Charles Ives (1874-1954): 14-18/10/24
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI'm looking forward to this series. I hope we'll be introduced to some lesser-known aspects of this interesting composer. I think he's a good candidate for this programme since his life was interfused with the music he wrote more than with some other composers.
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
Agreed. I was on an Ives exploration a few months back and I also find his biography interesting
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostRFG, Is this the Stuart Feder biog in CUP's Musical Lives series ? I have Vivian Perlis' Charles Ives Remembered - An Oral History which is, as the title suggests, delightfully anecdotal and paints a vivid picture of his life and times, but lacks musical analysis.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Hmm - too much like COTW these days, although one always hesitates before prejudging.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View Post
I'm unsure of how much hardcore musical analysis has ever been the province of COTW, as it would be pretty indigestible radio in the context. Not so, of course, for the much-missed Discovering Music, which has presumably been discontinued because it can't be fitted into one of the currently-fashionable formats.
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostRFG, Is this the Stuart Feder biog in CUP's Musical Lives series ? I have Vivian Perlis' Charles Ives Remembered - An Oral History which is, as the title suggests, delightfully anecdotal and paints a vivid picture of his life and times, but lacks musical analysis.
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Perhaps too early to say.Inevitably Kate is dealing more with family life at this stage,e.g the influence of his father. Later in the week it might change as she moves on to the third and fourth symphonies and his view of the world at that time.
I've always been struck by the story of the broadcast of the third, a once-in-a-blue-moon event , for which Ives and his wife had to borrow their cook's radio. Although a wealthy man due to his 'day job' he apparenty didn't own a radio.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostPerhaps too early to say.Inevitably Kate is dealing more with family life at this stage,e.g the influence of his father. Later in the week it might change as she moves on to the third and fourth symphonies and his view of the world at that time.
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Quite so. I don't want to be picky, and I realise that with limited time points have to be made quickly, but I did feel Kate caricatured Horatio Parker unfairly, and I detected a trace of that old-fashioned view of Ives as a happy-go-lucky iconoclastic hillbilly, where in fact he had a phenomenally acute ear and knew exactly what he was doing.
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