The Music of Harl McDonald - Complete Set (1935-56) - PABX015

The Music of Harl McDonald - Complete Set (1935-56) - PABX015

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  • Sold Out! - 3 CDs with case & artwork (+MP3)

Overview

McDONALD Symphony No. 1 etc.
McDONALD Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra etc.
McDONALD Violin Concerto
McDONALD Elegy and Battle Hymn
McDONALD
Symphony No. 3, “A Tragic Cycle”
McDONALD
Builders of America

Recorded 1935-56

Jeanne Behrend, Alexander Kelberine
- piano
Eugene Ormandy · Leopold Stokowski · Harl McDonald Arthur Fiedler • Fabien Sevitzky

Save 5% when you buy the set

Click below to expand note:
The Music of Harl McDonald, Volume 1 (1935-41) - PASC402
The Music of Harl McDonald, Volume 2 (1937-50) - PASC430
The Music of Harl McDonald, Volume 3 (1943-56) - PASC491
Click below to expand track listing:
The Music of Harl McDonald, Volume 1 (1935-41) - PASC402
The Music of Harl McDonald, Volume 2 (1937-50) - PASC430
The Music of Harl McDonald, Volume 3 (1943-56) - PASC491

Fanfare Review

I can think of no living American composer who surpasses McDonald at his best

REVIEW OF VOLUME 2

This is Pristine’s second CD devoted to the music of Harl McDonald. The first was an absolute triumph, and this one is nearly as good. McDonald grew up in the American West during the early years of the last century, and his musical personality exhibits the warmth and openheartedness one associates with such an upbringing. That is not to say McDonald lacked technique; he possessed all the compositional apparatus one expects from a student at the Leipzig Conservatory. In particular, he was an exceptionally resourceful orchestrator, and gets a sound that seems as natural to him as breathing. Although he spent most of his career at the University of Pennsylvania, McDonald was no mere academic composer. He absorbed influences from many cultures and different strata of music, from the arcane to the popular. His compositions are affecting without ever being sentimental. I listen to McDonald’s music the way I listen to Alexander Glazunov’s symphonies, relishing his ease of expression, his good nature, and a mastery of form that picks you up in one place and drops you off comfortably in another. As with Glazunov’s symphonies, McDonald’s tunes are not especially memorable in themselves, yet they are of a piece with the artfulness of his total concept. McDonald is a composer who convinces you that you are better off for having known him and his oeuvre.

In the opening movement of the concerto for two pianos and orchestra, soloists Jeanne Behrend and Alexander Kelberine play with rhythmic urgency, while Stokowski and the Philadelphians send waves of color drifting over them. The next movement, a theme and variations, has a deftness in orchestration underlying pianistic elegance that recalls Saint-Saëns’s piano concertos. The work concludes with a dance of northern Mexico called a juarezca, a real toe-tapper which subsides only for a pianistic interlude that is pure Latin sensual reflectiveness. Recording two pianos with orchestra is difficult with the best equipment, so to do it ably in 1937 is a tribute to this recording’s original producer, who I would guess was Charles O’Connell.

McDonald’s suite My Country at War seems to me as successful as a more celebrated work of the Second World War, George Antheil’s Symphony No. 4, “1942.” The opening movement, “1941,” is a song of foreboding over the events prior to Pearl Harbor. In the next movement, Ormandy draws haunting playing from the Philadelphia first chairs in a beautifully subdued study of American heroism in the failed defense of Bataan. An “Elegy” follows, with a reflective cello solo, and the work ends with a “Hymn of the People,” which is a sturdy confection of marches and chorales leading to a populist gesture, McDonald’s introduction of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.”

Songs of Conquest is a choral work set to poems by Phelps Putnum (texts are not given). It basically is a celebration of the pioneer spirit, with a sound recalling William Billings. The composer draws stirring, even rousing singing from his university’s choral society. The second song, “A complaint against the bitterness of solitude,” is a rare moment of angst in McDonald. John Christopher Smith: Miniature Suite is a selection of works by a protégé of Handel, “freely transcribed” by McDonald. The piece has at least as much charm as Hamilton Harty’s arrangements of Handel. Arthur Fiedler’s Sinfonietta play it with style and panache. The composer conducts the Philadelphians in an alert and enthusiastic performance of his Children’s Symphony, a largely pedagogical work. It uses children’s songs to introduce kids to the orchestra and symphonic form. It has tender moments and raucous ones, like the noisy treatment of Jingle Bells. I doubt kids today, in the era of Radio Disney, would be drawn to the Victorian world of innocent melodies McDonald draws upon. Still, it is an exuberant composition and worth hearing, though it lacks the staying power of McDonald’s From Childhood—Suite for Harp and Orchestra, which appears on volume one of Pristine’s series.

Restoration engineer Mark Obert-Thorn appears to have done a sane and conscientious job of transferring the various source materials. It is well to ponder the role of fashion in taking a composer like Harl McDonald out of the repertoire. Even the revival in the recording studio of American Romantic music from the middle of the last century largely has passed him by. Surely American conductors such as Gerard Schwarz and Leonard Slatkin would have something valuable to say about his music. In the meantime, we are fortunate to have Pristine’s reissues of the historic recordings of McDonald’s work. I am not an expert on contemporary music, but I can think of no living American composer who surpasses McDonald at his best. It’s time he was rediscovered.

Dave Saemann
This article originally appeared in Issue 38:5 (May/June 2015) of Fanfare Magazine.



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