All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Charles Ives: A Songbook
Jeannine Herzel (mezzo) & Omar Ebrahim (baritone) Ensemble für Neue Musik Zürich, Sebastian Gottschick "Sebastian Gottschick’s adaptations of Ives’ songs and short instrumental pieces in this sense not only pay homage to the composer but develop his work further. The multifaceted ensemble and the instrumentation Gottschick chose allow him to be highly differentiated in his approach to the specific Ives sound that oscillates between crude realism and symbolist fragmentation: he either deliberately avoids this sound (for instance by using a vibraphone in Grantchester) or he pushes it to the point of prismatic refraction. Apart from this, Gottschick’s selection proceeds in a continuous, multi-perspective order that can be interpreted as a drama en miniature, a model of an ordinary day from the snatches of dreams in the morning to the falling night, and finally also as the epitome of the diversity of life itself. Behind all that the power and intangible nature of memories, Ives’ lifelong theme, becomes visible and audible." Wolfgang Rathert “Creative decisions have been taken about where to place Ives's songs in relation to each other, this new concept designed to illuminate our understanding of the time and place that begat them...both singers are...sympathetic and technically bulletproof” Gramophone Magazine, May 2013 | 
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| |  | Ives - Piano Trio & Violin Sonatas Nos. 2 & 4
Considering that Ives lived to be 80 years old the period during which he was most active as one of the most innovative of American composers was remarkably short. His earliest works date from the mid-1890s and by 1930 he was virtually silent. This late inactivity was possibly engendered by the fact that his works were largely ignored during his lifetime and it wasn't until the mid-1960s that his music gained any kind of recognition. By then he had been dead for ten years. This is the second Ives disc in this series and the programme here comprises some of Ives's instrumental and vocal music. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Ives - Songs Volume 1
Lielle Berman, Jennifer Casey Cabot, Patrick Carfizzi, Michael Cavalieri, Robert Gardner, Ian Howell, Sara Jakubiak, Tamara Mumford, Mary Phillips, David Pittsinger, Matthew Plenk, Kenneth Tarver, Leah Wool (singers), Frederick Teardo (organ), Eric Trudel, Laura Garritson & J.J. Penna, Douglas Dickson (piano) Biava String Quartet Charles Ives wrote almost two hundred songs. Although his reputation rests on orchestral, chamber and piano music, it is Ives's songs that represent the heart of his creative thinking. The expressive variety encountered is accordingly vast: indeed, the gradual evolution of Ives’s songwriting is analogous to the wider evolution of American music during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This new edition includes all the songs that Ives completed. The alphabetic approach ensures that each volume (of which this disc is the first of six) contains a representative cross-section. “All of the soloists, who represent all voice-parts are first-rate singers, many quite young with blooming opera careers, each with a clear and compelling competence in how to sing songs. And these aren't just any songs, but some of the most fascinating, engaging, joyful, humorous, nostalgic, sentimental, artfully written songs in the repertoire.” Classics Today “Tackling the huge Ives songbook alphabetically gives us welcome variety. Anyone seriously interested in Ives warts-and-all will want to be on board for this series.” Gramophone Magazine, October 2008 “These songs, with all their quirks and flights of fantasy, [are] among the most important of the 20th century in any language.” The Guardian | | | (also available to download from $6.25) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Ives - Romanzo di Central Park
“Gerald Finley has everything and more in his darkly full-bodied voice to match the often formidable technical and expressive requirements of Ives’s songbook—reinforced by Drake’s elastic, expressive piano … this is a must-buy album” The Times “This is a highly successful follow-up to Gerald Finley and Julius Drake’s first Ives recital from 2005. Here there is the same sort of mix, from familiar songs such as The Circus Band and Watchman! To an early requiem for the family cat and the intriguing title song, Romanzo (di
Central Park), with its obbligato violin part atmospherically played by Magnus Johnston. Finley is his usual charismatic self, at home as much in the hymnody as the parody, and he is careful not to over-sentimentalise the more homely numbers while injecting pathos into the war songs. Drake
