Works by Henry Cowell, Roy Harris, Andrew Imbrie, Gunther Schuller, and Arthur Shepherd
This 77-minute disc features the renowned Emerson Quartet in five American chamber works, repertoire with which they are not normally associated but which they play superlatively well. The dense, rhythmically complex string writing of the Cowell, Schuller, and Imbrie quartets contrasts with the lush harmonies and lyrical melodies of the Harris and Shepherd works.
After a rigorous training in the German tradition that dominated nineteenth-century America, Arthur Shepherd (1880-1958) encountered the French music that was gradually crossing the ocean and influencing American composers (see Charles Tomlinson Griffes, 80273-2). But in between he met and was influenced—and published—by a native musician, Arthur Farwell, who was vigorously searching out American musical roots. Shepherd's Americana was placed in a European musical framework.
Henry Cowell's (1897-1965) special American trait was experimentation— he was an explorer continually looking for new musical territories. His native inquisitiveness was greatly enhanced and directed by Charles Seeger, possessor of one of the most exciting musical minds of this century.
Roy Harris's (1898-1979) American qualities are the deepest and strongest of the three but the most difficult to define. They are found in the very marrow of the man and in the music itself—an earthy, elemental vigor and a broad, open spaciousness.
Gunther Schuller (b 1925) became interested in jazz when he heard Duke Ellington for the first time in Cincinnati. In the late fifties, in a lecture, Schuller coined the term "third stream" for music that combines "the improvisational spontaneity and rhythmic vitality of jazz with the compositional procedures and techniques acquired in Western music during seven hundred years of musical development." Many of Schuller's own compositions have been wholly or in part third-stream music.
At his best, Andrew Imbrie (b 1921) combines generative spontaneity and a restrained but often telling lyricism (which can sometimes blossom into cadenza-like melisma) with rhythmic liveliness and an acute sense of instrumental color. That these qualities should be joined to structural clarity, fluid motivic development, and complex but masterfully controlled contrapuntal textures is a considerable achievement.
The Emerson String Quartet Plays 50 Years of American Music 1919-1969
MP3/320 | $16.00 | |
FLAC | $16.00 | |
WAV | $16.00 | |
CD | $25.00 |
Track Listing
Quartet Euphometric
Henry Cowell
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Triptych for High Voice and String Quartet: I. He It Is
Arthur Shepherd
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Triptych for High Voice and String Quartet: II. The Day Is No More
Arthur Shepherd
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Triptych for High Voice and String Quartet: III. Light, My Light
Arthur Shepherd
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Three Variations on a Theme (String Quartet No. 2): Variation I
Roy Harris
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Three Variations on a Theme (String Quartet No. 2): Variation II
Roy Harris
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Three Variations on a Theme (String Quartet No. 2): Variation III
Roy Harris
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String Quartet No. 2: I
Gunther Schuller
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String Quartet No. 2: II
Gunther Schuller
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String Quartet No. 2: III
Gunther Schuller
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String Quartet No. 4: I
Andrew Imbrie
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String Quartet No. 4: II
Andrew Imbrie
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String Quartet No. 4: III
Andrew Imbrie
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