Charles Ives (credit: Clara E. Sipprell)
For more information on Charles Edward Ives, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Charles Edward Ives |
For more information on Charles Edward Ives, visit Britannica.com.
| 5min Related Video: Charles Ives |
| Music Encyclopedia: Charles (Edward) Ives |
(b Danbury, ct, 20 Oct 1874; dNew York, 19 May 1954). American composer. He was influenced first by his father, a bandmaster who had libertarian ideas about what music might be. When he was perhaps 19 (the dating of his music is nearly always problematic) he produced psalm settings that exploit polytonality and other unusual procedures. He then studied with Parker at Yale (1894-8) and showed some sign of becoming a relatively conventional composer in his First Symphony (1898) and songs of this period. He worked, however, not in music but in the insurance business, and composition became a weekend activity - but one practised assiduously: during the two decades after his graduation he produced three more symphonies and numerous other orchestral works, four violin sonatas, two monumental piano sonatas and numerous songs.
The only consistent characteristic of this music is liberation from rule. There are entirely atonal pieces, while others are in the simple harmonic style of a hymn or folksong. Some are highly systematic and abstract in construction; others are filled with quotations from the music of Ives's youth: hymns, popular songs, ragtime dances, marches etc Some, like the Three Places in New England, are explicitly nostalgic; others, like the Fourth Symphony, are fuelled by the vision of an idealist democracy. He published his ‘Concord’ Sonata in 1920 and a volume of 114 songs in 1922, but composed little thereafter. Most of his music had been written without prospect of performance, and it was only towards the end of his life that it began to be played frequently and appreciated.
works:| Biography: Charles Edward Ives |
American composer Charles Edward Ives (1874-1954) was an experimental and boldly original pioneer in musical expression. Recognition of his forceful, often eccentric genius came late in his life and much more fully after his death.
Born in Danbury, Conn., on Oct. 20, 1874, of an old New England family, Charles Ives really lived two lives: an outward, tradition-bound public life as an insurance executive, and an inward, musical, and reflective life full of paradoxical and revolutionary ideas.
As a student, Ives was essentially involved in law and business administration programs. However, he received solid musical training, first under his father, who had been a bandleader in the Civil War and, later, at Yale University, under Horatio Parker (a then respected, now nearly forgotten composer and teacher). Musically daring from the first, Ives shocked Parker with some of his student essays. Yet Parker was impressed by, and generally encouraged, his maverick pupil. Ives graduated from Yale in 1898. A skilled organist during his student days and early years in business, Ives often earned spending money by playing at church services. He also sometimes conducted bands at vaudeville houses, a fact that may explain his later use in serious compositions of the small, odd groups of instruments such as he had encountered in nightly changing vaudeville orchestras.
In 1906 Ives began a career in the insurance business, and his Yankee shrewdness eventually made him a near millionaire. Mainly preoccupied with his business and, later, with health just poor enough to force him to retire, he was a musician much like a "weekend painter." Music remained his avocation. Sometimes this "hobby" was used to make private jokes: his scribbled, sometimes nearly undecipherable manuscripts occasionally contain rude marginal comments about everything from music and philosophy to notes on personal friends. For the most part, however, he was quite serious. Friends reported that he probably did not expect his spare-time musical creations to become accepted eventually as masterpieces; yet he did work at some of his compositions as if they might attain such status someday.
Working in the Dark
The musical environment in late-19th-century America, when Ives began composing, was conservative, cold, and retrogressive, still attached to the nearly exhausted European romantic tradition. Most of Ives's music was composed between 1896 and 1916, with short bursts of production after that. He worked alone, often in what he felt was a mysterious, unexplored darkness; paradoxically, he wrote knowingly, quietly, but with a determined seriousness. Though working outside the musical activity of his time, he never faltered in his creative spontaneity and passion for finding his own way. He possessed extraordinary musical intuition as well as a kind of visionary power. Though he sometimes wrote traditional pieces, he mostly experimented with new musical procedures, and works completed before he was 20 years old presaged techniques introduced into the mainstream of music by other composers 2 and 3 decades later.
