Charles Ives may have composed only four symphonies (six if one counts his patchwork New England Holidays Symphony and the unfinished Universe Symphony), but what a breadth of human experience they traverse, from mawkish youth to psychedelic visionary. On Thursday, Gustavo Dudamel and the Los Angeles Philharmonic inaugurated the first of four programs dedicated to the composer’s numbered symphonies. Paired with them are the last three by Antonín Dvořák, the musical nebula which birthed the Ives symphonies. Back-to-back they served as dueling images – landscape from afar, close-up self-portrait – of an America now long vanished. It was the first time since last year that the orchestra’s music director appeared before audiences at Disney Hall, and if the resulting performances were any indication, the orchestra was glad to have him back on their podium.
Punctuated by rousing horns (led by associate principal Jaclyn Rainey) and pert woodwinds, Dudamel led a buoyant reading of Ives’ First which effortlessly drew out this score’s homespun charm; even airbrushing those moments in which its seams start to show, especially apparent in the first and last movements, into something downright endearing. Though relishing its exuberance, Dudamel was also careful to savor the symphony’s moments of repose and lyric gracefulness. Carolyn Hove’s English horn blew out its delicate cirrus clouds which soared across the horizon of Ives’ autumnal twilight in the close of the pastoral Adagio molto – a Thomas Cole painting bursting into song. And at the work’s coda, a terrific eruption of boyish glee as Ives piles up snatches of the Tchaikovsky Fourth with march motifs straight out of Sousa.