BBC Music Magazine

Ives’s Symphony No. 2

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A guide to the US masterpiec­e American composer Charles

Ives began work on his Second Symphony in 1897, shortly after graduating from Yale University.

Ives later referred to it as one of his ‘soft’ pieces, as it lacks some of the dissonance­s that appear in his later works. Within it, he alludes to American tunes such as ‘Camptown Races’, a feature of much of his compositio­nal output. The piece also references western classical music, including Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5 and a motif from Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde.

The Second Symphony was well received by audiences at its belated 1951 Carnegie Hall premiere, despite being allegedly met with ambivalenc­e by Ives himself, who failed to attend the concert and instead listened back to a recording of the performanc­e on the radio. Bernstein, who condcuted the

New York Philharmon­ic in the piece’s premiere, made significan­t changes including a substantia­l cut to the finale, adjustment­s to the instrument­ation, harmonic resolution and tempo indication­s. The symphony’s first studio recording was made two years later by the Vienna Philharmon­ic Orchestra, under the baton of Frederick Charles Adler. Bernstein returned to Ives’s Second Symphony in a recording in 1958.

 ??  ?? Outsider: Ives did not attend the work’s premiere
Outsider: Ives did not attend the work’s premiere

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