Charles Ives Studio at the American Academy of Arts and Letters (all photographs by the author for Hyperallergic) Object by object, some 3,000 artifacts from the studio of composer Charles Ives have ...
In songs, symphonies and sonatas, Charles Ives furnished America's musical past with a future. Halley Erskine/Yale UniversityCharles Ives circa 1948 Long before his death in 1954, at 80, Charles Ives ...
REDDING -- Charles Ives' brown-shingled home and barn -- the place where America's most remarkable classical composer wrote some his greatest works -- will be taken off the market and preserved. That ...
In his life Charles Ives -- an iconoclast if there ever was one -- was busy with music, not collecting honors. At the same time, he was a man with a very deep sense of place. So it would be ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Essay This pioneering composer is not the easiest to love. But while he explores the poison of American nationalism, his music also offers an antidote ...
Actors Kate Berry, left, and Dave Belden perform an excerpt from the Curious Theatre's production of "Charles Ives Take Me Home" in the CPR Performance Studio. The production runs through Feb. 14. A ...
In addition to a pre-concert talk featuring noted cultural historian Joseph Horowitz, Ives scholar J. Peter Burkholder, music director Leon Botstein, renowned baritone William Sharp, and pianist ...
My favorite Charles Ives quote dates from 1931, when the composer was in New York for the first public performance of his "Three Places in New England." It was hissed and booed, but Ives seemed ...
While Charles Ives was a music student at Yale in the 1890s, the question of finding an American symphonic music was coming to a boil. The celebrated Czech composer Antonin Dvorák had been brought to ...
Join 24,000 of your neighbors and stay in tune with the Triangle. But it has to be said of Charles Ives, for whom the unruly musical welter of late-nineteenth-century New England—a mess of Protestant ...
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