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Ives Plays Ives: The Complete Recordings of Charles Ives at the Piano is an album consisting of recordings, made during the years 1933–1943, of composer Charles Ives playing his own music. Background
New World Records issued 42 tracks of his recordings on CD on April 1, 2006, as Ives Plays Ives. In Canada in the 1950s, the expatriate English pianist Lloyd Powell played a series of concerts including all of Ives's piano works, at the University of British Columbia. [33] Recognition of Ives's music steadily increased.
H. or Ch. Ives Because of You Because Thou Art Berceuse O're the mountain 93 H. or Ch. Ives The Cage A leopard went around 64 H. or Ch. Ives The Camp Meeting Across the summer meadows 47 Charlotte Elliot from Symphony No. 3 Canon [I] Oh, the days are gone 111 19 Songs Moore Canon [II] Chanson de Florian Ah! s'il est dans votre village 78
The beginning of the Concord Sonata, first edition. The sonata's four movements represent figures associated with transcendentalism.In the introduction to his Essays Before a Sonata [13] [14] (published immediately before the Concord Sonata, and serving as what Henry and Sidney Cowell called "an elaborate kind of program note (124 pages long)" [15]), Ives said the work was his "impression of ...
The groups play in independent tempos, [4] and typically require separate conductors. [5] Ives provided a short text by which to interpret the work, giving it a narrative as in program music. [6] [3] Throughout the piece the strings sustain slow tonal triads that, according to Ives, represent "The Silence of the Druids — who Know, See and ...
Three Places in New England was composed between 1903 and 1929. The set was completed in 1914 but was later revised for performance in 1929. The second piece, Putnam’s Camp, Redding, Connecticut was created from two short theater orchestra pieces composed by Ives in 1903.
Ives was inspired to write Decoration Day after listening to his father's marching band play on Decoration Day. The marching band would march from the Soldiers' Monument at the center of Danbury to Wooster Cemetery, and there Ives would play "Taps". The band would leave often playing Reeves's "Second Regiment Connecticut National Guard March". [10]
Here We Are is a musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim and a book by ... plans were underway for a Sondheim and Ives musical based on two Luis Buñuel ...