For the most part, Ives's works remained unknown to other musicians for many years after their composition. Nevertheless, the few bits and pieces that reached other composers worked a real, if mostly oblique, effect upon their own creations. American composers who early knew some of Ives's experiments included Henry Cowell, Aaron Copland, and John Cage; foreign composers included Carlos Chávez, Benjamin Britten, and Edgard Varèse. Ives was a prophet, however, rather than the founder of a "school." Though his ideas had impact on others, he could not be followed in any traditional sense, since he lived in a musical and philosophical world of his own which could not be imitated. He disdained to explain the whys and wherefores of his increasingly unusual work, quoting Henry Thoreau: "I desire to speak to men in their waking moments … for I am convinced that I cannot exaggerate enough even to lay a foundation for true expression."
Musical "Inventions"
By the 1920s Ives had experimented with (or, as one critic has said, "invented") practically every important musical innovation that would still be influential 50 years later. Thus, far in advance of contemporary compositional styles, Ives pioneered with techniques such as atonality, polymetric patterns, polyharmonic and polytonal particulars, quarter tones, microtones, tone clusters, and tone-rows. (These were not unlike the techniques that formed the basis of the twelve-tone serialism composer Arnold Schoenberg was working out in the early 1920s.) Ives's early experiments were akin to (and perhaps had some influence on) the mid-20th-century music of the tapesichord and even multidirectional music (written for music-making groups of varying sizes, sometimes calling for several conductors conducting independently but at the same time).
Mixed with Ives's formal innovations were his special "Americana" accents: the bittersweet seasoning of old American hymn tunes, banal parlor songs, and barbershop quartet songs of far-gone yesterdays which he called up in quotation or in sincerely fond remembrance; fragments of songs by Stephen Foster; sounds of minstrel shows; patriotic tunes; reminiscences of scores by Johannes Brahms and other classical composers; and native American ragtime. All of these bits and pieces were snipped and stitched together, sometimes expertly, sometimes crudely, almost always with mesmerizing effect. Sometimes in an Ives piece the listener can hear an old tune (such as "Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean" or "Bringing in the Sheaves") emerging from what seems a background either of accompaniment or of clashing competition. Occasionally, the elements simply combine with great beauty.
Ives's varied, empirical inventions blended eventually into something that could be called a definite style. This was characterized by a complex texture (often deliberately "muddy") and simple melodic shapes, mixed with zigzagging ultrachromatic twists, free-swinging harmony and counterpoint, and something like a "jargon" of rhythms.
His Accomplishment
In all, Ives wrote a staggeringly large amount of music: four symphonies (though his Three Orchestral Sets and the Holidays Symphony - the latter consisting of the four separate works Washington's Birthday, Decoration Day, The 4th of July, and Thanksgiving, played in that order - bring that number to eight); numerous large and small orchestral and chamber works; two finger-breaking, sprawling piano sonatas (the second interestingly subtitled Concord, Mass., 1840-1860, its first movement entitled "Emerson" its second, "Hawthorne" its third, "The Alcotts" its last, "Thoreau"); four violin sonatas (the last bearing the subtitle Children's Day at the Camp Meeting); nearly 200 songs; many choral pieces; and short solo piano or organ works. It is almost impossible to fix accurate completion dates to most of these compositions; some were worked at on and off over a period of years.
During most of his life Ives was treated simply as a musical eccentric or a sort of "prophet without honor." Fortunately, he lived just long enough to see his work begin to be accepted. His Third Symphony won the Pulitzer Prize in 1947. His influence upon younger creative musicians has increased since his death on May 19, 1954, in New York City.
Further Reading
Perhaps the best book on Ives is Henry and Sidney Cowell, Charles Ives and His Music (1955), a warm portrait by two musically knowledgeable friends. The book is not overly technical and offers many anecdotes, as well as penetrating comments on Ives's music. There is considerable material on Ives in such works on contemporary music as Peter Yates, Twentieth Century Music (1967).
Additional Sources
Block, Geoffrey Holden, Charles Ives, a bio-bibliography, New York: Greenwood Press, 1988.
Burkholder, J. Peter (James Peter), Charles Ives, the ideas behind the music, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1985.
Cowell, Henry, Charles Ives and his music, New York: Da Capo Press, 1983.
Feder, Stuart, Charles Ives, "my father's song": a psychoanalytic biography, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992.
Perlis, Vivian, Charles Ives remembered: an oral history, New York: Da Capo Press, 1994.
