A Symphony: New England Holidays
Encyclopedia
A Symphony: New England Holidays, also known as A New England Holiday Symphony or simply a Holiday Symphony, is a composition for orchestra written by Charles Ives
Charles Ives
Charles Edward Ives was an American modernist composer. He is one of the first American composers of international renown, though Ives' music was largely ignored during his life, and many of his works went unperformed for many years. Over time, Ives came to be regarded as an "American Original"...

. It took Ives from 1897 to 1913 to complete all four movements. The four movements in order are:
  • I. Washington’s Birthday
  • II. Decoration Day
  • III. The Fourth of July
  • IV. Thanksgiving


The movements coincide with each season; winter, spring, summer, and fall, respectively. While together these pieces are called a symphony, they may be played individually and thought of as separate works. As Ives dictates in his very own Memos:
Holiday Symphony exemplifies Ives’s varied, unique use of dissonance that gave his works a more dynamic range of emotion. “Each [movement] expresses its particular scene and feeling…[using] the mingling of stylistic voices, the meta-style, that had become second nature to Ives. They all contain the shared “pattern of splicing introverted slow music and extroverted fast music.”

Introduction and history

Charles Ives got the idea to write a holiday symphony during the summer of 1905. He wanted to write each movement as if it were based on a grown man’s memory of his childhood holidays. “Here are melodies like icons, resonating with memory and history, with war, childhood, community, and nation.” Ives constructed these movements based on personal memories from his past, including his father, George Ives, and the town of Danbury. His father had a huge impact on Ives’s compositions, especially after he died in November 1894. Ives lived in Danbury throughout his childhood, a town which holds many of the life experiences that inspired him to compose a Holiday Symphony.

New England Holidays exemplies “multi-tonality in the reharmonization of borrowed music…and [mixing of] several keys.” This work is notorious for its quotations, in particularly, its complex overlapping of multiple sources. Without the plethora of quotation, Holiday Symphony would lose its ability to call forth memories and emotions.
The first three movements of Holiday Symphony were performed in the United States and Europe in 1931 and 1932 under the direction of Nicolas Slonimsky
Nicolas Slonimsky
Nicolas Slonimsky was a Russian born American composer, conductor, musician, music critic, lexicographer and author. He described himself as a "diaskeuast" ; "a reviser or interpolator."- Life :...

. “The concerts created great excitement: laughter, protest, enthusiasm. Ives’s music never occupied more than a single modest spot on each pair of programs, but several important critics singled it out for serious and admiring comment.”

I. Washington’s Birthday


Washington’s Birthday is an impressionistic piece “featuring complex harmony scored mostly for many-stranded strings.” It was arranged for strings
String instrument
A string instrument is a musical instrument that produces sound by means of vibrating strings. In the Hornbostel-Sachs scheme of musical instrument classification, used in organology, they are called chordophones...

, horn
Horn (instrument)
The horn is a brass instrument consisting of about of tubing wrapped into a coil with a flared bell. A musician who plays the horn is called a horn player ....

, flute
Flute
The flute is a musical instrument of the woodwind family. Unlike woodwind instruments with reeds, a flute is an aerophone or reedless wind instrument that produces its sound from the flow of air across an opening...

, a set of bells
Bell (instrument)
A bell is a simple sound-making device. The bell is a percussion instrument and an idiophone. Its form is usually a hollow, cup-shaped object, which resonates upon being struck...

, and Jews Harps. Washington’s Birthday was finished in 1909, then rescored and published in 1913. The performance time of this piece is eleven to twelve minutes.

For the first part of this piece, Ives aimed to create a cold, dreary night in February. “Dissonant mostly whole-tone chords rise and fall in parallel motion to suggest the snow drifts and the hills.”

The allegro part in the middle of the piece reflects old barn-dance tunes; “Multiple overlapping dissonant ostinatos evoke the hubbub of the crowd.”
The barn dance contains the image of a country fiddling; a memorial to John Starr, a folk artist who died in 1890 at age forty-eight.

The piece ends with “the sleepy players intoning ‘Good Night, Ladies,’ then the music seems to dissolve in the mind” as “a solo violin plays reminiscences of the fiddle tunes, representing memories of the dance that echoes in the minds of the young folk as they head home.”

Washington’s Birthday was the first piece by Ives to be recorded in 1934 when Slonimsky conducted the Pan-America Orchestra for New Music Quarterly Recordings.

II. Decoration Day

Decoration Day was completed in 1912. Ives arranged the piece for full orchestra, and it lasts about nine to ten minutes in length.

Ives was inspired to write Decoration Day after listening to his father’s marching band play on Decoration Day. The marching band would march from the Soldiers’ Monument at the center of Danbury to Wooster Cemetery, and there Ives would play Taps. The band would leave often playing Reeves's Second Regiment Connecticut National Guard March.

Decoration Day begins with an extended meditative section, mostly for strings,” symbolizing morning and “the awakening of memory.” Ives has a player or two separated from the orchestra play as if he is alone, called “shadow lines.” The music slowly unfolds, yielding an eerie mix of major and minor keys. Ives begins to incorporate his memories of Decoration Day into his piece by transforming “Marching Through Georgia” into the mournful “Tenting on the Old Campground.” At this point, we are back in the cemetery where his father’s marching band stops, and just as Ives played Taps as a boy, he writes Taps into Decoration Day. Taps is coupled with “Nearer, My God, to Thee” played by the strings. Ives uses Taps to pave a way from the despairing section to the elated section. “On the last note of Taps the music begins to surge into a drumbeat that crescendos until with a sudden cut we are in the middle of the march back to town, and the pealing melody of Second Regiment.” Ives follows this jubilation with the music from the beginning of the piece.

The score of Decoration Day was published for the first time in 1989.

III. The Fourth of July

The Fourth of July was completely scored for full orchestra in the summer of 1912. The piece lasts six to seven minutes. Ives wrote The Fourth of July intending it to exmplify the excitement a boy feels during the Fourth of July celebrations and the freedom felt on that special day. He begins the piece with strings entering quietly; the sound and rhythmic intensity amplify steadily. This segues into the parade-like material of “Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean,” followed by fireworks, simulated by Ives’s sketch of The General Slocum. The movement ends peacefully with the imagery of falling sparks, signaling the end of the Fourth of July.

It was thought to be one of Ives’s most challenging pieces; the overlapping of an abundance of quotations creates heightened dissonance. More quotations that can be found within The Fourth of July are: Yankee Doodle, Dixie, Battle Cry of Freedom, Marching Through Georgia, and Battle Hymn of the Republic.

IV. Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving was the first movement in Holiday Symphony to be written. Ives started writing it as two organ pieces, a prelude and a postlude, in 1887 for a Thanksgiving church service; this is one of the reasons why it seems so conservative compared to the other three movements. He finished arranging Thanksgiving in 1904 as one orchestral movement.

“The middle section has a folklike simplicity and grace that Ives rarely allowed himself in orchestral music.” Ives tried to incorporate Puritan qualities into the music. Major and minor chords a step apart were meant to “represent the sternness and strength and austerity of the Puritan character.” The piece also contains “a scythe or reaping harvest theme which is a kind of off-beat, off-key counterpoint.”

External links

  • Keeping Score: Ives Holidays Symphony Multimedia website produced by the San Francisco Symphony
    San Francisco Symphony
    The San Francisco Symphony is an orchestra based in San Francisco, California. Since 1980, the orchestra has performed at the Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall. The San Francisco Symphony Youth Orchestra and the San Francisco Symphony Chorus are part of the organization...

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