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Thomas Adès: America: A Prophecy
 
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Thomas Adès: America: A Prophecy

Thomas Ades (Artist), City of Birmingham Symphony Chorus (Artist)
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (February 24, 2004)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: EMI Classics
  • Copy Protected
  • ASIN: B0000C17Q8
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #189,645 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #69 in  Music > Classical > Featured Composers, A-Z > ( C ) > Couperin, François
    #91 in  Music > Classical > Featured Composers, A-Z > ( B ) > Bolcom, William

Listen to Samples

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1. Part I
2. Part II
3. Movement I
4. Movement II
5. Iam nocet frigus teneris
6. Nec limpha caret alveus
7. Modo frigescit quidquid est
8. Nutritur ignis osculo

On this CD:
  1. America (a prophecy), for soprano & large orchestra (optional large chorus), Op. 19
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    Performed by Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
    with Susan Bickley
    Conducted by Thomas Ades

  2. The Fayrfax Carol, for chorus (& organ)
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    with Hugh Webb, Tom Poster

  3. Fool's Rhymes, for chorus, harp, prepared piano, organ & percussion, Op. 5
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    with Hugh Webb, Tom Poster, Christopher Bowers-Broadbent, Richard Benjafield

  4. January Writ, for chorus & organ
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    with Hugh Webb, Tom Poster, Christopher Bowers-Broadbent

  5. O thou who didst with pitfall and with gin, for male chorus, Op. 3a
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    with Hugh Webb, Tom Poster

  6. The Lover in Winter, song cycle for countertenor & piano
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    with Hugh Watkins, Robin Blaze

  7. Life Story, for soprano, 2 bass clarinets & double bass, Op. 8
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    with Duncan Prescott, Tom Poster, Corin Long, Dov Scheindlin, Hugh Watkins, Claron McFadden, Zoe Martlew, Andrew Webster
    Conducted by Thomas Ades

  8. Cardiac Arrest
    Composed by Christopher Foreman, Cathal Smyth
    with Dov Scheindlin, Hugh Watkins, Duncan Prescott, Tom Poster, Corin Long, Zoe Martlew, Andrew Webster
    Conducted by Thomas Ades

  9. Les Baricades mistérieuses, for harpsichord (Pièces de clavecin, II, 6e ordre)
    Composed by Francois Couperin
    with Dov Scheindlin, Hugh Watkins, Duncan Prescott, Tom Poster, Corin Long, Zoe Martlew, Andrew Webster
    Conducted by Thomas Ades

  10. Brahms, for baritone & orchestra, Op. 21
    Composed by Thomas Ades
    Performed by Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
    with Christopher Maltman
    Conducted by Thomas Ades


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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ades lives up to the hype ..., August 7, 2004
By Robert C. Hamilton (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
After hearing the recording of Asyla, which I consider one of the most exciting works on the modern classical scene, I have tended to give at least some initial respect to anything with the name Thomas Ades printed on it. Perhaps only this respect could persuade me to purchase a CD which juxtaposes Mayan texts, a sermon of John Donne, a poem by Omar Khayyam, and arrangements of a ska classic and a Rameau harpsichord piece. As it turns out, I was not wrong in my hopes that Ades would be able to pull off such a feat of eclecticism.

Of course, the main attraction here is the title work, America: A Prophecy. This big piece for orchestra, soloist, and chorus was written in 1999 as part of the New York Philharmonic's millenium commision. With lines like "They will come from the east ... they will burn all the land ... your cities will fall," the piece gained a rather terrifying new meaning after the September 11th attacks. It is possible that in light of this, the CD was slapped together quickly, blanks filled in by random unreleased Ades juvenilia. I doubt it, since the CD was released a full three years after 9/11; at any rate, Ades is such a diverse composer that an eclectic collection of his music actually makes perfect sense. His very unusual harmonies are audible in all the pieces, even the very early ones; thus the disc is musically unified, even if the themes are quite disparate.

