Release Date: November 18, 2016
Catalog #: NV6066
Format: Digital
20th Century
Orchestral
Orchestra

Three Century Suite

The Lost Music Of Deems Taylor Vol. II

Deems Taylor composer

2016 marks the 50th anniversary of composer Deems Taylor’s death (1885-1966), an opportune time to revisit his music by releasing his previously unrecorded piece Three Century Suite. This piece, in the form of a Baroque dance suite, is delightfully accessible, full of beautiful melodies, exquisite harmonies, and marvelous orchestration. Three Century Suite was performed once before, in Interlochen, Michigan, in 1961, conducted by A. Clyde Roller.

In the 1920s and 30s Taylor’s compositions were met with great enthusiasm. His orchestral pieces were widely played. Paul Whiteman commissioned pieces by both Taylor and George Gershwin for his 1925 concert “Second Experiment in Modern Music”. That same year, the Metropolitan Opera commissioned him to write an opera – the first American to be so honored. Based on the success of the resulting The King’s Henchman (with libretto by Edna St. Vincent Millay), the Met commissioned a second opera, Peter Ibbetson. This was also a big success, and the number of performances for The King’s Henchman and Peter Ibbetson is greater than any opera of any other American composer.

Taylor was also an influential music critic and commentator. He reached more people through his radio commentaries than any other music critic in American history, before or since, and became nationally known as “The Dean of American Music”. Noted conductor Gerard Schwartz, of the Seattle Symphony, says of Taylor as a radio commentator, “Single-handedly, he probably did more for classical music in the first half of the twentieth century than anyone else in the United States.” As a critic, Taylor was open to the experiments of modernism, and wrote favorably of Alban Berg, Stravinsky, Gershwin, and others. As a composer, his music remains consistently within the romantic and impressionistic style, and displays the influences of Wagner, Tchaikovsky, and Debussy.

A promoter of classical music throughout his life, Taylor is possibly best-known today as the narrator of Walt Disney’s 1940 film classic Fantasia. It was he who suggested Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring for the dinosaur sequence.

Taylor’s style is fundamentally melodic and tonal, with rich, expressive orchestration. His music maintains interest through constant variation and frequent modulation. Above all, he views music as the “language of emotion” and taught that the test of good music was “how it sounds”. His belief in these standards partially explains the fact that after World War II, when these criteria were violently rejected by the generation of Boulez, Stockhausen, and Cage, Taylor’s music receded from the spot light.

Now – fifty years after his death – it seems appropriate to renew our appreciation of this composer’s work, because Deems Taylor is, indeed, a master – of orchestration, form, contrast, balance, texture, not to mention melody and harmony – and Three Century Suite is one of his masterpieces.

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Artist Information

Deems Taylor

Composer

Deems Taylor One of the best-known musical figures of the first half of the twentieth century, Deems Taylor was a composer, radio commentator, music critic, and author. He was the composer of The King’s Henchman, the first American opera ever commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera, with libretto by Edna St. Vincent Millay. His second opera, Peter Ibbetson, was performed 22 times at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, landing Taylor on the cover of Time magazine, and was in the repertoire for several years. Both operas actually made money for the Met. He wrote two other operas, a number of orchestral pieces, including the often played Through the Looking Glass Suite, and hundreds of chorale pieces.