Ives: Symphonies Nos 1 & 4

Together with its companion CDA67525, this pair of exciting discs from the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and Andrew Litton offers thrilling new recordings of all four of Charles Ives’s extraordinary symphonies.

The idiosyncratic nature of Ives’s early musical training (simultaneous but competing marching bands, etc) is well known, but before we can delight in its fruits, we find Ives-the-student writing a (relatively) conventional Symphony No 1 under the watchful, if not always approving, stare of his tutor. The result is almost a pastiche of all that we know and love from the late-nineteenth century symphonic tradition: Brahms, Dvořák, Tchaikovsky.

Released from college in 1898, Ives rapidly shook off such influences, entered a new century and set about expanding his extraordinary vision through three further symphonies, culminating in the spiritual marathon of the fourth, which—Ives tells us—poses (and answers, threefold) the cosmic questions ‘what?’ and ‘why?’.

Alongside the four symphonies we have Central Park in the Dark, and an Ives-sanctioned orchestral arrangement of his most popular (and outrageous) solo song, General William Booth Enters into Heaven.

Captured live during concerts in Dallas, the recorded sound is every bit worthy of these epic works.

CDA67540  77 minutes 48 seconds
‘Overall these two CDs are a winning representation of the four Ives symphonies with the Dallas Symphony consistently impressive throughout’ (Gramophone)
‘Litton's new set is the one to have’ (International Record Review)
‘The performance of the Fourth is rightly the pinnacle of Andrew Litton's superb Ives cycle … Litton has the work's measure perfectly, balancing the visionary with the prosaic, and teasing out th ...