America: A Prophecy is the second-newest work recorded here, and it falls easily into the same category as Asyla. The same utterly unique, very dense orchestrations (from a composer with ambivalence toward Brahms!) are all there. The alternation of this style with a ghostly, vibrato-less mezzo, however, is a new thing, and I find it quite effective -- though the odd singing style took a few listens to grow on me. The climax of the first movement is arresting in the same way Asyla's fourth movement is: the glorious diatonic chords manage to be at once genuinely triumphant but also wry and self-conscious; after all, this sort of outburst has been essentially illegal since the death of Gustav Mahler. I find the piece very effective.

Following this are a few choral works, all different but coming out of the same basic sound-world. The Fayrfax Carol is probably the most traditional, "archaic" sounding of them, a somewhat medieval sound complementing the passion-play-style lyrics. Fool's Rhymes contains some excellent percussive effects that just echo the work of Gallic moderns like Messiaen and Boulez. Ades, however, always remains closer to the diatonic scale. January Writ and O Thou, who didst with pitfall and with gin are just as effective as the preceeding works.

The Lover in Winter, a song-cycle for piano and countertenor, is the earliest work on the CD, but you wouldn't be able to tell for sure just by listening. It is perhaps less distinctive than the newer works, but not less well-crafted. I also hear some echoes of French modern works in the piano writing. As a Latinist, I was thrilled to find some good Latin lyrics also! I wish I could have written music like this when I was seventeen ...

Next up is a much talked-about Ades work, Life Story. It was released a few years ago in a piano-voice arrangement, and famously insructs the soprano to imitate the vocal style of jazz singer Billie Holiday. I've never heard the piano version, but I find it hard to imagine arranging the accompaniment for piano alone; here it is played by two bass clarinets and string bass. I'm not sure that I like the piece especially well; the accompaniment is somewhat Stravinskian and detached, and seems not to fit in with the jazzy vocalizations. Perhaps I would just expect something a little warmer and more sultry for a setting of this Tennessee Williams poem; the whole thing seems a trifle cold. Not bad by any means, just less effective than many other works from Ades.

Two wildly disparate transcriptions follow: the first is of a "ska rock classic" by Christopher Foreman and Cathal Smyth called Cardiac Arrest. It is an odd little piece, very energetic and well-orchestrated. A pleasant surprise for me. Second is Les Barricades misterieuses by Couperin, originally for harpsichord. Rather innocuous, this is also given a good -- and somehwat "mysterious" -- arrangement.

The last piece on the CD, "Brahms," is also the latest-written. It sets a German poem by eminent pianist Alfred Brendel and was written for his birthday. It would seem that neither Ades (judging by previous statements) nor Brendel are terribly enthusiastic about Brahms' work, but at least Ades seems to be more paying an homage to the late-romantic patriarch than anything; the music is certainly not a pastiche, but it does come dangerously close to quotation a couple times -- though I believe the themes are all original. It is recognizeable as the work of Thomas Ades, but his usual frenetic orchestrations, with their percussive effects and extreme contrasts between low and high instruments are replaced with a very Brahmsian low-lying and homogeneous density. The German poem is set extremely well, making for an absolutely wonderful album close, at once humorous and serious.

It is a rare thing for a young, modern-classical composer to rise to swift stardom and become a household name before the age of thirty-five, and surely it would be easy for Mr Ades to get lost in all the hype. Yes, many people will probably buy this recording simply because of the eerie timing and message of the title work, or because Ades is a "hip" composer. But I think there is far more to this recording, and to Thomas Ades, than mere trendiness. He is a remarkable young composer with amazing technique and bursting with (sometimes too many!) ideas. He may not have fully found his voice yet, but his music can hardly fail to be recognized as his own. America: A Prophecy rates five stars, and comes highly recommended.
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Don't fall for hype: entertaining the first time, clearly deserving 1-star afterward, October 28, 2006
In the 1990s, Thomas Ades benefitted from one of the largest hype machines the classical music world had ever seen. This young composer, born in 1971, was the great hope of British music, the next great master after Britten (somehow Benjamin, Harvey, and Birtwistle were pushed aside), and just the man to bring classical music to the masses. That's a tall order, and one's disappointment in Ades' music deepens all the more because of the glory one was lead to expect. Some of his earlier work, such as "Asyla" and "These Premises are Alarmed", showed him a decent orchestrator, but the man's work has many weaknesses. These continue in this 2004 EMI disc, collecting ten of his pieces.