Rossiter, Frank R., Charles Ives and his America, New York: Liveright, 1975.
Sive, Helen R., Music's Connecticut Yankee: an introduction to the life and music of Charles Ives, New York: Atheneum, 1977.
Swafford, Jan, Charles Ives: a life with music, New York: W.W. Norton, 1996.
Wooldridge, David, From the steeples and mountains; a study of Charles Ives, New York, Knopf, 1974.
| Dictionary of Dance: Charles Ives |
Ives, Charles (b Danbury, Conn., 20 Oct. 1874, d New York, 19 May 1954). US composer. He wrote no ballet scores but his concert music has been used several times for dance, such as Balanchine's Ivesiana (New York City Ballet, 1954), H. Spoerli's Flowing Landscapes (Basle, 1975), and P. Martins's Calcium Light Night (Spokane, Washington, 1977).
| US History Companion: Ives, Charles |
(1874-1954), composer and businessman. Ives was an American original in the tradition of the eighteenth-century composer William Billings, who declared that every composer "should be his own carver." Ives's music was imbued with the spirit of his New England forebears, and the ideas of the nineteenth-century transcendentalists provided the inspiration for many of his compositions. His strong belief in self-reliance and devotion to family and community appear in the pamphlets he issued on American democracy and business enterprise. (Ives earned his living in the insurance business and composed in private without recognition or approval from the larger musical community.)
Ives received his early musical training from his father, an unconventional bandmaster and choir director who encouraged original thought along with technical precision. His years at Yale (1894-1898) included composition study with Horatio Parker, who did not share the young composer's enthusiasm for unresolved dissonances. After graduation, Ives continued composing and embarked on his insurance career. He suffered a major heart attack in 1918 but was able to complete his Concord Sonata and a book, Essays before a Sonata, two years later.
Ives's compositions were difficult and demanded more preparation than many performers were prepared to devote to them. Nor did listeners always appreciate his music. But critic Henry Bellamann recognized the "lofty" qualities of the Concord Sonata in the early 1920s, and pianists Henry Cowell and Nicholas Slonimsky performed his music in the latter half of the decade. Seven of his songs were presented at the first Yaddo festival in 1932, which sparked an interest in his music among young American composers. Ives was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for his Third Symphony (1901-1904) in 1947, by which time he was a seventy-three-year-old recluse who had not composed for more than twenty-five years.
Ives's music harks back to the nineteenth century but also anticipates the sounds and techniques of modern composition. In his use of the orchestra, piano, voice, and chamber ensembles to paint evocative musical pictures of nineteenth-century New England towns, Ives can be considered a romantic. His interest in transcendentalist thought is reflected in the Second Pianoforte Sonata, Concord, 1840-1860, with its movements entitled "Emerson," "Hawthorne," "The Alcotts," and "Thoreau." But despite his nostalgic vision of an earlier New England and the echoes of familiar hymns and patriotic and popular songs that recur in his works, he used sounds that belong to the language of modern music, including polytonality, polyrhythms, and quarter tones. Thus, he brought the everyday music of an earlier era into the twentieth-century concert hall.
Recent debate over whether Charles Ives may have predated a number of his compositions to make them appear uninfluenced by European modern music has not detracted from his successful evocation of small-town nineteenth-century America.
Bibliography:
Vivian Perlis, Charles Ives Remembered: An Oral History (1974); Rosalie Sandra Perry, Charles Ives and the American Mind (1974); Frank Rossiter, Charles Ives and His America (1975).
Author:
Barbara L. Tischler
See also Music; Progressivism.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Charles Ives |
Bibliography
See his Essays before a Sonata (new ed. 1962) and his Memos, ed. by J. E. Kirkpatrick (1972); biography by H. and S. Cowell (rev. ed. 1969); V. Perlis, Charles Ives Remembered (1974); R. S. Perry, Charles Ives and the American Mind (1974); H. W. Hitchcock, Ives (1977).
| Artist: Charles Ives |

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| Wikipedia: Charles Ives |
Charles Edward Ives (October 20, 1874 – May 19, 1954) was an American modernist[1] composer. He is widely regarded as one of the first American composers of international significance.[citation needed] Ives' music was largely ignored during his life, and many of his works went unperformed for many years. Over time, Ives came to be regarded as an "American Original".[2] Ives combined the American popular and church-music traditions of his youth with European art music, and was among the first composers to engage in a systematic program of experimental music, with musical techniques including polytonality, polyrhythm, tone clusters, aleatoric elements, and quarter tones,[3] thus foreshadowing virtually every major musical innovation of the 20th century.
