A-Seite:
Otto Luening
Symphonic Fantasia, 1924
Kentucky Rondo, 1951
Das Wiener Orchester unter der Leitung von F. Charles Adler
B-Seite:
George Antheil
Serenade No. 1 For Strings, 1948
(a) Allegro
(b) Andante Molto
(c) Vivo
Oslo Philharmonisches Orchester unter der Leitung von Alfredo Antonini
Mary Howe
Stars, 1934
Sand, 1926
Das Wiener Orchester unter der Leitung von William Strickland
Stars, 1934
"Lento sonoro. D major. pic, fl, ob, cl, bn, 2hn, tpt, timp,
cym, hp, stgs; 5 mins
She sat on the porch of her Rhode Island house of an evening, and
was inspired to write this atmospheric evocation of the heavens.
Howe herself described it as "... a miniature tone-poem inspired
by the gradually overwhelming effect of the dome of a starry night
- its peace, beauty and space. The sonorous ensemble of strings
opens the work with the suggestion of the spreading immensity of
the starry vault. As the music progresses, one's imagination is
carried into the contemplation of the awesome depths of space and
the sense of mystery which man compares his insignificance with
infinity." It has been widely performed in America, including
by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski. The Ambache
gave the UK premieres of Stars, Sand, and Spring Pastoral in May
2004" (zit. nach http://www.ambache.co.uk/wHowe.htm#Stars).
Sand, 1926
"Allegretto. C major. fl, ob, cl, bn, hn, perc, stgs; 3 mins
Again inspired by her surroundings, Howe wrote of this music as
an "imaginative piece on the substance itself - its consistency,
grains, bulk, grittiness and its potential scattering quality."
It has also been widely performed, often as a companion piece to
Stars. Stokowski wrote of it to Howe "I enjoyed so much conducting
your short but masterful work. I have had much pleasure in rehearsing
it and it has developed in me a new conception of staccato. But
of course this is only one of many interesting elements in the work”
(zit. nach http://www.ambache.co.uk/wHowe.htm#Stars).
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