THE LIBERTY TRAIL. Excerpts from NAXOS AMERICAN
	CLASSICS SERIES 
	
	Morton GOULD American Salute 
	John Philip SOUSA March: Hands across
	the Sea
	Samuel BARBER Excursions, Op.20: Un poco
	allegro
	Walter PISTON Piano Quintet: Allegro
	Vivo
	George Templeton STRONG Symphony No 2: Die
	drei entsetzlichen Gefähten: Tod, Teufel und Irrsinn (excerpt)
	Louis Moreau GOTTSCHALK Célébre
	Tarantelle Op. 67 No.4 (arr. Sidney Lambert)
	John CAGE Sonata V
	Thomas BEVERIDGE Yizkor Requiem: El Malei Rachamim
	(excerpt)
	Howard HANSON Rhythmic Variations on Two Ancient
	Hymns (excerpt)
	Paul CRESTON Symphony No. 1: II (with humour)
	Lalo SCHIFRIN Hommage à Ravel: Finale
	(excerpt)
	Philip GLASS Violin Concerto: III
	(excerpt)
	Robert Russell BENNETT Sights and
	Sounds (an Orchestral Entertainment): V. Night Club (Fox trot)
	Edward MACDOWELL Hexentantz (Witches'
	Dance) Op. 17 No.2
	Samuel BARBER Cello Concerto, Op.22:
	Molto allegro appassionato
	Charles IVES Variations on "America"
	(orch. William Schuman)
	
 various performers
	recorded, various venues 1991-2000
	
NAXOS 8.559121
	[73:42]
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	The disc cover carries the boast, "A comprehensive anthology of music taken
	from Naxos' American Classics series, The Liberty Trail showcases
	the dazzling array of musical style embraced by American composers. From
	Gottschalk to Gould, and from Sousa to Schifrin, this disc encompasses a
	wealth of creativity and an amazing diversity of musical imagination". So
	Naxos is making no bones about The Liberty Trail being a trailer for
	its enterprising and growing American Classics series. As such it is the
	sort of marketing product one might expect to acquire as a freebie. Reasons
	for buying it therefore are likely to be, first, to use it as Naxos intends,
	as a trailer that may introduce unfamiliar music that could lead to the purchase
	of items from the main series. The booklet handily contains a list of 36
	discs with their numbers to encourage this process. Second, to enjoy it as
	an untaxing wide-ranging collection of miniatures and excerpts. Since Naxos
	has carefully chosen the items for their seductive appeal, then for many
	it will work well on both counts.
	
	Although most of the sixteen pieces selected for the disc were composed in
	the 20th century they are conservative for their time. No Morton Feldman
	or even Elliot Carter is to be found here although there is one concession
	in that John Cage is given a brief outing with just over a minute
	of syncopated prepared piano which even nervous Cage antipathists should
	find tolerable. It is by far the shortest extract here. The modern minimalist
	movement is represented not by Steve Reich but by Philip Glass with
	his Violin Concerto, perpetual, idiomatic string figurations that
	will sound to some like updated Vivaldi.
	
	The disc opens with an American pop classic, the hugely successful orchestral
	arrangement by Morton Gould of Johnny Comes Marching Home,
	quintessential American music performed with suitable panache, bizarrely,
	by the National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine - a typical Naxos touch. A
	companion piece, concluding the disc, is Charles Ives' treatment of
	the patriotic song America, the jingoistic connotations of which will
	be lost on most of the rest of the world who will recognise it as God
	Save the Queen. Originally an organ work, this orchestral arrangement
	by William Schuman is given, ironically, a British rendering
	by the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra.
	
	In between there is a range of music to suit most tastes, none having extraneous
	American allusions as in the Gould and Ives pieces although we do get a
	Sousa march, Hands Across the Sea, complete with piccolo obbligato.
	Otherwise, even stylistically there is little to identify as American apart
	from two wonderful piano pieces. One of Samuel Barber's Excursions
	has a European surface underpinned by a boogie bass and the 19th century
	pianist/composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk is represented by what sounds
	like a scintillating salon number (actually an arrangement for two pianos
	of a piano/orchestra work) with an oompah left hand that anticipates ragtime.
	Liszt meets Scott Joplin may seem an unimaginable concept - until you hear
	the piece.
	
	There is good representation of what I can only describe as very late romantic.
	An excerpt from Thomas Beveridge's Requiem deploys lush choral
	resources and a gently undulating excerpt from Howard Hanson's
	Rhythmic Variations on Two Ancient Hymns will appeal to those many
	fans of Gorecki's Third Symphony.
	
	Compositional rigour is not the point of this disc. The nearest we get is
	the splendid Allegro Vivo from Walter Piston's Piano Quintet,
	a reminder of what a huge influence Stravinsky has been on many leading
	American composers.
	
	The booklet accompanying the disc consists of an introduction to the
	American Classics  series in the guise of a potted history of American
	music. Much is made of the influence of Copland and Gershwin who are both
	in the main series (Gershwin gets three discs to himself) yet neither feature
	on The Liberty Trail. Naxos presumably thinks they are too well known
	to need trailing.
	
	All these excerpts are excellently performed with recording quality to match.
	
	As a trailer the disc is quite a clever product but many will find it enjoyable
	in its own right . It worked both ways for me.
	
	John Leeman