projects Ives’s often complex accompaniments with clarity and style” The Telegraph “…outstandingly well sung and played, equally well recorded, and highly recommendable to all lovers of fine songs and fine singing.” BBC Music Magazine, March 2008 ***** “…some of the early songs in a conventional style are treated with the same seriousness that Finley would apply to Lieder. The contemplative ones are delivered with an impressive serenity and Finley has his own way of attacking the razzle-dazzle of something like "The Circus Band" or "They Are There!".” Gramophone Magazine, April 2008 “This is the second volume of Ives songs from this accomplished team; their first Ives volume (reviewed above) contained some of the blockbusters like Charlie Rutlage and General WilliamBooth but the mood of this volume is fairly sedate. In particular some of the early songs in a conventional style are treated with the same seriousness that Finley would apply to Lieder. An unusual but effective feature here is the provision of violin obbligato both for the jingoistic wartime song They Are There! and the mawkish take-off Romanzo (di Central Park). Sentimentality is a Victorian characteristic but in Songs MyMother Taught Me, as elsewhere in Ives, the emotion is genuine so it invariably convinces. Many of the songs are transposed down – hard work for the pianist and it makes some of the textures rather dense. The contemplative ones are delivered with an impressive serenity and Finley has his own way of attacking the razzledazzle of something like The Circus Band or TheyAre There! He's close-miked, which works best in the intimacy of the quieter songs.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 BBC Music Magazine
Choral & Song Choice - March 2008 |
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| |  | Voices of our Time - Dawn UpshawA Contemporary Songs Selection
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| |  | Time to Time
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| |  | Ives - Variations on ‘America’
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| |  | Cabaret Songs
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| |  | The Art of Susan Graham
Berg: | Sieben frühe Lieder | Berlioz: | La Damnation de Faust, Op. 24: Chanson gothique 'Autrefois un roi de Thulé' Dieu! Que viens-je d'entendre?…Il m'en souvient ... Je l'aime donc? (from Béatrice et Bénédict) | Brahms: | He, Zigeuner, greife in die Saiten ein! (No. 1 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Hochgetürmte Rimaflut, wie bist du trüb (No. 2 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Wißt ihr, wann mein Kindchen am allerschönsten ist? (No. 3 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Lieber Gott, du weißt, wie oft bereut ich hab' (No. 4 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Brauner Bursche führt zum Tanze (No. 5 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Röslein dreie in der Reihe blühn so rot (No. 6 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Kommt dir manchmal in den Sinn (No. 7 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) Rote Abendwolken ziehn am Firmament (No. 8 from Zigeunerlieder, Op.103) | Chausson: | Poème de l'amour et de la mer, Op. 19 | Debussy: | Proses Lyriques Fantoches Songs from Le livre de Baudelaire | Gluck: | O del mio dolce ardor (from Paride ed Elena) Non, je n'espere plus... O toi qui prolongeas mes jours (from Iphigénie en Tauride) O malheureuse Iphigenie! (from Iphigénie en Tauride) Non, cet affreux devoir... Je t'implore et je tremble (from Iphigénie en Tauride) Qu'entends-je? Qu'a-t-il dit?... Amour, viens rendre a mon ame (from Orphée et Eurydice) J'ai perdu mon Eurydice (from Orphée et Eurydice) | Hahn, R: | A Chloris O mon bel inconnu: 'O mon bel inconnu' Brummell: 'Air de la Lettre' Mozart: 'Etre adore' O mon bel inconnu: 'C'est tres vilain d'etre infidele' Ciboulette: 'C'est pas Paris, c'est sa banlieue' | Handel: | Di te mi rido (from Alcina) Mi lusinga il dolce affetto (from Alcina) | Heggie: | Who will walk with me? (from Dead Man Walking) He will gather us around (from Dead Man Walking) | Honegger: | Les Aventures du roi Pausole: 'Si vous saviez' | Ives, C: | The Things our Fathers Loved The Housatonic at Stockbridge Swimmers Memories: (A) Very Pleasant; (B) Rather Sad Ann Street Serenity ‘1, 2, 3' Songs My Mother Taught Me The Circus Band The Cage The Indians Like a Sick Eagle September Soliloquy, or a Study in 7ths and Other Things Farewell to Land Thoreau | Mahler: | Liebst Du um Schönheit (Rückert-Lieder) | Messager: | L'Amour masque: 'J'ai deux amants' Fortunio: 'Je ne vois rien..Lorsque je n'etais qu'une enfant' Coups de roulis: 'Les hommes sont biens tous les memes' Passionnement: 'L'amour est un oiseau rebelle' Les P'tites Michu: 'Vois-tu, je m'en veux' La Petite Fonctionnaire: 'Je regrette mon Pressigny' Les Dragons de l"Imperatrice: 'Amour, amour, quel est donc ton pouvoir' L'Amour masque: 'Mon reve' | Moore, B: | Sexy Lady | Mozart: | Non so più cosa son, cosa faccio (from Le nozze di Figaro) Parto, parto, ma tu ben mio (from La Clemenza di Tito) Voi che sapete (from Le nozze di Figaro) Deh, per questo istante solo (from La Clemenza di Tito) Non ho colpa (from Idomeneo) Dunque Sperar Poss'io...Il Tenero Momento (from Lucio Silla) | Poulenc: | Quatre poemes de Guillaume Apollinaire | Ravel: | Shéhérazade | Rorem: | Sonnet (Santa Fe Songs) Clouds Early in the morning The Serpent Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal Opus 101 (Santa Fe Songs) I Strolled Across an Open Field To a Young Girl Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair Ode For Poulenc Little Elegy Alleluia Look down fair moon O you to whom I often and silently come I will always love you The Tulip Tree The Wintry Mind (Santa Fe Songs) I am Rose The Lordly Hudson O Do Not Love Too Long Far-Far-Away For Susan A Journey Sometimes with one I love Love Orchids Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening Do I love you more than a day? Ferry Me Across the Water The Sowers (Santa Fe Songs) That shadow, my likeness | Simons, Moises: | Toi c'est moi: 'C'est ca la vie, c'est ca l'amour' Toi c'est moi: 'Vagabonde' | Yvain: | Yes: 'Yes' |
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