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Alan Hovhaness


7/4

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Vision of a Starry Night. The piano player is Marvin Rosen, who has a classical show on WPRB (Princeton). This morning he was spinning Janabar, a new release on OgreOgress. (They're the folks that recorded my string qt.)

Plus, I've heard a lot of his pieces on the radio over the years, and performances at Julliard.

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I'd go on a Hovaness CD buying binge now, but all my music purchases are suspended for the foreseeable future. :unsure:

Well, that doesn't sound good!

I don't think I've ever seen a Hovhaness performance advertised around here. The new conductor for the Lansing Symphony is trying new things, though. Maybe he'll pull something out. Probably a lot happens in Ann Arbor that flies under my radar.

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  • 4 weeks later...
Guest Bill Barton

I'm definitely a fan of his music. Unfortunately I don't have many recordings though. One I like a lot is the Celestial Fantasy CD on Dorian which, in addition to the title piece, includes a number of relatively brief works, among them "The Holy City, Opus 218."

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  • 5 months later...

I'm listening to this right now, sounds exactly like I expected, Hovaness with a sitar. Quite beautiful.

It will be over momentarily so I'll just post the info here:

01/30/08 First-ever public airing for Hovhaness violin & sitar concerto: Shambala

Almost 40 years after it was written, the Hovhaness concerto Shambala, for violin, sitar and orchestra, originally composed for Yehudi Menuhin and Ravi Shankar, receives its world-premiere broadcast on January 30th 2008, during the 9am hour (US Eastern Time) on the WPRB radio show Classical Discoveries.

Shambala has never been performed at any concert, so this is its first public airing of any kind. The broadcast marks the February 14th release of the OgreOgress DualDisc comprising three Hovhaness works, each featuring violinist/violist Christina Fong. Both Shambala and Janabar (1950) appear in world-premiere recordings, whilst the concerto Talin was last recorded in its original viola & strings format as far back as 1957.

Composed in 1969 for the Menuhin/Shankar 'East-West fusion' duo (which by then had released two successful West Meets East LPs), the 45-minute, single-movement Shambala was commissioned by Menuhin, but for some reason didn't get its premiere and then fell into complete obscurity - perhaps now making it one of the most eagerly-anticipated Hovhaness discoveries of recent times. Appropriately, one of Shankar's most highly-respected students, Gaurav Mazumdar, undertakes duties on sitar.

Performers are as follows: Rastislav Štúr conducting the Slovak Philharmonic Orchestra, Christina Fong (violin, viola), Gaurav Mazumdar (sitar), Paul Hersey (piano), Michael Bowman (trumpet).

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Shambala is the mythical kingdom beyond the snowpeaks of the

Himalayas, as described in ancient Tibetan texts. The nineteenth-

century writings of Theosophical Society founder Madame Blavatsky

propagated this myth to the West, and is the likely source for

Hovhaness' choice of title for this distinctly Indian-sounding

concerto.

Hovhaness' credentials as a scholar of Indian music were impeccable -

and are a much overlooked attribute in deciphering the enigma of this

American maverick. He first witnessed it in 1936, when Uday Shankar's

touring dance troupe performed in Boston (with 16-year old Ravi

Shankar on sitar) and he subsequently met with many Indian musicians

who passed through Boston. In the early 1950s Hovhaness was Director

of Music and composer for the Near and Middle East sections of the

Voice of America, and in 1959/60 spent a year in India on a Fulbright

Scholarship, becoming the first Westerner to have his works performed

at the Madras Music Festival.

In India Hovhaness had met Ravi Shankar, who by the late 1960s (with a

little help from The Beatles) was rousing a huge surge of Western

interest in Indian music. Hovhaness provided some rather technical

liner notes for the sitarist's 1966 Columbia release The Sounds of

India. 1967's West Meets East then saw Shankar duetting with violinist

Yehudi Menuhin, also an acquaintance of Hovhaness from a summer stay

in Switzerland. Perhaps wanting something more substantial in this

East-West vein, Menuhin commissioned Hovhaness for a concerto for

violin, sitar and orchestra. The result was 1969's Shambala, the first

orchestral concerto to incorporate the sitar. For reasons unclear, it

was never performed and Shankar subsequently composed his own Concerto

No.1 for Sitar and Orchestra the following year.

Whereas Shankar's concerto employs several notated sitar passages,

ironically it is Hovhaness, the Westener, who preserves Indian

tradition, with just improvised music for the sitar (in the specified

modes of Bhairav, Todi, Gunkali, Jait) supported only by Hovhaness'

trademark rhythmless textures. The violin part, however, is more

notated than improvised.

As Shankar never performed this work, it is fitting that one of his

most cherished disciples, Gaurav Mazumdar, undertakes the sitar part

for this premiere performance and recording. No less fitting is the

appearance of Christina Fong, who to date has digitally recorded more

Hovhaness (and Feldman) than any other violinist/violist. Fong has

longsince championed little-known repertoire over the 'standard

warhorses', following very much in the generous musical spirit of the

aforementioned Ajemian sisters and Yehudi Menuhin himself.

© Marco Shirodkar, 2007

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000XULO3O

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  • 9 years later...

I'd recommend this Hovhaness LP:

R-9752709-1485809313-3116.jpeg.jpg

Andre Kostelanetz Conducts the Music of Alan Hovhaness (Columbia, 1977)

This is probably my favorite Hovhaness record. (Admittedly, like Larry, I feel like a little Hovhaness can go a long way.) The most interesting piece on this LP is the opener, based on The Rubáiyát Of Omar Khayyám. It features narration by Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and an accordion soloist! That may not sound like a promising combination -- and there is a certain latent cheeseball element -- but I was completely won over the first time I ever heard it. Incidentally, Teo Macero produced the record.

I don't think the LP has ever been reissued in digital format.  But here's The Rubáiyát via YT:

 

 

 

 

4 hours ago, JSngry said:

What the hell is he doing here? It sounds like a Bert Kaepmfert record as remixed by David Lynch?

Isn't that description true of much of Hovhaness' music?!?!? ;) 

His compositions often seem (to me) to be walking a very fine line between (unintentional) camp and wonderment.

Edited by HutchFan
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  • 1 month later...

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