orchestra as well. That can also be said of "The Ocean," an evocation of the sea that starts with a kind of Wagnerian drama and earnestness that recalls Vaughn Williams' "Sea Symphony," and then settles down to quiet evocations of the sea at rest that might have been outakes for "La Mer." In all, a worthy companion to the musical literature of the sea by Rimsky, Glazounov, Rachmaninov, Sibelius, and many others. The symphony strikes me as not quite in the league of the other pieces, though it's full of character too. Protraying the four points of the globe, it starts with an evocation of the icy North that is starkly dramatic. The second movement is full of faux Orientalisms that WON'T make you think of Rimsky. (Another reviewer mentioned Ketelby, who is a better fit.) The third movement takes us to our own sunny Southland, which Hadley characterizes through cakewalks and other jazzy utterances--fun. The last movement is an impulsive and upbeat one, protraying the promise of the American West, featuring episodes of Native American music complete with tribal drums. All I can say is, where are the cowboys? Written in 1919, the symphony is a little too naive, given what was happening in the musical world at the time, but then it is chock full of truly fine melodies and is orchestrated with such great skill that the sum of the whole is certainly more than that of its parts. Like me, you'll probably come away admiring rather than cavilling about particulars. The performances by John M. Williams, who is making a name for himself as revivifier of older American music, are splendid one and all. He navigates the Ukrainian orchestra through the Americanisms of the symphony with great success, and they play all the music with conviction. Add to that a sound recording that is one of the finest in Naxos' American music series, and you have a truly winning disc.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An American Romantic Master shows his stuff...,
By
This review is from: Henry Kimball Hadley: Symphony No. 4, The Ocean, and The Culprit Fay (Audio CD)
Henry K. Hadley was an important figure in America's musical life during the first decades of the 20th century. He was one of the first American conductors and composers to be recognized in Europe, where he conducted in Berlin, London, and Warsaw. His first opera, "Safie" premiered in Germany. He was the first conductor of the San Francisco Symphony, and the first American composer to conduct his own opera, "Cleopatra's Night", at the Metropolitan Opera. The opera was a success, and was revived the following year, and given a radio broadcast in 1929. Mahler conducted Hadley's works, and Richard Strauss once said that he was the only American to really know the orchestra! It is sad that so much of his music, including all his 8 operas, lie unrecorded. So "bravo" to Naxos for introducing this lovely music to modern listeners!
The finest work on this disc is the opening work--the symphonic poem "The Ocean", from 1921. This is an exhilerating work, with a transcendant, etherial ending. His earlier work, "The Culprit Fay" is also lovely, with much imagination in the orchestral writing. The symphony is also attractive, if not quite as emotionally compelling as the others. John McLaughlin Williams is an exciting conductor, and the orchestra plays beautifully. The sound is also excellent. Here's hoping Naxos will give us more Hadley! How about "Cleopatra's Night"?...Please? I read that after playing this music for the first time, the Ukrainian orchestra members were much impressed, and asked Williams, "Is he famous in America?" My answer to their question? He should be.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Near-Forgotten American Romantic Pictorialist,
By J Scott Morrison (Middlebury VT, USA) - See all my reviews (TOP 50 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Henry Kimball Hadley: Symphony No. 4, The Ocean, and The Culprit Fay (Audio CD)
I'd heard the name of Henry Hadley (1871-1937) and remembered that John Tasker Howard, in his landmark 'Our American Music' made the sly comment that his music was 'so agreeable that people like to hear it. And that is a great deal in these days.' But I'd never heard a note of his music as far as I could recall. In addition to being a prolific composer, Hadley was a busy man as conductor (Seattle and San Francisco Symphonies, associate conductor of the New York Philharmonic), music organizer (he was instrumental in the early days of what became the Berkshire Music Center [Tanglewood]) and all-round proselytizer for American music. He was the first American to conduct the Berlin Philharmonic. He had an opera commissioned by the Metropolitan ('Cleopatra's Night,' a one-acter that was quickly forgotten).Here we have three orchestral pieces dating from the early years of the last century, all of them descriptive in the manner of 'tone poems' à la Liszt, Strauss or Dukas. 'The Ocean' is a fifteen minute musical depiction of the sea from 1920, inspired by poetry of Louis K. Anspacher, another once celebrated artist whose work has disappeared from our collective consciousness. It portrays a sea storm as well as the glassy stillness of a becalmed sea. It builds to a Straussian climax before ending with a brief and serene coda. The program notes quote extensively from Anspacher's 'Ocean Ode,' and provide a program of sorts. 'The Culprit Fay' is another quarter-hour tone poem based on a poem, this time the early 19th century American poet, Joseph Rodman Drake's eponymous paean to the mighty Hudson River. Written in 1908, the music, which tells the story of a male water fairy who makes the mistake of falling in love with a mortal woman, is rather more impressionistic than 'The Ocean' and sounds at times like Dukas. It displays Hadley's mastery of French-influenced orchestration and is really quite effective. There was a time when it was quite popular with American orchestras, we're told. Although a true symphony, Hadley's Fourth Symphony (1911), is also descriptive. Each of the four movements is named for a direction. 'North' protrays winter weather and there is a blizzard every bit as stark as the wintry music of Sibelius, say. It begins with a solemn chorale in the brass before bursting forth with a wild and wicked storm, all crafted skillfully. 'East' abounds with Orientalisms reminiscent of Ketèlbey, but sounding a good bit more authentic. Granted, the materials sound rather more like what we later came to hear in film music, but we must remember that Hadley was writing a good twenty-five years before that sort of music was common in our movie theaters. (A side note: Hadley is credited with writing the very first synchronized film score, for 'When a Man Loves,' in 1926.) 'South' obviously refers to the American South, and this scherzo is my favorite of the four 'directions' primarily because it is an expert and early use of ragtime rhythms in concert music. Plus, it swings! 'West' also seems to be describing an American region, the wide-open spaces of our Western states. It abounds with Elgarian nobilmente and Straussian instrumental brilliance allied with some use of what sound to be Native American melodies. It is interesting that our modern conception of Western music exemplified by the open harmonies of Copland has no place here, but the music still manages to convey the grandeur of the region. This release is a part of the increasingly valuable 'American Classics' series. It matters not that the orchestra involved is the Ukraine National Symphony Orchestra; under John McLaughlin Williams's expert direction they play with conviction, suavity and rhythmic point. I don't think an American orchestra could have done it any better. The informative notes are by the CD's (and the American Classics') producers, Victor and Marina Ledin. Lifelike sound. TT=69 mins. Scott Morrison
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