Recordings of the Society for the
Preservation of the American Musical Heritage
Music of Farwell, Hadley, Herbert, MacDowell and Parker
American Orchestral Compositions (1890-1916)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Karl Krueger, conductor
BRIDGE 9124A/C (Three discs for the price of two)
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Disc A
Edward MacDowell: Suite No. 1 in D Minor, Op. 42
Edward MacDowell: Suite No. 2 'Indian', Op. 48
Disc B
Horatio Parker: Vathek
Victor Herbert: Hero and Leander
Arthur Farwell: The Gods of the Mountain - Suite, Op. 52
Disc C
Henry Hadley: Symphony No. 2 in F Minor, 'The Four Seasons' Op. 30
Henry Hadley: Salome, Op. 55
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra
Karl Krueger, conductor
BRIDGE 9124A/C (Three discs for the price of two)
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This three disc set of American orchestral masterpieces brings several works
into the CD catalog for the first time. Recorded in the 60s by the Royal
Philharmonic Orchestra and conductor
Karl Krueger, these path-breaking recordings, originally done for the Society
for the Preservation of the American Musical Heritage, have been lovingly
re-mastered by Grammy winning Engineer/Producer Adam Abeshouse. Edward MacDowell’s
‘Indian’ Suite is the composer’s most substantial orchestral composition
and is accompanied by the composer’s rarely heard Suite No. 1. "Vathek"
is one of Horatio Parker’s two symphonic poems. Parker based this composition
on a work of fabulous excess and immorality, the early Gothic picaresque,
"The History of the Caliph Vathek" by the eccentric millionaire
intellectual, novelist and travel writer William Beckford (1759-1844). Victor
Herbert’s orchestral masterpiece, "Hero and Leander", was fated to
remain unpublished during the composer’s lifetime. It is given an opulent
reading by Krueger and his British forces. Arthur Farwell’s "The Gods of
the Mountain" is music of great exoticism and originality. Though a suite
taken from incidental music for a play by Lord Dunsany, the work feels like a
short symphony with echoes and presages of motifs from each of the movements
serving to bind the work together with great unity of design. Henry Hadley’s
rarely heard Second Symphony of 1901 was awarded two prizes and may justly be
called one of the first successful American symphonies. "Salome" was
one of Hadley’s favorites among his own compositions, and was written after he
had seen a production of Oscar Wilde’s sensational and decadent play.
BRIDGE 9124A/C (Three discs for the price of two)
Other discs from this series on BRIDGE:
BRIDGE 9086: William Grant
Still, "Afro-American Symphony" and Amy Beach, "Gaelic
Symphony"
BRIDGE 9089: Edward
MacDowell: The Symphonic Poems
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