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Ives: Three Places in New England, Ruggles: Sun Treader, etc.
 
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Ives: Three Places in New England, Ruggles: Sun Treader, etc. [ORIGINAL RECORDING REMASTERED]

Charles Ives (Composer), Walter Piston (Composer), Carl Ruggles (Composer), Michael Tilson Thomas (Conductor), Boston Symphony Orchestra (Orchestra)
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Product Details


Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. 3 Places in New England - 1. The "St. Gaudens" in Boston Common (Col. Shaw and his Colored Regiment) 8:35Album Only
listen  2. 3 Places in New England - 2. Putnam's Camp, Redding, Connecticut 5:59$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. 3 Places in New England - 3. From "The Housatonic at Stockbridge" by Robert Underwood Johnson 3:45$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Sun-treader - 1.Quarter note= 69 Poco accelerando (bar/Takt/mesure 1) 3:58$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Sun-treader - 2. Tempo eighth note = 126 (bar 51a) 4:18$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Sun-treader - 3. Lento (bar 119) 1:12$0.45 Buy Track
listen  7. Sun-treader - 4. A tempo (bar 138a) 1:35$0.45 Buy Track
listen  8. Sun-treader - 5. Quarter note = 69 Poco accelerando (bar 169) 1:42$0.45 Buy Track
listen  9. Sun-treader - 6. Serene, but with great expression (bar 191) 3:37$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. Symphony No.2 - 1. Moderato10:36Album Only
listen11. Symphony No.2 - 2. Adagio11:10Album Only
listen12. Symphony No.2 - 3. Allegro 5:00$0.99 Buy Track


On this CD:
  1. Orchestral Set No. 1: Three Places in New England, for orchestra, S. 7 (K. 1A5)
    Composed by Charles Ives
    Performed by Boston Symphony Orchestra
    Conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas

  2. Sun-treader, for orchestra
    Composed by Carl Sprague Ruggles
    Performed by Boston Symphony Orchestra
    Conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas

  3. Symphony No. 2
    Composed by Walter Piston
    Performed by Boston Symphony Orchestra
    Conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Originally recorded in 1970, this is a welcome reissue of superb performances by the young Michael Tilson Thomas in his Boston Symphony days. The Ives is one of his best-known pieces and the crack orchestra plays it to the hilt. Ruggles's Suntreader is the work of another American loner, full of stark contrasts and uninhibited sound explorations--with a brass and percussion opening that'll make you sit up. Piston is often written off as an academic craftsman but his Second Symphony, like most of his works, makes such stereotyping patently absurd. He may not have been as idiosyncratic as Ruggles or Ives, but he was a creative composer whose poised, warmly gracious music should be better known. The three-movement Second Symphony is typical Piston in its classic framework, well-molded melodies and orchestration, and the way it slides effortlessly between the lyrical and the dramatic. It's hard to imagine better performances of these important American works. --Dan Davis

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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quintessential Ives, Ruggles, Piston, and MTT, August 9, 2004
By DAVID A. FLETCHER (Richmond, Va United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I must confess a bit of biographical prejudice in reviewing this disc. It was the original DG LP incarnation of the Ives included here--"Three Places..."--and its Ruggles discmate "Sun Treader" that opened my eyes to both composers back in high school. That worn library copy, with its glorious DG sonics captured in Boston Symphony Hall in the early '70's, was returned overdue more than a few times. I'd investigated it hot on the heels of seeing MTT conduct the Ives on one of the New York Philharmonic's "Young People's Concerts" televised by CBS, a series which Thomas took over from the departing Leonard Bernstein. Hearing MTT and the BSO on the LP confirmed what I'd learned from the television presentation, and the Ruggles companion piece gave me yet another foothold in 20th century American music.

While MTT doesn't really enjoy the comparisons, it would be less than truthful to say that not a little of Lenny's knack with American symphonic writing, as well as the barely-controlled histrionics of Gustav Mahler, rubbed off on him during their professional association in the '60's and '70's. And, even today, you can see it with Thomas's growing cycle of Mahler symphony performances with the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. Ives' and Mahler's contemporary popularity owe more than a little to Bernstein's advocacy, and it's this tradition that MTT falls into. Likewise, one must admit that he often surpasses his mentor.

