Episode 237. Paul Kirby Introduces Charles Ives (Listeners’ Favorites VIII)

Episode 237. Paul Kirby Introduces Charles Ives (Listeners’ Favorites VIII)

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My friend Paul Kirby is a musical polymath: a tenor of excellence who performs throughout the world as both a soloist and as a valued member in small vocal ensembles; he is also a killer banjo player and bluegrass singer, and a member of the Norwegian group Stemmespesialisten that combines voice lessons, voice massage and coaching. In addition he has worked as a musical administrator and is a Timani teacher in training: an education that focuses on in-depth anatomical knowledge in order to enhance movement and playing for musicians. He has also been a valued and trusted friend of mine for the past twenty years, and was a major encouragement and support when I was putting Countemelody on its feet. For his favorite episode of the podcast, Paul has chosen the Fourth of July episode I posted in 2021. In this episode I bring you a gorgeous conglomeration of great baritones and bass-baritones performing songs by the emblematic American composer Charles Ives. In this episode we hear thirty of his songs which display a wide range of compositional, musical, and literary styles. Some of the greatest Ives interpreters are represented here, including Thomas Stewart, Samuel Ramey, Donald Gramm, Sanford Sylvan, Kurt Ollmann, Gerald Finley, William Sharp, and William Parker, accompanied by Alan Mandel, Dalton Baldwin, Alan Feinberg, Warren Jones, Steven Blier, Craig Rutenberg, and others. I finish the program with Jerry Hadley performing that most celebratory of Ives’s songs, “The Circus Band.” Since this episode was first posted I have gone on to produce full episodes on Donald Gramm, William Parker, and Jerry Hadley. Thanks, Paul, for your support, encouragement, and wonderful introduction to this episode which retains its focus on the song output of the composer himself as well as the array of wonderful performers who celebrate Ives’s fascinating combination of old-fashioned Americana and revolutionary compositional techniques.

Paul Kirby

RECORDINGS HEARD IN THIS EPISODE

Thomas Stewart, Alan Mandel:

  • The Things Our Fathers Loved (Text by Charles Ives)
  • Thoreau (Text by Charles Ives)
  • In Flanders Fields (Poem by John McCrae)
  • Autumn (Text by Harmony Twitchell Ives)

William Sharp, Steven Blier:

  • from Lincoln the Great Commoner (Text by Edwin Markham)
  • August (Text by Dante Gabriel Rossetti after Folgore da San Geminiano)
  • My Native Land (Text by Charles Ives after Heinrich Heine)
  • The Innate (Text by Charles Ives)

Samuel Ramey, Warren Jones:

  • A Night Song (Text by Thomas Moore)
  • In the Alley (Text by Charles Ives)
  • An Old Flame (Text by Charles Ives)
  • Slow March (Text by Lyman Brewster Ives, Charles Ives and other family members)

Sanford Sylvan, Alan Feinberg:

  • The Rainbow (Text after William Wordsworth)
  • Premonitions (Text by Robert Underwood Johnson)
  • Luck and Work (Text by Robert Undderwood Johnson)
  • Evening (Text by John Milton)

Gerald Finley, Julius Drake:

  • Feldeinsamkeit (Text by Hermann Allmers)
  • Ich grolle nicht (Text by Heinrich Heine)

Kurt Ollmann, Mary Dibbern:

  • The Housatonic at Stockbridge (Text by Robert Underwood Johnson)

Theo Bleckmann, Kneebody [Ben Wendel, Adam Benjamin, Shane Endsley, Kaveh Rastegar, Nate Wood]:

  • In the Mornin’ (arr. by Nate Wood; Anonymous Text)

William Parker, Dalton Baldwin:

  • At the River (Text by Robert Lowry)
  • Watchman! (Text by John Bowring)
  • Chanson de Florian (Text by Jean Pierre Claris de Florian)
  • The Camp Meeting (Text by Charles Ives, Charles Elliott)

Donald Gramm, Richard Cumming:

  • Two Little Flowers (Text by Charles Ives and Harmony Twitchell Ives)
  • Serenity (Introduction by Aaron Copland; Text by John Greenleaf Whittier)
  • Charlie Rutlage (Introduction by Aaron Copland; Text collected by Alan Lomax)

Donald Gramm, Donald Hassard:

  • The Side Show (Text by Charles Ives after Pat Rooney)
  • General Booth Enters into Heaven (Text by Vachel Lindsay)

Jerry Hadley, Craig Rutenberg:

  • The Circus Band (Introduction by Jerry Hadley; Text by Charles Ives)

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