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Cantilena in G, Op. 71, No. 1

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Uploaded by: Agnus_Dei (02/27/23)
Composer: Foote, Arthur
Sample Producer: Audio Angelorum
Sample Set: Peterborough Cathedral Hill
Software: Hauptwerk IV
Genre: American Romantic
Description:
Arthur William Foote (5 March 1853 in Salem, Massachusetts – 8 April 1937 in Boston, Massachusetts) was a member of the "Boston Six." The other five were George Whitefield Chadwick, Amy Beach, Edward MacDowell, John Knowles Paine, and Horatio Parker. The modern tendency is to view Foote’s music as “Romantic” and “European” in light of the later generation of American composers. A Harvard graduate and the first noted American classical composer to be trained entirely in the U.S., in some sense he is to music what American poets were to literature before Walt Whitman. He was an early advocate of Brahms and Wagner and promoted performances of their music. Foote was an active music teacher and wrote a number of pedagogical works.

The Grove Music Encyclopedia says: “In his finest works Foote was a memorable composer. His style, firmly placed in the Romantic tradition, is characterized by lyrical melodies, expressive phrasing, and clear formal structure."

The "Cantilena in G", is probably Foote's most "well-known" organ work, as it appears from time to time on recordings and recital programs. Dedicated to Charles Heinroth, it is the first of the "Seven Pieces", composed in 1910. To me, this work immediately calls to mind Bach's "Air on the G-String".

Charles Heinroth (1874-1963) was Organist of the City of Pittsburgh and a well-known recitalist in his time.

The "Seven Pieces" are mostly large scale works. This is particularly the case with the "Solemn March" and the blazing "Toccata."

This is the third time that I've uploaded the "Cantilena." In this performance, I've tried to follow Footes' detailed instructions, hoping to achieve an "authentically styled performance.
In doing so, I'm not sure that this version is as successful as some of the earlier uploads.

This piece alone secures Foote a position of immortality in American organ music.

The score is attached, as well as photos of Foote and of the dedicatee, Charles Heinroth.

Tommorrow: "Solemn March."
Performance: Live
Recorded in: Stereo
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