While Ives was often quite specific in his musical notation and verbal playing instructions, he also encouraged performers to explore the implied "possibilities" of the piece. To understand Ives is to understand musical Americana. Charles Ives, growing up in Danbury, CT, in the late Victorian era under the tutelage and example of his bandmaster-father George Ives, absorbed several American music traditions: traditional hymnody and choral music, small-town brass bands with their often-times less than perfect pitch and ensemble, and the omnipresent European-based symphony orchestra with its established expressive vocabulary. These traditions, focused and remolded under the spell of New England Transcendentalism as expressed in the writings of Emerson and others, become the key ingredients of the Yankee musical "stew" which is quintessential Ives. Therein lies his genius, something which MTT understands deeply.

The turgid, brooding orchestral color of "The 'St. Gaudens' in Boston Common," the incredible mix of Fourth of July pomp and a schoolboy's daydreaming that make up "Putnam's Camp," and the wistful yet powerful evocation of the newlywed Ives couple's walk along "The Housatonic at Stockbridge," all receive their due here in a performance that I return to again and again with pleasure. The added bonus, of course, is the recorded sound, coming as it does from a vintage period of recordings made by DG at Boston Symphony Hall, the acoustic of which can become an ambient swamp if not as successfully managed as it is here. Contrary to an earlier reviewer's remarks, MTT truly "gets" Ives; one only has to hear that moment in "Housatonic" when the swirling string textures give way to the introduction of the "Contented River" theme, one of the most magical moments in all of American symphonic literature. I've never heard another performance match it.

The Ruggles "Sun Treader," as thorny and imposing an opus as one can find, offers equal rewards in MTT's hands, again with the BSO's performance on its home turf yielding major dividends. Ruggles was strongly championed by Thomas, an effort which resulted in a multi-disc LP set of Ruggles' complete works recorded with the Buffalo Philharmonic by CBS/Sony which has yet to see the light of day on CD, a travesty both for collectors and fans of this important American voice. "Sun Treader," the title of which is drawn from Robert Browning's tribute to Percy Shelley, draws its inspiration not from the latter (Ruggles had absolutely no interest in Shelley), but from Browning's verbal imagery...think of a titan's thunderous striding--tympany strokes--across a landscape of barely-contained orchestral movement. Browning, like Emerson, was also an interest of Charles Ives; perhaps a new recording by MTT and the San Francisco Symphony of "Sun Treader," coupled with the Ives "Robert Browning Overture," might by suggested by the A&R folks at BMG/RCA? Sometimes these things just suggest themselves.

Coming at the close of the present disc, the Piston Symphony #2 represents a somewhat less craggy musical lineage. Maine native Walter Piston achieved an almost Italianate elegance in his marriage of New England economy and French musical training. Within the symphony there is warmth, heart, reason, civility, all energetically presented by MTT in the present performance. A fitting finale, then, to a wonderful reissue by DG of spendid readings of 20th century American masterpieces.
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4.0 out of 5 stars win some, lose some, March 23, 2003
By Helen Kim (Seoul Korea (South)) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Tilson Thomas has done a fine job in rendering the demanding music of Ruggles and his reading of the Piston is well done. His Ives, however, is lacking. The orchestra, a superb orchestra as any, plays this music as if they just don't get it. Is it some notes, wanting to be free of the page or is it the job at hand? Who knows? The pacing, tempi and *feel* of the work in the second movement is hurried. Compare this to the later versions recorded by the conductor's mentor, L. Bernstein and FEEL the difference; the pacing, the ensemble sound, the sense of narrative and imagination. I can only wonder also of the difficulty and choices in recording this ensemble for the Ives as well; I suspect that a more unorthodox solution was needed and no one figured it out! This is why recording orchestras is such a challenge for anyone attempting such. For the Ives, I recommend Bernstein if not another version for this piece. I rate this 4 stars only for the Piston and Ruggles, which are better rendered and good examples of their work.
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