Deems Taylor: Through the Looking Glass Suite
Historical Films Inc.
•
30m
A charming extended piece of music (about 30 minutes) by an American composer who is seldom heard nowadays, but whose music was highly popular in the 1920s and is well worth hearing now. Deems Taylor was almost a household name in those days, being prominently seen and heard in magazines and on radio, as a classical music popularizer and a successful composer. Through the Looking Glass is closely inspired by Lewis Carroll’s famous story, with extensive passages from the book directly quoted in the margins of the score.
Up Next in Historical Films Inc.
-
Rimsky-Korsakov Storm Music from "Iva...
Storm interlude from the opera The Maid of Pskov, also titled Ivan the Terrible. Albert Coates and the London Symphony, 1938.
A brief but wonderfully atmospheric evocation of a winter storm from a saga of Ivan the Terrible’s Russia in 1570. Conductor Albert Coates was born in St. Petersburg and ... -
Charles Gounod, Funeral March for a M...
Charles Gounod, Funeral March for a Marionette. Sir Henry Wood and the London Philharmonic, 1940
A droll piece of very French humor, this very popular item will be familiar to listeners today from its appropriation by Alfred Hitchcock for his television series in the 1960s. The renowned Sir Henry... -
César Franck: The Accursed Huntsman
A highly dramatic orchestral fantasy written in the old grand manner, and not as famous as it used to be, it can still be exciting and highly evocative in a good performance. This one is exceptional, with just the right orchestral balance, and very full sound just a few years before the age of th...