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Joe Horowitz on music

“The Housatonic at Stockbridge” — Ives’s Four-Minute Masterpiece Extolling the Sublime

September 23, 2024 by Joe Horowitz 1 Comment

This weekend’s “Wall Street Journal” includes a piece of mine reading Charles Ives’s four-minute masterpiece “The Housatonic at Stockbridge.” Composed in the 1910s, it’s both an orchestral work and a song. No other American composition known to me so bears comparison with the famous Nature reveries of Beethoven, Berlioz, Liszt, and Wagner. My essay reads in part: Ives was a … [Read more...] about “The Housatonic at Stockbridge” — Ives’s Four-Minute Masterpiece Extolling the Sublime

Charles Ives and National Understanding

September 15, 2024 by Joe Horowitz 2 Comments

Charles Ives, 150 years old, is immensely important right now. Why is that? What’s changed? For the Ives Sesquicentenary festivals currently sponsored by the NEH Music Unwound consortium, The American Scholar has published an extraordinary online Program Companion. In addition to my essay on Ives and Mahler, it features contributions by a leading American art historian, a … [Read more...] about Charles Ives and National Understanding

Ives and Schoenberg Turn 150 — and the Road Not Taken

September 11, 2024 by Joe Horowitz Leave a Comment

Charles Ives and Arnold Schoenberg, both of whom turn 150 years old this year, are the most important composers of their generation produced by Austro/Germany and the US.   Though Ives was said by some to “know his Schoenberg,” he plausibly denied it. Schoenberg, however, paid sufficient attention to Ives to have written a magnificent encomium: “There is a great man living … [Read more...] about Ives and Schoenberg Turn 150 — and the Road Not Taken

Mahler, Ives, and Today’s Cultural Memory Crisis

September 10, 2024 by Joe Horowitz 2 Comments

In celebration of the Charles Ives Sesquicentenary, I’ve written a long piece on Ives and Gustav Mahler for The American Scholar. The topic is not new: these composers quite obviously have in common a radical propensity to juxtapose the quotidian with the sublime – parade bands and tuneful ditties with the most rarefied metaphysical strivings. But my perspective is, I think, … [Read more...] about Mahler, Ives, and Today’s Cultural Memory Crisis

The Bernstein Story Not Told in “Maestro” — Take Four: What Happened to Charles Ives?

August 30, 2024 by Joe Horowitz 2 Comments

In 1951, Leonard Bernstein, age 32, led the New York Philharmonic in the belated world premiere of Charles Ives’ Symphony No. 2 – music composed half a century earlier. The performance was nationally broadcast and widely noticed. Seven years after that, Bernstein began his tenure as the Philharmonic’s music director with Ives’ Second Symphony. In all, he performed Ives’ … [Read more...] about The Bernstein Story Not Told in “Maestro” — Take Four: What Happened to Charles Ives?

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About Joe Horowitz

Joseph Horowitz is an award-winning author, concert producer, film-maker, broadcaster, and pianist/composer. He is one of the most prominent and widely published writers on topics in American music. As an orchestral administrator and advisor, he has been a pioneering force in the development of … [more] about Joseph Horowitz

About Unanswered Question

When a few years ago Doug McLennan invited me to write an ArtsJournal blog, I thought about it and said no. Having been born as long ago as 1948, I remain somewhat a stranger to the internet. And, as I am always writing a book (a form of therapy) when I am not producing concerts, I felt I didn't … [more] about The Unanswered Question

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