
  
  
    Morton GOULD (1913-1966) 
    Concerto Grosso, from the ballet Audubon (1969) [19:37]
    Cinerama Holiday - Suite (excerpts) (1955) [3:10]
    World War I - Music for the CBS TV Series (excerpts) [1964] [7:53]
    Pavanne from American Symphonette No 2 (1938) [3:23]
    Holocaust - Suite from the NBC TV Series (excerpts) (1978) [5:08]
    Interlude from Festive Music (1964) [3:35]
    Formations Suite, for Marching Band (1964) [18:07]
    Jeffrey Silberschlag (trumpet), John Weller, Mikhail Shmidt, Maria Larionoff, 
    Mariel Bailey (violins) 
    Seattle Symphony/Gerard Schwarz. 
    rec. Seattle Opera House, USA, 1994/95 
    NAXOS 8.559715 [60:55]  
    
    The music of Morton Gould is rarely, if ever, boring. He seems to have been 
    equally happy, and equally proficient, whether writing for the concert hall 
    or a TV series, for Broadway or for a marching band, whether providing the 
    music for a film or a ballet or, indeed, demonstration pieces for new audio 
    systems. In all these and more genres he wrote prolifically and inventively, 
    with remarkable fertility. He also had a gift for recycling his own music, 
    so that music written for one medium served as the material for works in another 
    idiom or genre. In doing so he was continuing a long and distinguished tradition, 
    doing nothing more than many a great baroque composer, for example, had done 
    before him. In his willingness to write with equal commitment both ‘pure’ 
    and ‘functional’ music there was also something of the baroque 
    about his attitude - such thoughts are prompted by the fact that the most 
    substantial piece on this rather bitty anthology of his work is his Concerto 
    Grosso which is, in some ways, an archetypal Gould composition, with its 
    successful fusion of musical languages. Always omnivorously eclectic, Gould 
    had a remarkable capacity to create coherence out of his eclecticism. 
      
    In 1952 Gould was commissioned to write the music for a new ballet, to be 
    choreographed by the great George Balanchine. For a whole lot of reasons - 
    none of them Gould’s fault - the ballet never materialised. Undeterred, 
    Gould mined the various drafts he had written for the ballet - which, after 
    many transformations, was to be about the great American painter of birds, 
    John James Audubon, with whom Balanchine had a great fascination - to produce 
    no fewer than ten (!) works for the concert hall. Among the best of these 
    was this Concerto Grosso for four violins and orchestra. Its four movements 
    - Prelude and fugue, Air, Variations, Rondo - are approximately baroque in 
    shape, but the materials are quintessentially American. Gould described the 
    work as “a transformation of hoedown tunes”. The result is striking 
    and satisfying, tuneful, rhythmically intriguing and unexpected, full of harmonic 
    surprises. The outer movements are rapid and often - especially in the first 
    movement - refreshingly astringent; the central movements are slower, the 
    second tenderly lyrical with a long and attractive melodic line over a pizzicato 
    accompaniment, the third a scherzo both wistful and playful. This is the undoubted 
    highlight of the disc. 
      
    The only other complete work included is Formations Suite, written 
    for the University of Florida Marching Band. Its eight short movements are 
    full of invention, from a splendidly festive and fanfaric opening to the delightful 
    lilt and rhythmic shifts of its final movement; in between Gould’s use 
    of silence (as in Slink) is very effective, and everywhere the use 
    of percussion is beautifully judged; Alma Mater has a pleasing dignity 
    and Twirling Blues some sinuous phrasing and sophisticated harmonies. 
    This is a thoroughly enjoyable piece which Elliot Feld made use of in his 
    1978 ballet Half-Time. 
      
    Elsewhere, somewhat frustratingly, we get only excerpts and individual movements, 
    though some of them are rewarding. Best-known is the Pavanne from the 
    second of Gould’s American Symphonettes. This arrangement features 
    the muted trumpet of the excellent Jeffrey Silberschlag, who catches its mood 
    very well, with Gerard Schwarz drawing some politely jazz-inflected playing 
    from the Seattle Symphony. Still, the piece undoubtedly sounds better when 
    heard in the context provided by the two other movements of the Symphonette. 
    Silberschlag is also given a prominent solo role in much of the rest of the 
    music on the CD. The music of Cinerama Holiday was written at the introduction 
    of Cinerama, when Gould was commissioned to write music to accompany a demonstration 
    film, a travelogue. From his score he later created a suite of fifteen movements, 
    only two of which are played here. Souvenirs of Paris and On the 
    Boulevard again reflect Gould’s magpie-like eclecticism, with their 
    echoes of Françaix, Milhaud and Gershwin, echoes which never entirely 
    swamp his own voice and manner, since Gould speaks his French with an American 
    accent. Three tracks are devoted to excerpts from music Gould wrote for a 
    CBS television documentary on World War I. The Prologue and Drum Waltz 
    is evocative of a society sliding into war, waltzing its way onto the battlefield 
    with an initially romantic idea of what war might be like, the interplay of 
    rhythms beautifully crafted; Sad Song - where Silberschlag plays particularly 
    well - makes one think of Hans Eisler and Kurt Weill, bringing to mind a kind 
    of cabaret of melancholy. Royal Hunt is contrastingly upbeat - one 
    wonders what images it accompanied. Another TV series for which Gould wrote 
    the score was Holocaust, which many will remember from the 1970s. Again 
    we are given just two excerpts from the music, Theme and Elegy - once 
    more heard in Gould’s arrangement for trumpet and orchestra - and in 
    both pieces Silberschlag’s trumpet is poignant and lyrical. Better than 
    any of these, however, is the Interlude from Festive Music, 
    a three movement work written for the Tri-Cities Orchestra of Davenport, Iowa. 
    Again we are missing the outer movements; what we have is Silberschlag playing 
    a slow moving melody of great poignancy over the strings of the orchestra 
    in a recreation of that distinctively American quality of loneliness, of the 
    human dwarfed by the landscape. 
      
    This CD was previously issued on Delos DE3166. It is an enjoyable, if at times 
    slightly frustrating, sampler of Gould, concentrating more on his ‘popular’ 
    than his ‘classical’ side (when issued on Delos it was called 
    The Music of Morton Gould, but above that the cover read ‘Film 
    and TV hits including CINERAMA HOLIDAY’). Probably no single 
    CD could adequately represent so heterogeneous a composer, but there’s 
    plenty to be going on with here, plenty to enjoy. 
      
    Glyn Pursglove 
      
    An enjoyable reissue offering glimpses of some of the many sides of an underrated 
    composer.
  Morton 
    Gould on Naxos