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Monday, 9 December 2024

Gould - Spirituals for String Choir and Orchestra


Morton Gould

American composer, conductor, arranger, pianist Morton Gould (1913-1996) was equally at home in music for stage and screen, pop, jazz and classical. He was a Grammy winner (for his recording of Charles Ives' 1st Symphony), a Pulitzer Music Prize winner, as well as  many other awards and prizes.

Gould's Spirituals For String Choir and Orchestra was composed in 1941. Gould wrote of this piece:
"I have tried to write music the way one speaks. I tried to make it as direct and simple as possible. Part of the "Jubilee" section, for example, is in boogie-woogie pattern. Of course, many contemporary jazz effects coincide with certain rhythmic patterns in our spirituals. What I tried to do was to synthesize some of these features. My starting premise was that our spirituals develop a wide gamut of emotions, musically. These emotions are specifically American. The songs range from strictly spiritual ones that are escapist in feeling, or light and gay, to those having tremendous depth and tragic impact. My idea was to get five moods, widely contrasted in feeling. Although most of the work is original as far as thematic material goes, I have used fragments of folk tunes here and there. The first movement ("Proclamation") has a dramatic religious intensity. The second movement ("Sermon") is a simple narrative — a sort of lyrical folk tale. The third movement ("A Little Bit of Sin") is humorous and good-natured. The fourth movement ("Protest") is bitter, grim and crying-out. The last movement ("Jubilee") is a festive and dance-like piece." 

 


Cartridge: Sumiko Starling MC
Phono amp: Graham Slee Accession MC
Turntable: CTC Classic 301 with SME M2-12R


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