Romeo 
                    Cascarino was born in Philadelphia 
                    in 1922. Self-taught until the age of seventeen, his early 
                    influences in music came mostly from the operas that he attended 
                    with his father, a tailor-cum-dramatic tenor. Aaron Copland 
                    reviewed some of his early scores and invited him to Tanglewood 
                    for further study. Unabashedly devoted to tonality and to 
                    the beauty that could be created through the medium of the 
                    orchestra; Cascarino’s orchestral works reflect sensitivity 
                    to color and are indebted somewhat to Copland’s Americana 
                    style. 
                  A 
                    somewhat crippling modesty and lack of self-promotion kept 
                    Cascarino’s music out of the limelight for most of his career. 
                    An avid reader and lover of literature, the composer was particularly 
                    fond of Greek myth. It is from this passion that Pygmalion 
                    and Portrait of Galatea were born. Lush orchestral 
                    textures and large, sweeping bands of sound define both works. 
                    They are rhapsodic in their nature and in spite of some pungent 
                    dissonances; they contain some very beautiful writing, somewhat 
                    reminiscent of Samuel Barber’s shorter orchestral pieces. 
                    
                  Inspired 
                    by a Carl Sandburg poem, Blades of Grass is elegiac, 
                    with a mournful English Horn solo, lovingly played by Geoffry 
                    Deemer. Composed right after the end of the Second World War, 
                    the work reflects the tragedy of war’s destruction and death. 
                    Next follows Prospice, Cascarino’s first orchestral 
                    work, originally commissioned as a ballet. Most performances 
                    during the composer’s lifetime were in its two-piano version, 
                    and this disc contains the first recording of it in its original 
                    form for orchestra. 
                  I 
                    must confess that by the time I got to this fourth piece, 
                    I was growing weary of slow. Although there is much beauty 
                    to be enjoyed in these works, Cascarino seemed to overly favor 
                    slow tempi and somewhat lugubrious harmonic rhythm. The faster 
                    sections in Prospice were a welcome relief. Still, 
                    I must point out that in spite of their being well-crafted 
                    and carefully orchestrated, this composer’s works tend to 
                    be a bit lacking in variety of styles and ideas. 
                  The 
                    Meditation and Elegy is based on Poe’s poem Annabel 
                    Lee and began life as piano music. It is truly beautiful, 
                    and wistfully brief, but again, it’s slow. Rounding out the 
                    program is The Acadian Land this time inspired by the 
                    poetry of Longfellow. It is full of the rich textures and 
                    delicious harmonies of the other works, but the lack of tempo 
                    variety, while it doesn’t kill the music, certainly makes 
                    this disc one that you would want to sample one work at a 
                    time rather than all at one sitting.
                  The 
                    Philadelphia Philharmonia is a group assembled for this project, 
                    and is ably conducted by JoAnn Falletta, of right reputation 
                    as one of the major talents of the younger generation of American 
                    conductors. She makes a good showing of some decidedly second-tier 
                    music. 
                  This 
                    is, in all honesty, worth investigation, and although this 
                    is not music that is bound for a lasting place in the concert 
                    repertoire, the occasional performance makes for a refreshing 
                    change of pace.
                  Kevin 
                    Sutton
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