- Symphony No. 4 (Ives)
The Symphony No. 4, S. 4 (K. 1A4) by
Charles Ives (1874 –1954 ) was written between the years of1910 and1916 . The symphony is notable for its over-sized orchestra. Combining elements and techniques of Ives's previous compositional work, this has been called "one of his most definitive works"; [cite book|author=Kirkpatrick, John|year=1965|title=Preface to: Charles Ives, Symphony No. 4; Performance Score (facsimile edition)|publisher=G. Schirmer, Inc.|id=, p.vii] Ives' biographer,Jan Swafford has called it "Ives's climactic masterpiece."*cite book|author= Swafford, Jan|year=1988|title=Charles Ives: A Life With Music|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|location=New York|id=ISBN 0-393-31719-6, p.349, p.360, p.362]tructure
The symphony is in four movements:
# Prelude: Maestoso
# Allegretto
# Fugue: Andante moderato
# Very slowly - Largo maestosoAlthough the symphony requires a large orchestra, the duration is, interestingly, about half an hour.First movement
This movement and the third movement were first performed in
New York City onJanuary 29 ,1927 . In contrast to Ives's other works for large orchestra, which begin in quiet and meditative moods, this symphony starts with a strong,maestoso , fortissimo bass line, immediately followed by a rising trumpet fanfare. A quiet passage follows. The movement ends with chorus singing the Epiphany hymn "Watchman" ("Watchman, tell us of the night.") Unlike the bold beginning, the movement dies away, quadruple-pianissimo, at the end.econd movement
Ives bases this "Comedy" movement on Hawthorne's story "The Celestial Railroad."
Third movement
First performed in New York on
May 10 ,1933 with the first movement, this is an apparently straight-forward, academicfugue , ending with a brief quotation of "Joy to the World ". Ives called it "an expression of the reaction of life into formalism and ritualism." Paradoxically, because of its juxtaposition with the other three harmonically, tonally and rhythmically complex movements, Jan Swafford calls this most outwardly simple and conservative movement "in a way the most revolutionary movement of all."The movement is an orchestration from the fugue in Ives's firststring quartet , which he wrote while still at Yale.Fourth movement
The symphony ends with what Ives called "an apotheosis of the preceding content, in terms that have something to do with the reality of existence and its religious experience."
Composition
The program of the work echoes that of "
The Unanswered Question " Or|date=March 2008 — Ives said the piece was "a searching question of 'What' and 'Why' which the spirit of man asks of life". Use of quotation is again rife, especially in the first movement, and there is no shortage of novel effects. In the second movement, for example, atremolando is heard throughout the entire orchestra. In the final movement, there is a sort of musical fight between discordant sounds and more traditional tonal music. Eventually a wordless chorus enters, the mood becomes calmer, and the piece ends quietly with just the percussion playing.Instrumentation
The symphony is scored for a romantic-size orchestra. The woodwind section consists of 3
flute s, 2piccolo s, 2oboe s, 3clarinet s, and 3bassoon s, with optional parts for alto, tenor and baritonesaxophone . The brass section consists of 4 horns, 6trumpet s, 2cornet s, 4trombone s, andtuba . The percussion and keyboard section consists oftimpani ,snare drum ,bass drum , tom-tom, triangle,cymbal s, 2gong s, bells,glockenspiel ,harp ,celesta , orchestralpiano (4 hands),quarter tone piano , solopiano , and organ. In addition there is a part for a mixed chorus. Fact|date=August 2007There is the usual string section and a second distant group of 5
violin s, 1viola and 2harp s. The score also has an optional part for an "ether organ" (it is not clear what Ives meant by this, but atheremin or asynthesizer is usually used).History and reception
The symphony did not have a complete performance until
Leopold Stokowski conducted it with theAmerican Symphony Orchestra atCarnegie Hall onApril 26 ,1965 [*Burkholder, J. Peter, (work-list with James B. Sinclaire and Gayle Sherwood). "Charles Ives", "Grove Music Online", ed. L. Macy (accessedAugust 5 ,2006 ), [http://www.grovemusic.com/ grovemusic.com] ] , almost 50 years after the completion of the work, and 11 years after Ives' death. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9807E6DD1739F936A25753C1A962948260]It was soon recorded thereafter for the first time under the Columbia label. Fact|date=January 2008
Notes
References
*Burkholder, J. Peter, (work-list with James B. Sinclaire and Gayle Sherwood). "Charles Ives", "Grove Music Online", ed. L. Macy (accessed
August 6 ,2006 ), [http://www.grovemusic.com/ grovemusic.com] (subscription access).
*cite book|author= Ives, Charles|year=1990|title=Symphony No. 4; Performance Score (facsimile edition)|publisher=G. Schirmer, Inc.|id=
*cite book|author= Swafford, Jan|year=1988|title=Charles Ives: A Life With Music|publisher=W. W. Norton & Company|location=New York|id=ISBN 0-393-31719-6External links
* http://www.americansymphony.org/dialogues_extensions/2002_03season/2002_11_17/ives.cfm
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