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Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast

Ives, "Three Places in New England"

Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast

Joshua Weilerstein

Clarinet, Timpani, Performing, Trombone, Cello, Trumpet, Bassoon, Classicalmusic, Performing Arts, Arts, Violin, Flute, Piano, Conductor, Music, Weilerstein

4.92.1K Ratings

🗓️ 29 September 2022

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In 1929, the conductor Nicolas Slonimsky contacted the American composer Charles Ives about performing one of his works. This was a bit of a surprise for Ives, since he had a checkered reputation among musicians and audience members, if they even were familiar with his name at all. In fact, he was much more famous during his lifetime as an extremely successful insurance executive! Ives mostly composed in his spare time, and his music was mostly ignored or ridiculed as that of a person suffering from a crisis of mental health. Most of his music was never performed during his lifetime, and even today, he is thought of as a great but extremely eccentric composer, and orchestras and chamber ensembles often struggle to sell tickets if his name appears on the program. But for those who love Ives, there is an almost evangelical desire to spread his music to the world. I’m one of those people, and I’m finally fulfilling a pledge to myself to do a full show devoted to a single work of arguably the greatest and most under appreciated American composer of all time, Charles Ives. The piece I chose to talk about today is Three Places in New England, or the New England Symphony, a piece that is a perfect amalgam of what makes Ives such a spectacular composer - his radical innovations, his ahead of his time experiments, his humor, his humanity, his warmth, and the staggering creativity that marked all of Ives’ great works. We’ll start with a little biography of Ives in case you’re not familiar with him, and then we’ll dive into Three Places in New England, and by the end, I hope , if you’re not already, that I will have converted you into an Ives fan for life! Join us!

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello and welcome to Sticky Notes, the Classical Music Podcast.

0:10.8

My name is Joshua Wytherstein, I'm a conductor, and I'm the Music Director of the Phoenix

0:14.6

Orchestra of Boston.

0:16.3

This podcast is for anyone who loves classical music, works in the field, or is just getting

0:20.7

ready to dive into this amazing world of incredible music.

0:23.8

Before we get started, I want to thank my new Patreon sponsors, Paul, Mark, and Ann,

0:29.0

and all of my other Patreon sponsors for making Season 9 possible.

0:33.1

If you'd like to support the show, please head over to patreon.com slash Sticky Notes Podcast.

0:38.4

And if you are a fan of the show, please just take a moment to give us a rating or review

0:41.4

on Apple Podcasts.

0:43.3

Every rating or review helps more people find the show, and it is greatly appreciated.

0:49.1

So I've just come back from a fantastic week in Leal, with the orchestra nasi-naud

0:52.6

Leal and soloist Gabriel Pidou.

0:55.6

We played four concerts not actually in Leal, but around Leal.

0:58.8

That's one of the most important missions of this orchestra, is to play not only in

1:02.9

Leal and their concert hall, but to bring music to places that don't normally have orchestral

1:07.4

concerts every week or so.

1:10.1

So it's a really fantastic mission and goal of this orchestra to bring this music around,

1:14.9

and it was great to be a part of that.

1:17.1

I'm now heading to Boston for my first week of the season with Phoenix.

1:21.7

We're going to be doing a program of WC's La Mer, and a great arrangement by Ian Farrington.

1:26.8

We're going to be doing some rags by Scott Joplin, the entertainer, Chrysanthemum, and

...

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