Three Places in New England, composition for orchestra by American composer Charles Ives, completed and much revised in the first decades of the 20th century and published in its best-known version in 1935. Its three movements portray scenes from the composer’s native New England and feature much of his trademark polyphony (the simultaneous use of multiple melodies and sometimes even multiple tonalities, often creating great dissonance).
The first movement, “The Saint-Gaudens in Boston Common,” offers a vision that the subtitle clarifies as “Col. Shaw and his Colored Regiment”; the Civil War leader and his forces are portrayed in a bas-relief sculpture in Boston Common. A poetic preface printed in the musical score describes the scene: a ghostly procession of soldiers steadily passing over a hill, their pace changing as the pitch of the hill varies. The Civil War setting is brought home by fragments of Civil War tunes, which Ives would have learned from his father, who was an army bandleader during the war.
The second movement, “Putnam’s Camp, Redding, Connecticut,” imagines a young boy wandering away from the crowd at an Independence Day celebration to drowse in the fields and dream of the Revolutionary War winter camp once located there. Melodies sampled in that movement include “British Grenadiers” and “Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean.” With a startling, clamorous crash, the boy awakes and rejoins the present day.
In the final movement, Ives evokes “The Housatonic at Stockbridge,” remembering a time when he and his wife, Harmony, walked along the banks of the Housatonic River hearing hymns from a church on the opposite bank. For that final movement, Ives drew upon hymn tunes he himself had played as a church organist from his early teens to mid-20s.