Sources of Charles Ives’s tonal imagery are hymn tunes and traditional songs, the town band at holiday parade, the fiddlers at Saturday night dances, patriotic songs, sentimental parlor ballads, and the melodies of Stephen Foster.
Contents |
Charles Ives was born in Danbury, Connecticut, the son of George Ives, a U.S. Army bandleader in the American Civil War, and his wife Mary Parmelee. A strong influence of Charles's may have been sitting in the Danbury town square, listening to his father's marching band and other bands on other sides of the square simultaneously. George Ives's unique music lessons were also a strong influence on Charles; George Ives took an open-minded approach to musical theory, encouraging his son to experiment in bitonal and polytonal harmonizations. It was from his father that Charles Ives also learned the music of Stephen Foster.[4] Ives became a church organist at the age of 14[5] and wrote various hymns and songs for church services, including his Variations on 'America' .[6] Ives moved to New Haven in 1893, enrolling in the Hopkins School where he captained the baseball team. In September 1894, Ives entered Yale University, studying under Horatio Parker. Here he composed in a choral style similar to his mentor, writing church music and even an 1896 campaign song for William McKinley.[7] On November 4, 1894 Charles's father died, a crushing blow to the young composer, but to a large degree Ives continued the musical experimentation he had begun with George Ives.
At Yale College Ives was a prominent figure; he was a member of HeBoule, Delta Kappa Epsilon (Phi chapter) and Wolf's Head Society, and sat as chairman of the Ivy Committee.[7] He enjoyed sports at Yale and played on the varsity football team. Michael C. Murphy, his coach, once remarked that it was a crying shame that Charles Ives spent so much time at music as otherwise he could have been a champion sprinter.[8] His works Calcium Light Night and Yale-Princeton Football Game show the influence of college and sports on Ives' composition. He wrote his Symphony No. 1 as his senior thesis under Parker's supervision.[7]
He continued his work as a church organist until May 1902. In 1899 he moved to employment with the insurance agency Charles H. Raymond & Co., where he stayed until 1906. In 1907, upon the failure of Raymond & Co., he and his friend Julian Myrick formed their own insurance agency Ives & Co., which later became Ives & Myrick, where he remained until he retired.[9] During his career as an insurance executive, Ives devised creative ways to structure life-insurance packages for people of means, which laid the foundation of the modern practice of estate planning[citation needed]. His Life Insurance with Relation to Inheritance Tax, published in 1918, was well-received. As a result of this he achieved considerable fame in the insurance industry of his time, with many of his business peers surprised to learn that he was also a composer. In his spare time he composed music and, until his marriage, worked as an organist in Danbury and New Haven as well as Bloomfield, New Jersey and New York City.[7] In 1907, Ives suffered the first of several "heart attacks" (as he and his family called them) that he had through out his lifetime. These attacks may have been psychological in origin rather than physical. Following his recovery from the 1907 attack, Ives entered into one of the most creative periods of his life as a composer. After marrying Harmony Twitchell in 1908,[9] they moved into their own apartment in New York. He had a remarkably successful career in insurance, and continued to be a prolific composer until he suffered another of several heart attacks in 1918, after which he composed very little, writing his very last piece, the song Sunrise, in August 1926.[9] In 1922, Ives published his 114 Songs which represents the breadth of his work as a composer — it includes art songs, songs he wrote as a teenager and young man, and highly dissonant songs such as "The Majority."[9] According to his wife, one day in early 1927 he came downstairs with tears in his eyes: he could compose no more, he said, "nothing sounds right." There have been numerous theories advanced to explain the silence of his late years, which seems as mysterious as the last several decades of the life of Jean Sibelius, who also stopped composing at almost the same time. While Ives had stopped composing, and was increasingly plagued by health problems, he did continue to revise and refine his earlier work, as well as oversee premieres of his music.[9] After continuing health problems, including diabetes, in 1930 he retired from his insurance business, which gave him more time to devote to his musical work, but he was unable to write any new music. During the 1940s he revised his Concord Sonata, publishing it in 1947 (an earlier version of the sonata and the accompanying prose volume, Essays Before a Sonata were privately printed in 1920).[10] Ives died in 1954 in New York City.
