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Sextet
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
Charles Griffes, composer
Three Tone Pictures
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
Walter Piston, composer
Divertimento
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
Ned Rorem, composer
Eleven Studies for Eleven Players
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
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Excellent survey of American works for chamber orchestra.
Walter Piston's "Divertimento" was commissioned by the International Society for Contemporary Music and given its first performance by an ensemble of New York players at Columbia University in May, 1946. The group was conducted by Dmitri Mitropoulos. "The Three Tone Pictures" of Charles Tomlinson Griffes were originally composed for solo piano in 1915. At the request of Caroline Beebe, the pianist and director of the New York Chamber Music Society, Griffes prepared a chamber ensemble version of the "Tone Pictures." This version was premiered in Greenwich, Connecticut, in June 1920, less than two months after the composer's death. Ned Rorem composed his "Studies" in 1959, at the request of Cameron Baird, the head of the Music Department at Buffalo University. He had hired Rorem to teach a class in composition, give some public lectures and compose a work for chamber ensemble. Unfortunately, Baird died before the premiere of the work, which the composer conducted at the University in May, 1960. Copland's "Sextet" is actually a chamber version of his "Short Symphony." The original work was composed between 1931 and 19933. The chamber version, "Sextet," was composed in 1938 and given its first performance at Town Hall in New York by a group of Juilliard graduate students in February 1939.Contents:
Aaron Copland, composerSextet
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
Charles Griffes, composer
Three Tone Pictures
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
Walter Piston, composer
Divertimento
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor
Ned Rorem, composer
Eleven Studies for Eleven Players
New York Chamber Ensemble, Stephen Radcliffe, conductor