Hide player

Hyperion Records

General William Booth Enters into Heaven
First line:
Booth led boldly with his big bass drum
composer
author of text

Recordings
Cover of 'Ives: A Song - For Anything' (CDA67516)
Cover of 'Ives: Symphonies Nos 2 & 3' (CDA67525)
Cover of 'Ives: Symphonies Nos 2 & 3' (SACDA67525)
Ives: Symphonies Nos 2 & 3
Buy by post £13.99
This album is not yet available for download SACDA67525  Super-Audio CD  
Details
Track 8 on CDA67516 [5'59] Copyright holder as reported by MCPS: United Music Publishers
Track 9 on CDA67525 [5'13] Copyright holder as reported by MCPS: United Music Publishers
Track 9 on SACDA67525 [5'13] Super-Audio CD Copyright holder as reported by MCPS: United Music Publishers

General William Booth Enters into Heaven
EnglishFrançaisDeutsch
General William Booth Enters into Heaven (1914) is one of Ives’s supreme achievements in the field of song. Vachel Lindsay (1879–1931) made his name as the writer (and pyrotechnical performer) of a modern ballad poetry whose strenuous rodomontade established an ‘American rhythm’ dealing with indigenous and contemporary subjects. He gained widespread acclaim with the publication in 1913 of his first collection, of which General William Booth Enters into Heaven, in memory of the founder of the Salvation Army, was the title poem.

Ives seems to have come across the text in a review of Lindsay’s poetry published in the New York Independent on 12 January 1914, since he sets only the thirty-one lines quoted in that review. The poem’s musical possibilities – and also no doubt the fervour of its Gospel religion – clearly fired him, and he had soon composed a setting (he called it a ‘glory trance’) for voice and piano. This was not published in his collection of 114 Songs, maybe because the possibility of using larger forces was present from the beginning. Ives made some sketches towards a brass band version, and a male chorus form. In 1934 the composer John J Becker, one of Ives’s staunchest admirers, arranged General Booth for bass voice, chorus and chamber orchestra, in which form it has become best known. But it remains a stunning tour de force in the original song version.

from notes by Calum MacDonald © 2005

Track-specific metadata
Click track numbers opposite to select

Details for CDA67516 track 8
Artists
ISRC
GB-AJY-05-51608
Duration
5'59
Recording date
12 November 2004
Recording venue
All Saints' Church, East Finchley, London, United Kingdom
Recording producer
Mark Brown
Recording engineer
Julian Millard
Hyperion usage
  1. Ives: A Song - For Anything (CDA67516)
    Disc 1 Track 8
    Release date: September 2005
Show: MP3 FLAC ALAC
   English   Français   Deutsch
over £20 for 10% discount on whole order
over £40 for 15% discount on whole order
over £59 for 25% discount on whole order
over £200 for 35% discount on whole order
(P&P free on almost all orders.)
Your basket:
There are no items in your basket.
Use the Buy buttons across the site.

The following discounts will be applied for CD purchases:
ms'); ' %>