Ives was formally trained in music at Yale. His First Symphony shows a grasp of the academic skills needed to write in the traditional sonata form of the late 19th century, as well as a tendency to display an individual and iconoclastic harmonic style. His father was a band leader, and like Hector Berlioz, Ives was fascinated with both outdoor music and instrumentation. His attempts to fuse these interests coupled with his devotion to Beethoven set the direction for the remainder of his musical life.
Ives published a large collection of his songs, many of which had piano parts which paralleled modern movements in Europe, including bitonality and pantonality. He was an accomplished pianist, capable of improvising in a variety of styles, including those which were then quite new. Although he is now best known for his orchestral music, he composed two string quartets and other works of chamber music. His work as an organist led him to write Variations on "America" in 1891, which he premiered at a recital celebrating the Fourth of July. The piece takes the tune (which is the same one as is used for the national anthem of the United Kingdom) through a series of fairly standard but witty variations; it was not published until 1949. The variations differ sharply: a running line, a set of close harmonies, a march, a polonaise, and a ragtime allegro; the interludes are one of the first uses of bitonality;[11] William Schuman arranged this for orchestra in 1964 and again for symphonic band in 1968.
Around the turn of twentieth century Ives composed his Symphony No. 2, signifying a departure from the conservative approach of his composition teacher at Yale, Horatio Parker. His first symphony is a more conventional piece since Parker had insisted that he stick to the older European style. However, the second symphony, composed after he had graduated, adopted new techniques that included musical quotes, unusual phrasing and orchestration, and even a blatantly dissonant 11 note chord ending the work. The second symphony foreshadows his later compositional style even though the piece is relatively conservative by Ives' standards.
In 1906 Ives composed what some have argued was the first radical musical work of the twentieth century, "Central Park in the Dark".[12] The piece evokes an evening comparing sounds from nearby nightclubs in Manhattan (playing the popular music of the day, ragtime, quoting "Hello My Baby" and even Sousa's "Washington Post March") with the mysterious dark and misty qualities of the Central Park woods (played by the strings). The string harmony uses shifting chord structures that are not solely based on thirds but a combination of thirds, fourths, and fifths. Near the end of the piece the remainder of the orchestra builds up to a grand chaos ending on a dissonant chord, leaving the string section to end the piece save for a brief violin duo superimposed over the unusual chord structures.
Ives had composed two symphonies, but it is with The Unanswered Question (1906), written for the highly unusual combination of trumpet, four flutes, and string orchestra, that he established the mature sonic world that became his signature style. The strings (located offstage) play very slow, chorale-like music throughout the piece while on several occasions the trumpet (positioned behind the audience) plays a short motif that Ives described as "the eternal question of existence". Each time the trumpet is answered with increasingly shrill outbursts from the flutes (onstage) — apart from the last: The Unanswered Question. The piece is typical Ives — it juxtaposes various disparate elements, it appears to be driven by a narrative never fully revealed to the audience, and it is tremendously mysterious. It has become one of his more popular works.[13] Leonard Bernstein borrowed its title for his Charles Eliot Norton Lectures in 1973, noting that he always thought of the piece as a musical question, not a metaphysical one.
Starting around 1910 Ives began composing his most accomplished works including the "Holidays Symphony" and arguably his best-known piece "Three Places in New England".
Pieces such as The Unanswered Question were almost certainly influenced by the New England transcendentalist writers Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.[9] These were important influences to Ives, as he acknowledged in his Piano Sonata No. 2: Concord, Mass., 1840–60 (1909–15), which he described as an "impression of the spirit of transcendentalism that is associated in the minds of many with Concord, Mass., of over a half century ago...undertaken in impressionistic pictures of Emerson and Thoreau, a sketch of the Alcotts, and a scherzo supposed to reflect a lighter quality which is often found in the fantastic side of Hawthorne."
