
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
On today’s date in 1938, at the New York Philharmonic’s summertime concert home at Lewissohn Stadium, a 24-year-old American composer named Morton Gould conducted the first performance of his new piece entitled “American Symphonette No. 2.”
The new piece was in three movements, and the second, entitled “Pavanne,” proved especially popular. It fused elements of jazz in swing time with the form of the old-fashioned courtly dance made famous by Maurice Ravel’s “Pavane for Dead Princess.” In the published score, Gould spelled “Pavanne” with two “n’s.” At the time I wrote the piece” said Gould, “’pavane’ was not a well-known word. Those who knew their Ravel could spell and say it right, but the people who knew only mine had difficulty in pronouncing the title. So I decided to use two n’s to give at least some idea of what the phonetic sounds were.”
For many decades, Morton Gould was much in demand as a conductor and arranger, but writing original music was what he loved best. “Composing is my life blood,” he claimed. “That is basically me, and although I have done many things in my life – conducting, arranging, playing piano, and so on – what is fundamental is my being a composer.”
Morton Gould (1913 – 1996): Pavanne, fr American Symphonette No. 2 (St. Louis Symphony; Leonard Slatkin, cond.) RCA 60778
4.7
1010 ratings
On today’s date in 1938, at the New York Philharmonic’s summertime concert home at Lewissohn Stadium, a 24-year-old American composer named Morton Gould conducted the first performance of his new piece entitled “American Symphonette No. 2.”
The new piece was in three movements, and the second, entitled “Pavanne,” proved especially popular. It fused elements of jazz in swing time with the form of the old-fashioned courtly dance made famous by Maurice Ravel’s “Pavane for Dead Princess.” In the published score, Gould spelled “Pavanne” with two “n’s.” At the time I wrote the piece” said Gould, “’pavane’ was not a well-known word. Those who knew their Ravel could spell and say it right, but the people who knew only mine had difficulty in pronouncing the title. So I decided to use two n’s to give at least some idea of what the phonetic sounds were.”
For many decades, Morton Gould was much in demand as a conductor and arranger, but writing original music was what he loved best. “Composing is my life blood,” he claimed. “That is basically me, and although I have done many things in my life – conducting, arranging, playing piano, and so on – what is fundamental is my being a composer.”
Morton Gould (1913 – 1996): Pavanne, fr American Symphonette No. 2 (St. Louis Symphony; Leonard Slatkin, cond.) RCA 60778
1,344 Listeners
3,880 Listeners
179 Listeners
521 Listeners
7,629 Listeners
37,841 Listeners
75 Listeners
41 Listeners
72 Listeners
43,452 Listeners
240 Listeners
25,794 Listeners
110,626 Listeners
2,106 Listeners
55,930 Listeners
4,099 Listeners
6,220 Listeners