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George
ANTHEIL (1900–1957) His Carnegie Hall Concert of 1927
A Jazz Symphony (1925) [12:32]
Violin Sonata No.2 (1923) [8:06]
String Quartet No.1 (1924) [12:59]
Ballet pour instruments Mécanique et Percussion (1925) [26:55]
Charles Castleman (violin), Randall Hodgkinson (piano), Mendelssohn
Quartet (Ida Levin, Nicholas Mann (violins), Katherine Murdock (viola),
Marcy Rosen (cello)), Ivan Davis (piano). New Palais Royale Orchestra
and Percussion Ensemble (Rex Lawson (pianola), Leslie Amper, David
Close, Stephen Harlos, Randall Hodgkinson, Steve Little, Mark Sherman
(pianos), Gordon Gottlieb, Sue Evans, Alan Raff (percussion), Maurice
Peress
rec. 1–4 April 1990, Suny Purchase, New York. DDD
Re–issue of Music Masters 67094 (1992)
NIMBUS NI 2567 [60:46]
George Antheil was, probably, his own worst enemy. Having taken
Paris by storm, both as composer and virtuoso pianist, he failed,
unlike Stravinsky, to moderate his language and adopt the neo–classical
style which came into vogue during his stay. However, when Copland
arrived in France, to study, he said that “… George had all
Paris by the ear". It was probably Ezra Pound’s call that
Antheil was "possibly the first American–born musician
to be taken seriously" and regarding him as the great Messiah
of a 'New Music' which coloured the composer’s attitude. From
our historical position, the fact that he failed to move with
the times is no longer seen as a problem. True, some still find
it difficult to equate Antheil’s early works with the more sober
works he wrote after his return to the USA, but a man has to
eat, and with a wife and son to support he had to work. The
later works are, certainly, more conventional than the pieces
from his Paris years, but there are still many fine pieces to
be found, both in his concert music and operas as well as his
music for film. I particularly like his score for Edward Dmytryk’s
The Sniper (1952) and Ben Hecht’s Angels Over Broadway
(1940). I cannot help but mention that before returning permanently
to America, Antheil wrote a detective story, Death In the
Dark, which was edited and published T.S. Eliot. The plot
concerns the murder of a concert agent!
Antheil visited America in 1927 to display his musical wares
to an unsuspecting American public and this is what it heard!
He wrote the Jazz Symphony for Paul Whiteman’s second
Experiment in Modern Music concert of December 1925 –
the first, held on 12 February 1924, had introduced Rhapsody
in Blue to the world. For some reason it wasn’t given in
that show and the Carnegie Hall concert of 1927 was its premiere,
when it was done by W.C. Handy’s Orchestra with the composer
as piano soloist. Antheil revised the score of the Jazz Symphony
in 1955 and made it a much less spectacular and exciting work.
Hearing it in its original form is a revelation, for it is wild
and exuberant, great fun and it’s easy to understand that it
received an ovation when it was given in Carnegie Hall, at this
concert. This is an excellent performance, hard-driven, up-front
and in-yer-face, hysterical and brilliantly realised. It’s worth
buying the disk for this piece alone.
Antheil’s two Violin Sonatas were written for Ezra Pound’s
mistress, Olga Rudge. The second is fascinating for it contains
a part for drum, supposedly written for Pound to play. As it
stands, it starts as a wild ride for the two instruments, then
the piano launches into an almost insane cadenza. After
this the drum takes over the accompaniment for the rest of the
work. As with most of the other music recorded on this disk,
it’s a wild, typical 1920s piece, but the performance here is
a bit too polite. I once turned pages for a performance of this
work given by Thomas Halpern and Yvar Mikhashoff and they threw
all caution to the wind, giving a marvellously showy and fantastically
over-the-top performance – just what the work needs. All that
kind of extrovert display is missing here. A real shame, given
the music-making of the couplings.
The short 1st String Quartet
is a very compelling work, cogently written, well laid out for
the instruments, and it’s much more mainstream European music
than the other works recorded here. The performance, by the
Mendelssohn Quartet, is strong and forthright.
The Ballet Mécanique made Antheil’s name and confirmed
his status as ‘The Bad Boy of Music’ - the title of his autobiography
which is well worth a read. It caused a riot at its premiere
in Paris and Aaron Copland wrote to Israel Citkowitz, “… the
boy is a genius. Need I add that he has yet to write a work
which shows it.” At Carnegie Hall, Copland, together with Colin
McPhee, was one of the pianists in the performance of the Ballet
where, again, it caused a riot. In 1952 Antheil revised the
score, but all this did was to water down a fascinating score
into a less-than-interesting one. Here it is, in all its 1920s
gaudy splendour, colossal, noisy, outrageous, a tough listen
– without a doubt – but a rewarding one. Anyone who heard, either
in the hall, or on the radio, the weak performance given at
the 2009 BBC Proms won’t know what’s hit them when they hear
this! It’s fantastic!
Great performances, in general, brilliantly bright sound, good
notes all go to making this indispensable to anyone interested
in American music and the musical experiments of the 1920s.
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