Above and Beyond: Music for Wind Band
“The President’s Own” US Marine Band/Gerard Schwarz
Naxos 8.573121
Total Time: 71:53
Recording: ****/****
Performance: ****/****
One of great ways Naxos markets its vast recording catalogue is through specific “series” that survey large chunks of repertoire. For fans of wind ensemble music, their “Wind Band Classics” series has made available to a wider audience some of the great wind bands from throughout America and provided a lasting testament to some of the excellent works composed for this sort of ensemble. For those who may not know, the military services have some of the finest bands in the country. Many times there recordings were available during their tours and even with the advent of sites like Amazon, they were hard to track down. This new release features one of these fine ensembles, the US Marine Band—one of the oldest professional organizations in the US established by Congress in 1798! Throughout the 19th century, the band would inspire other similar groups to form throughout the country. Perhaps its first great reknown came in the period from 1880-1892 when John Philip Sousa began an annual tour throughout the continental US bringing both his own new music and a host of other transcriptions to audiences. Under Sousa, the group made some of the first sound recordings with some 200 pieces available which no doubt cemented the March King’s music in the ears of many. Throughout the year, it is the responsibility of the band to play for a variety of White House events often amounting to some 200 performances a year.
Gerard Schwarz, Conductor Laureate of the Seattle Symphony, takes the podium for the present release. The disc was recorded in concert in March 2012 in Bethesda, Maryland (note applause appears at the end of selections). Schwarz’s program is filled with classic band compositions that also recall some of his great programming choices for other recordings in Seattle. In addition, the CD takes its title from a work by Schwarz making its premiere release. There is some great trumpet and brass writing in this work which is a rather contemplative piece with equally gorgeous harmonic writing. Certainly this is one of the nice surprises on the release. It is preceded though by two essential band works. First up is Paul Creston’s exciting Celebration Overture, Op. 61 from a 1955 commission by Edwin Franko Goldman. The piece has all those quirky rhythmic interplaying moments and unique phrasing that are hallmarks of the composer’s style. A delicate central section allows for melodic content to be explored in flute, oboe and clarinets. Aaron Copland’s mid-century pieces, such as El Salon Mexico and selections from his Martha Graham ballets, found their way into the band literature through many transcriptions. For this program, Schwarz chose one of his lesser known works, Emblems (1965). Commissioned by the College Band Directors National Association, the piece is intended to provide an opportunity to challenge young players and stretch their technical abilities. It includes a familiar hymn quote as well which would become a popular approach for many band works up to the present day. The blocks of harmonic sound are reminiscent more of Copland’s symphonic works and this might be considered a kinder, gentler Statements.
At the mid-point of the program is another standard work, Percy Grainger’s Lincolnshire Posy. Though born in Australia, the composer would spend much of his time in England and America and was part of the movement dedicated to collecting folk music and incorporating it into his own music. As WWI began, Grainger headed to New York and would claim America as his new home. He even enlisted in the US Army in 1917. He would experience here the idea of the concert band as he played in the Coast Artillery Band. It would lead to a lifelong appreciation of wind band composition. Lincolnshire Posy was composed in 1937 and one of the great bonuses of this album is the inclusion of his original 1939 program notes for this six-movement work.
A contemporary work by Bernard Rands, a British composer who became a US citizen in 1983, provides some interesting contrast to the Grainger. Rands received the Pulitzer Prize in music in 1984 for his Canti del sole. Ceremonial (1993) was a commission from the University of Michigan. The piece is an opportunity to explore more modern compositional sounds and dramatic writing using a combination of tone clusters within a theme and variation form. It explores interesting musical combinations and registers. The sense of time also seems to stand still or become difficult to pick up in this interesting and moody work. That said, the piece still manages to be a fairly accessible work that allows for a brief foray into modern wind band music.
There are two pieces by Samuel Barber to help round off the program. First up is a transcription by Frank Hudson of “Medea’s Dance of Vengeance” from the Martha Graham ballet based on Euripides. The delightful Commando March (1943) was originally premiered by the Army Air Forces Technical Training Command Band. Sergey Koussevitzky subsequently requested the composer to create an orchestral version which was then performed with the Boston Symphony later that year. In its band form, one gets to hear Barber’s accomplished writing in a unique setting. Finally, the program closes with Donald Hunsberger’s arrangement of the “Marines’ Hymn”. The official song of the US Armed forces and Marine Corps, the piece was popularized in Offenbach’s opera Genevieve de Barbant.
Above and Beyond may be one of the finest overall programs in Naxos’ wind band series. The release features a great collection of significant classic band music in superb performances while introducing two recent pieces into the mix as well. Audience noise is mostly inaudible during these performances and the recording itself is set up to capture the band very well. The attacks on phrasing throughout these performances will be the envy of many a band teacher and student!
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