The sonata is possibly Ives's best-known piece for solo piano (although it should be noted that there is an optional part for flute). (A part for viola in the "Emerson" movement is not intended for a viola player — it is simply the "viola part" from the original Emerson Concerto sketch, which was also to be played by bassoon and tubular bells.) Rhythmically and harmonically, it is typically adventurous, and it demonstrates Ives' fondness for quotation — on several occasions the opening motto from Beethoven's Fifth Symphony is quoted. It also contains one of the most striking examples of Ives' experimentalism: in the second movement, he instructs the pianist to use a 143⁄4 in (37 cm) piece of wood to produce a dense but generally very soft cluster chord. All these effects are combined to create one of the towering masterworks of 20th century piano literature—an unprecedented masterpiece of American music.
Perhaps the most remarkable piece of orchestral music Ives completed was his Fourth Symphony (1910–16). The list of forces required to perform the work alone is extraordinary. The work closely mirrors The Unanswered Question. There is no shortage of novel effects. (A tremolando is heard throughout the second movement. A fight between discordance and traditional tonal music is heard in the final movement. The piece ends quietly with just the percussion playing at a distance.) In it Ives finally resolves all of his compositional issues and the full force of his considerable genius is heard. The final movement can be seen as an apotheosis of his work and a culmination of his musical achievement. A complete performance was not given until 1965, almost half a century after the symphony was completed, and more than a decade after Ives's death.
Ives left behind material for an unfinished Universe Symphony, which he was unable to assemble in his lifetime despite two decades of work. This was due to his health problems as well as his shifting conception of the work. There have been several attempts at completion or performing version. However, none has found its way into general performance.[14] The symphony takes the ideas in the Symphony No. 4 to an even higher level, with complex cross rhythms and difficult layered dissonance along with unusual instrumental combinations.
Ives's chamber works include the String Quartet No. 2, where the parts are often written at extremes of counterpoint, ranging from spiky dissonance in the movement labeled "Arguments" to transcendentally slow. This range of extremes is frequent in Ives' music — crushing blare and dissonance contrasted with lyrical quiet — and carried out by the relationship of the parts slipping in and out of phase with each other. Ives's idiom, like Mahler's, employed highly independent melodic lines. It is regarded as difficult to play because many of the typical signposts for performers are not present. This work had a clear influence on Elliott Carter's Second String Quartet, which is similarly a four-way theatrical conversation.
Ives's music was largely ignored during his lifetime as an active composer, but since then his reputation has greatly increased. Juilliard commemorated the 50th anniversary of Ives' death by performing his music over six days in 2004. Many of his works went unperformed for many years. His tendency to experiment and his increasing use of dissonance were not well taken by the musical establishment of the time. The difficulties in performing the rhythmic complexities in his major orchestral works made them daunting challenges even decades after they were composed.
One of the more damning words one could use to describe music in Ives's view was "nice", and his famous remark "use your ears like men!" seemed to indicate that he did not care about his reception. On the contrary, Ives was interested in popular reception, but on his own terms.
Early supporters of his music included Henry Cowell, Elliott Carter and Aaron Copland. Cowell's periodical New Music published a substantial number of Ives's scores (with the composer's approval), but for almost 40 years Ives had few performances that he did not arrange or back, generally with Nicolas Slonimsky as the conductor.[10] After seeing a copy of Ives' self-published 114 Songs during the 1930s, Copland published a newspaper article praising the collection.
Ives began to acquire more public recognition during the 1930s, with performances of a chamber orchestra version of his Three Places in New England both in the U.S. and on tour in Europe by conductor Nicholas Slonimsky and the New York Town Hall premiere of his Piano Sonata No. 2 (the Concord Sonata) by John Kirkpatrick in 1939, which led to favorable commentary in the major New York newspapers. Later, around the time of the composer's death in 1954, Kirkpatrick teamed with soprano Helen Boatwright for the first extended recorded recital of Ives' songs for the obscure Overtone label (Overtone Records catalog number 7). (Boatwright and Kirkpatrick recorded a new selection of songs for the Ives Centennial Collection that Columbia Records published in 1974.)
His obscurity lifted a little in the 1940s, when he met Lou Harrison, a fan of his music who began to edit and promote it. Most notably Harrison conducted the premiere of the Symphony No. 3 (1904) in 1946.[15] The next year, this piece won Ives the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Ives gave the prize money away (half of it to Harrison), saying "prizes are for boys, and I'm all grown up".
