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			Howard HANSON (1896-1981)  
                  Symphony No. 6 (1968) [20:33]  
                  Lumen in Christo (1974)* [21:33]  
                  Symphony No. 7, The Sea (1977)* [18:13]  
                  1. Lo, the unbounded sea [7:44]  
                  2. The untold want [4:19]  
              3. Joy, shipmate, joy! [6:10]  
             
            *Seattle Chorale  
                  Seattle Symphony/Gerard Schwarz
 
			rec. 15-16 October 1989 (No. 6), 6-7 June 1994 (Lumen in 
                  Christo), 18-19 May 1992 (No. 7), Seattle Opera House, Seattle, 
                  USA  
                  Sung texts from the Naxos website.
 
                
              NAXOS AMERICAN CLASSICS 8.559704   [60:19]  
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                  So Gerard Schwarz’s Hanson cycle - first released on Delos 
                  - moves towards its conclusion; appropriately enough this volume 
                  ends with the composer’s own farewell to the symphony, 
                  the Whitman-inspired Seventh. Before that we have the Sixth 
                  - commissioned by the New York Philharmonic to celebrate their 
                  185th season - and the choral Lumen in Christo, written 
                  for the 50th anniversary of Nazareth College in Rochester, NY. 
                  Far from being mere duty pieces all three display the deceptively 
                  simple, open-hearted qualities that suffuse so much of Hanson’s 
                  work; moreover, his Romantic spirit is undiminished, despite 
                  the changed and changing musical milieux of the 1960s 
                  and 1970s.  
                     
                  It’s all too easy to sound apologetic when writing about 
                  these pieces, but one just has to hear the Sixth - in six continuous 
                  movements - to be made aware of a strong and individual voice; 
                  from its seminal woodwind theme the symphony is articulated 
                  with an economy of style that’s never short on drama. 
                  The first big tutti - goodness, what a formidable bass drum 
                  - the dry rattle of side drums and the vaunting brass are the 
                  hard outer shell, the sustained, string-led lyricism the soft 
                  kernel. Schwarz certainly points up the latter most beautifully; 
                  and while the long, singing lines of the third movement are 
                  ravishing, the more trenchant moments are just as gripping. 
                   
                     
                  What a glorious, elegantly proportioned piece this is, the steady 
                  beat of the last two movements - cue that big bass drum - underpinning 
                  music of surprising impact and energy. And, as I’ve found 
                  with the other discs in this series, the orchestra are very 
                  well recorded. They’re joined in the remaining works by 
                  the Seattle Chorale, a choir that impressed me greatly in The 
                  Lament for Beowulf (review). 
                  The women certainly don’t disappoint in the light-filled 
                  loveliness of Lumen in Christo, whose opening verses 
                  from Genesis point to Haydn as a source of inspiration.  
                     
                  Whereas The Creation is a series of declamatory/descriptive 
                  passages interspersed with solos, Hanson’s score is a 
                  blend of bold but nicely scaled orchestral statements - just 
                  listen to the imposing start - and fine, cloistered singing. 
                  There’s a hint of Orffian ostinati as well - tastefully 
                  done - and a discreet peal of bells; as for the singing, it’s 
                  firmly focused and resolute in its reach. The end of the first 
                  section is a good example of Hanson’s talent for spinning 
                  the most radiant and memorable tunes from the simplest flax. 
                  Lumen in Christo is full of such epiphanies, with perhaps 
                  a genuflection towards Bruckner in the chorale-like passages 
                  of the second part.  
                     
                  The concluding ‘Lux aeterna’ is intensely moving 
                  - how like beams of rubied light in a serene, votive space - 
                  and it makes a perfect prelude to the Seventh Symphony. Comparisons 
                  with Vaughan Williams’ Sea Symphony are unavoidable 
                  - including the use of lines from Whitman’s Leaves 
                  of Grass - but Hanson’s version is much more austere. 
                  Grand gestures are kept to a minimum, and dynamics are more 
                  finely shaded. As so often with this composer there’s 
                  an abiding sense of a very private persona - like Britten’s, 
                  perhaps - given to writing of simplicity, strength and quiet 
                  astonishment.  
                     
                  Another rewarding addition to this fine cycle, celebrated as 
                  much for the composer’s gentle spirit as for Schwarz’s 
                  inspired direction. The original Delos engineers also deserve 
                  praise for their superb recording, which adds so much to one’s 
                  enjoyment of these engaging scores.  
                     
                  Works of distinction and delight, winningly played.  
                     
                  Dan Morgan 
                  http://twitter.com/mahlerei  
                   
                   
                  See also reviews by Rob 
                  Barnett and Steve 
                  Arloff  
                   
                 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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