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On today’s date in 1931, a short notice appeared in The San Francisco Chronicle, which began: “Music never before heard in San Francisco will make up the program of the New Music Society to be conducted by Nicolas Slonimsky of Boston tonight in the Community Playhouse.” In addition to new works by Stravinsky and Prokofiev, Slonimsky conducted pieces by three American composers, including the world premiere of Washington’s Birthday, by Charles Ives.
Ives had written Washington’s Birthday in 1909, and the following year had talked some theater musicians into giving the work a run-through. “They made an awful fuss about playing it, and only after some of the parts that seemed to me to be the best and strongest were cut,” he recalled. About 10 years later, he asked some players of the New York Symphony to give the score a private reading at his home. Again, the musicians complained it was just too difficult.
Slonimsky’s 1931 performance in San Francisco presented the score complete and as originally written. Ives, who lived on the East Coast, was not present for the San Francisco premiere, but was delighted to learn — as he put it: “Neither the audience nor the critics were disturbed to the point of cussing.
Charles Ives (1874-1954): Washington’s Birthday; Chicago Symphony; Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor; CBS/Sony 42381
By American Public Media4.7
176176 ratings
On today’s date in 1931, a short notice appeared in The San Francisco Chronicle, which began: “Music never before heard in San Francisco will make up the program of the New Music Society to be conducted by Nicolas Slonimsky of Boston tonight in the Community Playhouse.” In addition to new works by Stravinsky and Prokofiev, Slonimsky conducted pieces by three American composers, including the world premiere of Washington’s Birthday, by Charles Ives.
Ives had written Washington’s Birthday in 1909, and the following year had talked some theater musicians into giving the work a run-through. “They made an awful fuss about playing it, and only after some of the parts that seemed to me to be the best and strongest were cut,” he recalled. About 10 years later, he asked some players of the New York Symphony to give the score a private reading at his home. Again, the musicians complained it was just too difficult.
Slonimsky’s 1931 performance in San Francisco presented the score complete and as originally written. Ives, who lived on the East Coast, was not present for the San Francisco premiere, but was delighted to learn — as he put it: “Neither the audience nor the critics were disturbed to the point of cussing.
Charles Ives (1874-1954): Washington’s Birthday; Chicago Symphony; Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor; CBS/Sony 42381

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