George Antheil: Dreams, Piano Concerto No. 2, Serenade No. 2
Liner Notes   Cat. No. 80647     Release Date: 2006-01-01
Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra, Daniel Spalding, conductor; Guy Livingston, piano

A concert pianist and vanguard composer, George Antheil (1900–1959) became known as the "Bad Boy of Music." The ultimate American in Paris, Antheil was an avant-garde provocateur of the first order who made his name composing iconoclastic compositions: the loudest and brashest classical music of his time. But this album gives us three new performances-two of them world-premiere recordings-which reveal another, forgotten side of Antheil, the incurable romantic.

Written in 1926, after the height of Antheil's radical period, the Piano Concerto No. 2 (1926) is an experiment in classical form. The work contains the same sudden juxtapositions and abrupt contrasts of mood as his futurist music. But the excesses of his recent Ballet mécanique (written for 16 player pianos!) are compensated for by an almost spare, baroque orchestration and motifs that draw on Bach as much as on Stravinsky. In three movements, Antheil employs a more restrained but still exuberant style. The beautifully meditative slow movement is followed by a virtuosic and compelling toccata. Each movement ends on an overtly Bachian cadence, most obvious in the sweetly naive coda of the final movement.

The ballet Dreams (1935) had a prior existence in Paris. It was called Les Songes, and Darius Milhaud wrote the original music in 1933, later discarded in favor of Antheil's score. Antheil plays sarcastically with contradictions: waltz vs. march; folk song vs. orchestral romanticism. This is marvelous ballet music, and the unexpected structural and melodic changes keep us on the edge of our seat: amused and entertained. The lack of a formal structure does not hamper Antheil; he seemed to thrive on it, both in this piece, and in many others he wrote. Despite the cut-and-paste exoticism and the predictable thematic material, this music sounds appealingly American-folksy, populist, and engaging. Antheil's brilliant orchestration makes these works shine.

Not much is known about the genesis of the Serenade No. 2 (1948). As the work neared completion, Antheil wrote, the Serenade ". . . is as important, for me, as a new symphony; indeed, it can be played by a major symphony orchestra." It's a beautifully orchestrated, lush work. Both serenades are in three movements—the first is for strings alone while the second adds a wind section and a percussionist. Some of the themes from the first serenade re-occur in the second serenade. 

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"Spalding and his Philadelphians do the music proud. They capture the energy and impatience of Antheil's musical imagination. You realize that even in his later, more conservative idioms, Antheil retained the soul of the provocateur." —Classical.net

The Philadelphia Virtuosi Chamber Orchestra

George Antheil: Dreams, Piano Concerto No. 2, Serenade No. 2

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Track Listing

Dreams: I. Introduction
George Antheil
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Dreams: II. Andante
George Antheil
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Dreams: III. Polka
George Antheil
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Dreams: IV. Rat
George Antheil
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Dreams: V. Acrobat
George Antheil
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Dreams: VI. The King's March
George Antheil
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Dreams: VII. Can-Can
George Antheil
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Dreams: VIII. Valse
George Antheil
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Dreams: IX. Finale & Epilogue
George Antheil
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Piano Concerto No. 2: I. Moderato
George Antheil
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Piano Concerto No. 2: II. Largo
George Antheil
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Piano Concerto No. 2: III. Allegro
George Antheil
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Serenade No. 2: I. Moderately Fast
George Antheil
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Serenade No. 2: II. Slow
George Antheil
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Serenade No. 2: III. Quite Fast
George Antheil
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