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Date: | Tue, 11 May 1999 15:46:52 -0500 |
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Uncle Dave Lewis writes of Ballet mecanique:
>For his most famous work, the "Ballet Mecanique" there are currently two
>very different recordings of the work in as many incarnations. The 1927
>New York vesion is heard as part of a concert recording on MusicMasters
>with the New Palais Royale Orchestra under the direction of Maurice Peress
>(MusicMasters 60794). This is the only recording of something approaching
>the original version, and as such reccomends itself. It is also what I
>call the "kitchen sink" version- it has everything in it. ..
>
>While the earlier version seems
>more experimental and even "post-modern", the revision is clearer and
>altogther more purposeful in design, and even seems more "mechanichal".
This is why horses race. I much prefer this version to the 1954 revision.
To me, it's one of the most amazing works of the century - not for the
show-biz effects, but for its incredible use of silence. I find the
revision far less interesting. If I speculated, I would say that Antheil's
adaptation of neo-classicism distanced him too far from his Twenties'
musical point of view. On the other hand, I do prefer the revision of the
Jazz Symphony, which, as Uncle Dave points out, gains from the tightening.
Steve Schwartz
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