At this time, Ives was also promoted by Bernard Herrmann, who worked as a conductor at CBS and in 1940 became principal conductor of the CBS Symphony Orchestra. While there he was a champion of Charles Ives's music. When meeting Ives, Hermann confessed that he had tried his hand at performing the Concord Sonata.
Remarkably, Ives, who actually avoided the radio and the phonograph, agreed to make a series of piano recordings from 1933 to 1943 that were later issued by Columbia Records on a special LP set issued for Ives's centenary in 1974. New World Records issued 42 tracks of Ives's recordings on CD on April 1, 2006.[16]
Recognition of Ives's music has improved. He received praise from Arnold Schoenberg, who regarded him as a monument to artistic integrity, and from the New York School of William Schuman. He won the admiration of Gustav Mahler, who said that Ives was a true musical revolutionary. Mahler talked of premiering Ives's Third Symphony with the New York Philharmonic, but Mahler's death soon after prevented the premiere.
In 1951, Leonard Bernstein conducted the world premiere of Ives's Second Symphony in a broadcast concert by the New York Philharmonic; the Iveses heard the performance on their cook's radio and were amazed at the audience's warm reception to the music. Bernstein continued to conduct Ives's music and made a number of recordings with the Philharmonic for Columbia Records; he even honored Ives on one of his televised youth concerts and in a special disc included with the reissue of the 1960 recording of the second symphony and the Fourth of July movement from Ives' Holidays symphony.
Another pioneering Ives recording, undertaken during the 1950s, was the first complete set of the four violin sonatas, performed by Cleveland Orchestra concertmaster Rafael Druian and John Simms.
Leopold Stokowski took on the Symphony No. 4 in 1965, regarding the work as "the heart of the Ives problem"; the Carnegie Hall world premiere by the American Symphony Orchestra led to the first recording of the music.
Another promotor of Ives was choral conductor Gregg Smith, who made a series of recordings of the composer's shorter works during the 1960s, including first stereo recordings of the psalm settings and arrangements of many short pieces for theater orchestra. The Juilliard String Quartet recorded the two string quartets during the 1960s.
In the present, Michael Tilson Thomas is an enthusiastic exponent of Ives' symphonies, as is composer and biographer Jan Swafford. Ives's work is regularly programmed in Europe. Ives has also inspired pictorial artists, most notably Eduardo Paolozzi, who entitled one of his 1970s sets of prints Calcium Light Night, each print being named for an Ives piece (including Central Park in the Dark). In 1991, Connecticut's legislature designated Ives as that state's official composer.[17]
The Scottish baritone Henry Herford began a survey of Ives's songs in 1990, but this remains incomplete, owing to the collapse of the record company involved (Unicorn-Kanchana).
Pianist-composer and Wesleyan University professor Neely Bruce has made a life's study of Ives. To date, he has staged seven parts of a concert series devoted to the complete songs of Ives.
Musicologist David Gray Porter [AKA D. G. Porter] reconstructed a piano concerto, the "Emerson Concerto", from Ives's sketches. A recording of the work was released by Naxos Records.
However, Ives is not without his critics. Some find his music bombastic and pompous. Others find it, strangely enough, timid in that the fundamental sound of European traditional music is still present in his works. His onetime supporter Elliott Carter has called his work incomplete, but has since revised his stance.
A bold testament to Ives's greatness comes from no less an authority than Arnold Schönberg himself. Arnold's widow eventually found a note of his in the form of a brief poem shortly after his death (just three years before Ives himself died). The note was originally written in 1944 when Schoenberg was living in Los Angeles and teaching at UCLA stating....
There is a great man living in this country – a composer. He has solved the problem how to preserve one's self and to learn. He responds to negligence by contempt. He is not forced to accept praise or blame. His name is Ives.
Ives was also a great financial supporter of twentieth century music, often supporting works that were written by other composers. This he did in secret, telling his beneficiaries it was really his wife who wanted him to do so.[18] Nicolas Slonimsky said in 1971, "He financed my entire career."[19]
Note: Because Ives often made several different versions of the same piece, and because his work was generally ignored during his lifetime, it is often difficult to put exact dates on his compositions. The dates given here are sometimes best guesses. There have even been speculations that Ives purposely misdated his own pieces earlier or later than actually written, but these have been largely debunked by Ives scholars such as Jan Swafford.[citation needed]
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| Was Charles Ives married? |
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