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Charles Ives – Holidays Symphony – II. Decoration Day

Charles Ives (1874-1954) Holidays Symphony (or A Symphony: New England Holidays) I. Washingtons Birthday II. Decoration Day III. The Fourth of July IV. Thanksgiving and Forefathers’ Day San Francisco Symphony/Michael Tilson Thomas Charles Ives got the idea to write a holiday symphony during the summer of 1905. He wanted to write each movement as if it were based on a grown mans memory of his childhood holidays. Here are melodies like icons, resonating with memory and history, with war, childhood, community, and nation. Ives constructed these movements based on personal memories from his past, including his father, George Ives, and the town of Danbury. His father had a huge impact on Ivess compositions, especially after he died in November 1894. Ives lived in Danbury throughout his childhood, a town which holds many of the life experiences that inspired him to compose a Holdiday Symphony. New England Holidays exemplies multi-tonality in the reharmonization of borrowed musicand [mixing of] several keys. This work is notorious for its quotations, in particularly, its complex overlapping of multiple sources. Without the plethora of quotation, Holiday Symphony would lose its ability to call forth memories and emotions. The first three movements of Holiday Symphony were performed in the United States and Europe in 1931 and 1932 under the direction of Nicolas Slonimsky. The concerts created great excitement: laughter, protest, enthusiasm. Ivess music never occupied more than a
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Charles Ives (1874-1954) Holidays Symphony (or A Symphony: New England Holidays) I. Washingtons Birthday II. Decoration Day III. The Fourth of July IV. Thanksgiving and Forefathers’ Day San Francisco Symphony/Michael Tilson Thomas Charles Ives got the idea to write a holiday symphony during the summer of 1905. He wanted to write each movement as if it were based on a grown mans memory of his childhood holidays. Here are melodies like icons, resonating with memory and history, with war, childhood, community, and nation. Ives constructed these movements based on personal memories from his past, including his father, George Ives, and the town of Danbury. His father had a huge impact on Ivess compositions, especially after he died in November 1894. Ives lived in Danbury throughout his childhood, a town which holds many of the life experiences that inspired him to compose a Holdiday Symphony. New England Holidays exemplies multi-tonality in the reharmonization of borrowed musicand [mixing of] several keys. This work is notorious for its quotations, in particularly, its complex overlapping of multiple sources. Without the plethora of quotation, Holiday Symphony would lose its ability to call forth memories and emotions. The first three movements of Holiday Symphony were performed in the United States and Europe in 1931 and 1932 under the direction of Nicolas Slonimsky. The concerts created great excitement: laughter, protest, enthusiasm. Ivess music never occupied more than a
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Posted in Europe.

6 comments

6 Replies

  1. 0betalibrae0 Jul 28th 2011

    A wonderful ode to a forgotten holiday, that is now just a car sale special, r the start of the unofficial summer for businesses. But, once used to actually commerorate soldiers, on May 30th, a date chosen for it was not the anniversary of a battle. Untile the uniformed holiday act of 68.

  2. petezilla Jul 28th 2011

    the harmonies are so chilling and rich, just amazing

  3. Epogdous Jul 28th 2011

    @ptose An intimate Andrew Wyeth’s painting for each one of the four movements of this stunning symphony! =]

  4. incredible music but i like also the paint, what is it?

  5. johnnynoirman Jul 28th 2011

    Brilliant work..Thanks for the posting!

  6. thrash5409 Jul 28th 2011

    This is the Bernstein recording from 1963. It is my favorite.


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