This page lists all recordings of The Side Show, by Charles Ives (1874-1954) on CD. Generally, more recent CDs are listed first, but with priority given to items that are in stock. |
Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Ives - Piano Trio & Violin Sonatas Nos. 2 & 4
Deborah Voigt, Brian Zeger, Glenn Dictenow, Alan Staphansky & Israelela Margalit 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. | 
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| |  | Ives - Songs Volume 5
Janna Baty, Lielle Berman, Patrick Carfizzi, Jennifer Casey Cabot, Michael Cavalieri, Robert Gardner, Ian Howell, Sara Jakubiak, Sumi Kittelberger, Ryan MacPherson, Tamara Mumford, Mary Phillips, David Pittsinger, Matthew Plenk, Kenneth Tarver, Leah Wool, Enrico Sartori, Douglas Dickson, Laura Garritson, J.J. Penna & Eric Trudel 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 fourth of six) contains a representative cross-section “These songs, with all their quirks and flights of fantasy, [are] among the most important of the 20th century in any language.” The Guardian | 
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| |  | A Song For AnythingSongs by Charles Ives
Gerald Finley (baritone) & Julius Drake (piano) | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Charles Ives
Marni Nixon, John McCabe & Henry Herford Ensemble Modern, Ingo Metzmacher | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | All My HeartDeborah Voigt sings American Songs
Deborah Voigt (soprano) & Brian Zeger (piano) | | | Usually despatched in 3 - 4 working days. |
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| |  | Vocal Music by Crumb and Ives
Jan de Gaetani and Gilbert Kalish | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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| |  | Sure on this shining nightThe romantic song in America
Barber: | Sure on this shining night, Op. 13 No. 3 | Beach: | The Year's at the Spring, Op. 44 No. 1 | Bolcom: | Never more will the wind | Chadwick: | When stars are in the quiet skies (Bulwer-Lytton) | Chanler: | The Children (Feeney) These, my Ophelia (MacLeish) | Charles, E: | When I have sung my songs | Copland: | Nature, the gentlest mother (Dickinson) | Corigliano: | Song to the Witch of The Cloisters (Hoffman) | Ewazen: | The Tiger (Blake) | Firestone: | If l could tell you (Marshall) | Friml: | Rose Marie (Harbach & Hammerstein) | Griffes: | An Old Song Re-sung (Masefield) | Hageman: | Do Not Go My Love | Herbert, V: | Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life (Johnson Young) | Hindemith: | On hearing 'The Last Rose of Summer' (Wolfe) Echo | Ives, C: | The Side Show The Collection (Kingsley) | Korngold: | Songs of the Clown: 'Come Away, Death' | Malotte: | The Lord's Prayer | Marder: | To a Stranger (Whitman) | Musto: | Triolet (O'Neill) | Parker, H: | June Night (Higginson) | Romberg, S: | One Alone (Harbach & Hammerstein) | Rorem: | Little Elegy | Schuman: | Orpheus with His Lute | Thomson, V: | Sigh no more, ladies (Shakespeare) |
Robert White (tenor), Samuel Sanders (piano) Tenor Robert White sings 28 romantic songs spanning the century by both native American and immigrant composers, from Amy Beach in 1899 to Marc Marder's Walt Whitman setting of 1996. There are many favourites (or 'favorites') here from the musical stage, including Friml's Rose Marie and Victor Herbert's Ah! Sweet Mystery of Life. Malotte's famous setting of The Lord's Prayer is also included. The title of the CD is taken from Samuel Barber's beautiful setting of James Agee (the poet of Knoxville, Summer of 1924).
The accompanying booklet is packed with anecdotes from Robert White's personal acquaintance with the majority of the composers represented. Several of the songs were actually written specially for him to sing. | | | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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