Tag: Lou Harrison

  • Lou Harrison Solstice Ballet Summer Music

    Lou Harrison Solstice Ballet Summer Music

    It’s 4:40 EDT.

    Join the Sun Lion, the Moon Bull, and Mother Earth in welcoming summer with the ballet “Solstice” (1949) by American composer Lou Harrison. The actual music starts at the 2-minute mark. Before that is a brief spoken intro.

  • Ives Quartet No 2: An American Argument

    Ives Quartet No 2: An American Argument

    Lou Harrison called it “the finest piece of American chamber music yet… Music of this kind happens only every fifty years or a century, so rich in faith and so full of a sense of completion.”

    Charles Ives’ String Quartet No. 2 (composed between 1907 and 1913) is a programmatic work. The composer envisions his musicians as four people who “converse, discuss, argue (in re ‘Politick’), fight, shake hands, shut up – then walk up the mountain side to view the firmament.” What could be more American than that?

    On this Election Day, it is my hope that the majority of Americans will be big enough to emulate those enshrined in this quartet. We’re all different, we all have our own opinions, and our own philosophies, but we are all peers under the heavens.

    We’re also flawed, but we do have the capability to reach down inside to get in touch with our best selves. It’s not about getting over on those you don’t agree with. State your piece, in peace, cast your vote, but coexist and respect your neighbors and family. It’s time for us to be better than our leaders.

    That’s all I’ve got to say. Though I am thinking of my grandfather, who once remarked, on an Election Day morning of my childhood, “Well… I’m on my way to vote the bastards out!”

    Screwing the plywood over my computer screen now. Good luck, and God bless.

    Ives’ String Quartet No. 2

    A little more about it
    http://www.musicweb-international.com/ives/wk_string_quartet_2.htm

  • First Day of Summer Longest Day Lou Harrison Solstice

    First Day of Summer Longest Day Lou Harrison Solstice

    The first day of summer. Only three months to go until autumn! That’s the good news. The bad news is that the sun won’t set now until 8:30 p.m. That’s an awful lot of sun.

    Hey, man! It’s Lou Harrison’s “Solstice!”

  • Lou Harrison Maverick Composer at 100

    Lou Harrison Maverick Composer at 100

    Today is the 100th anniversary of the birth of composer Lou Harrison. Frequently described as an “American maverick,” Harrison was a pioneer of assimilating what is now termed “world music,” blending Eastern and Western elements. In this way, he navigated his own route to postmodernism, and his influence has been as keenly felt as that of any 20th century composer.

    Typically, Harrison discards the sense of willfulness and the projection of self that make many of our 20th century classics undeniably great. But in the process, he uncovers something else, a kind of musical equivalent to Zen that can be as entrancing as it is immediately accessible in its elegant simplicity. Funny to consider that among his teachers was Arnold Schoenberg. But then Harrison found joy in all kinds of music. He was mentored by Henry Cowell and Virgil Thomson. He was a friend of John Cage. He was an early champion of composers Edgard Varèse, Carl Ruggles and Alan Hovhaness.

    Among his great contributions on behalf of others: Harrison conducted the world premiere of Charles Ives’ Symphony No. 3, “The Camp Meeting,” at Carnegie Hall in 1946. The piece had lain unperformed, in Ives’ possession, since its creation 40 years earlier. The symphony went on to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music, and it remains one of the few works to have been so honored to have entered the standard repertoire.

    A lifelong pacifist, Harrison lived an openly gay lifestyle since the 1930s. To help make ends meet, he took side jobs as a record salesman, a florist, an animal nurse, and a forestry firefighter. He died at the age of 85 from a heart attack while traveling to a festival of his own music at Ohio State University in 2003. Not a bad way to go.

    Happy birthday, Lou Harrison. You’ve touched many, many more than those who know your name.

    http://www.npr.org/sections/deceptivecadence/2017/05/13/525919082/lou-harrison-the-maverick-composer-with-asia-in-his-ears

  • Summer Solstice Lou Harrison’s Solstice

    Summer Solstice Lou Harrison’s Solstice

    The first day of summer. Only three months to go until autumn! That’s the good news. The bad news is the sun won’t set tonight until 8:30. That’s an awful lot of sun.

    Hey, man! It’s Lou Harrison’s “Solstice!”

    Solstice (1950) 26:57

    Part 1:

    1. Garden of the Sun 4:22
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NOPcPia_jvc

    2. Entrance of the Moon Bull 3:51
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f6j1vZz5-2M

    3. Battle 2:31
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMimlKMlrIw

    4. Earth’s Invitation 2:57
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDXh4ElaS5Q

    5. Vernal Dance 2:38
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYYSNGG4BXo

    Part 2:

    1. Saturnalia 1:47

    2. Rekindling of the Fire 2:59

    3. Turning of the Wheel 2:58

    4. Blaze of Day 2:54

    Leta Miller, flute; Yvonne Powers, oboe; Adam Gordon, trumpet; Nohema Fernández, celesta; Emily Wong George, tack piano; Stephen Tramontozzi, string bass; Peter Shelton, Lee Duckles, cellos; Dennis Russell Davies, conductor

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