Large and in charge [plus an Ivesian ramble]

Reviewing the Boston Modern Orchestra Project.
Boston Globe, May 31, 2010.

Also, I forgot to link to this one over the Memorial Day weekend:

Hailing the 54th With Monumental Works. The joined Civil War memorials of Augustus Saint-Gaudens and Charles Ives.
Boston Globe, May 28, 2010.

Ives’s original proposed context for his “St.-Gaudens” movement is a little mysterious. It was to have been the third movement of a triptych—the second being his Wendell Phillips piece, the piano study known as “The Anti-Abolitionist Riots.” It’s the first movement that’s a puzzle. Ives’s memos refer to something called “The Common (Largo) (Emerson & Park Ch)” (scroll down here to x683). Most Ives biographers have taken this to mean “Emerson and Park Church,” a reference to Park Street Church, across the street from Boston Common—but that doesn’t actually make a whole lot of sense, Park Street Church having been (and still being) an outpost of rather conservative Congregationalism, and one that, in the 19th century, was not very sympathetic to abolitionists. The best possibility of an Emerson-Park Street Church connection would be the 1846 funeral of Charles Turner Torrey, an early anti-slavery activist who died in a Maryland penitentiary; Park Street Church withdrew their permission to host Torrey’s funeral, after which it was moved to Tremont Temple (Emerson attended the funeral but did not speak at it). James Sinclair raises the possibility that Ives really meant Park Square, not Park Church—and Boston’s Park Square does still have its copy of Thomas Ball’s Freedman’s Memorial, the original of which is in Washington, D.C. One other far-fetched possibility—well, maybe not so far-fetched, given the way Ives abbreviated names in his memos—is that “Park Ch” refers to a pair of Emerson’s fellow abolitionists: Theodore Parker and William Henry Channing. That reading could circle back to Torrey as well: Channing did speak at Torrey’s funeral, and Emerson’s subsequent “Ode to W. H. Channing”—

Virtue palters, right is hence,
Freedom praised but hid;
Funeral eloquence
Rattles the coffin-lid

—has often been interpreted as a reaction to that event.

It’s All True

Sorry it’s been quiet around here, but I’ve been busy gearing up to respond to the new standards for history textbooks imposed by the Texas School Board. Like all good Americans, I want a piece of that action—textbooks are high-margin! So I’ve been coming up with a music history text that’ll reorient a thousand years of Western music away from liberal brainwashing and towards divinely-sanctioned American exceptionalism. Here goes:

Jazz was invented by Paul Whiteman as a musical expression of his love for traditional values.

THE END

Oh, and George Gershwin borrowed from the blues a lot because he was sad he wasn’t a Christian. Yeah, that’ll work. (And I agree that textbooks always overlook Joe McCarthy’s achievements. For example, the man could drink like a fish.)

In other news, I’ve been horribly remiss about linking to Globe reviews. Here’s a couple recent ones:

Reviewing Michael Maniaci and Boston Baroque. (May 10, 2010)

Reviewing the Back Bay Chorale. (May 17, 2010)

In the Maniaci review, I talk about speculation that Venanzio Rauzzini, Mozart’s favorite castrato, wasn’t a castrato at all, but a natural male soprano. (More detailed speculation here.) I don’t know if I buy it, though, especially after reading this contemporary description, from the April, 1807 issue of a magazine called The Monthly Mirror:

SIGNOR VENANZIO RAUZZINI, the subject of our present memoir, is by birth a Roman, and at a very early period of life evinced a fondness for music, which induced his parents to devote him, as it were, entirely to the study of that enchanting science.

As it were. On the other hand, the story about Haydn composing a setting of the epitaph for Rauzzini’s dog is totally true.

As long as we’re housecleaning, I found this on my hard drive. I have no idea why I originally made it. So here it is to haunt your dreams for no reason: