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Roy Harris'
Third Symphony of 1938 (in one movement) remains one of the masterpieces of
American music, and has had its champions over the years, from Serge
Koussevitzky (who premiered and recorded it) to Leonard Bernstein (who recorded
it twice) and Leonard Slatkin (once). But Harris wrote thirteen symphonies (plus
one for voices only and the "West Point Symphony" for concert band), and only on
rare occasions have any of them been performed, much less recorded, by major
orchestras. Thus it is gratifying that Marin Alsop — whose Samuel Barber
series for Naxos has been overall superb — is recording Harris. Her renditions
of Symphonies Nos. 3 and 4 (the latter a choral "Folk Song Symphony") with the
Colorado Symphony have already appeared; now All the works on the present CD date from the War Years, 1941 to 1944, and certainly have a predominantly somber quality, though with moments of exultation all the same. To be sure, the same could be said for Harris' symphonies of the 1930s. His musical style in the ‘40s, instantly recognizable to anyone familiar with the Third Symphony, features the "American" sound one also associates with Aaron Copland (say, the latter's own Third Symphony), but the rich modal harmonies and the treatment of the brass in particular, plus a debt both to Sibelius (evolution of symphonic themes though fragmentary buildup) and Renaissance church composers (polyphony, antiphonal choirs), are distinctive of Harris. The CD offers the works in reverse order of composition, but I'll comment on them from earliest to latest. The worthwhile "filler" on the CD is Acceleration, a 7-minute work that starts out as a funeral march but — you guessed it — accelerates, though not to any extreme degree, as in, say, Honegger's Pacific 231. It just becomes more jubilant and vigorous, with passages in 3/4 rhythm, and actually slows down at the end. David Truslove's booklet note mentions that Harris revised the work in 1942 but presumably the 1941 original is being performed, since that's the date attached to the title. He also mentions that the musical material was "recycled" in the Sixth Symphony, but I can't help but ask if this is a mistake, since the second movement of the Fifth Symphony opens with the same funeral-march theme. (Perhaps there is more subtle use of the material in the Sixth.) Overall, I wouldn't want to argue that Acceleration is a major discovery, but it's a pleasant addition to the Harris catalogue. The Fifth Symphony, premiered in early 1943 by
Koussevitzky and his Boston Symphony, was dedicated to the As I've mentioned, the second movement does begin with a funeral march. The heavy rhythmic tread very gradually fades, but the mood remains somber — downcast yet yearning. There is an impassioned section with melodic material given to the strings; the pace accelerates to a climax which gradually subsides, with choirs of winds, especially brass, adding their own accents to the strings' restlessness. A brass chorale quiets things down, and the movement ends with antiphonal responses between (mainly) brass and strings. The finale is fugal, beginning starkly with a statement of material to be used but soon becoming light-textured and playful, with a return of the dotted rhythm of the first movement. A piano, though never soloistic, lends its color to most of the movement, and snare drum and other percussion fortify the conclusion. Overall, the Fifth Symphony strikes me as more "absolute" music than as a piece with a program about struggle and hope, for example. In 1982 I saw Rafael Kubelik conduct this work
with the Chicago Symphony — the featured work in the second half of a concert
that opened with Barber and Norman Dello Joio. I remember it being an exciting
performance, especially the French-horn opening with the dotted rhythm, but I
haven't been able to compare my recollections with the taping on the
limited-edition "From the Archives" set issued by the CSO years ago. Marin Alsop
certainly gets splendid playing from Once again premiered by "Dedication," the longest
movement, is an "after-the-battle" slow movement, though not so much bleak or
despairing as tenderly sad and wistful. The finale, like that of the Fifth
Symphony, is fugal though mostly slow-paced, with fragments of themes complexly
passed back and forth until the "Affirmation" of the final pages. Overall, I
found that Alsop and Naxos' cover art, a rather wan picture of
Performance: Enjoyment: Sound Quality:
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