"America: A Prophecy" (1999) is the largest work here in terms of length and proportions. It was written for mezzo-soprano, chorus, and orchestra for the New York Philharmonic's "Messages for the Millennium" project. Ades sought to contrast the comfort of New York at the time with the bloody way in which the Americas were conquered, so he paired Mayan prophecies from the Chilam Balam with conquistador songs of bravado. Lines like "They will come from the East" and "They will burn your cities" made the piece especially poignant after September 11, 2001. Though the work is entertaining on the first listen or two, especially due to the odd vibrato-less mezzo-soprano, it gets old real soon. There's no subtlety here, Ades either bangs it out with massive orchestral and choral bombast with no economy, like Sandstrom's awful "High Mass", or keeps it real quiet. At both extremes, we get generally the same sonorities of "Asyla", which were cute before but now just seem sappy. I first heard "America: A Prophecy" over a year ago, it's taken me this long to tame my annoyance enough to review it, it's that bad.

Several chamber works primarily for voice follow, setting ancient or medieval texts. These are all quite lightweight, some of them even lack opus numbers, making one wonder how much work the composer put into them. "January Writ", for chorus and organ, seems fairly easy and might prove a hit with regional choruses. The others, however, are dull. "Life Story", here in an arrangement for soprano and a chamber ensemble of string bass and two bass clarinets, is just as unimpressive as the first time it appeared on disc for soprano and piano: if all you do is have your soprano sing like Billy Holliday, it's not all that exciting.

One reason "Asyla" got so much attention was because of its third movement, titled "Ecstasio". In 4/4 time, it evoked the bass/hi-hat alteration of house music and imitated the trippy synths of trace with woodwinds. Trying to follow in that success, this disc contains Ades' chamber setting of a 1982 ska rock hit by Madness, "Cardiac Arrest". Unlike Olga Neuwirth's "Hommage a Klaus Nomi" which supplements the arrangement with a strong dramatic spectacle, Ades' arrangement of "Cardiac Arrest" just sounds gimmicky. So an ensemble can imitate a rock song, so what? This is followed by Ades' arrangement of a Couperin harpsichord piece, where yet again any insight is lacking.

If you're interested in contemporary music from Britain, look for anything by George Benjamin or Julian Anderson, two composers whose music has some substance behind the surface glitter. Considering how far Ades' career had moved along by the last works here, it's appalling that he still hasn't shown anything underivative and rigourous.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More than hype, June 5, 2008
By kamus (United States) - See all my reviews
  
Again, I have to echo Mr. Hamilton's fine and accurate review. I would just like to add that I was largely unaware of any hype about Ades before I was exposed to his music. As a matter of fact, I was somewhat negatively predisposed to him due to reading something critical about him. I must say I was unprepared for the impact his music had on me, Beyond his technique which itself, is extraordinary, lies a brilliant, fecund imagination that seems to have absorbed just about everything in Classical music that had preceded him while delivering that synthesis of technique and ideas in an utterly original manner. His command of the resources of tonality and "atonality" is astonishing, always acutely aware of the play of tonality or it's lack upon the listener, which is more than I can say about a depressing percentage of contemporary composers. There is a deep tonal logic to his music and the listener is well rewarded by following the thread of his musical argument, surreal as it is many time.For me, some highlights included the title piece which is as powerful as it is chilling, with or without the unintended 9-11 link. The songs are exquisitely wrought with the polytonal clouds of piano notes surround the arch melodies always sounding curiously inevitable. The man is demonstrably a genius IMO, and this music bears witness to that, Sometimes, by accident the hype is accurate.
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