These first piece that I listened to was Hoedown, because as creatures of habit and familiarity, I listened to the one that I knew.  When I then listened to Putnam's Camp, I was a little shocked and uneasy, and although I did not enjoy the piece - it had many things in common with Hoedown.
            
	Hoedown by Copland uses percussion to represent familiar sounds; for example, there was a percussion instrument used to simulate the trotting of a horse.  The xylophone was also used - this piece is simple, but made more intricate and interesting by its percussion.  There was a great deal of repeated melody in this piece.  The opening - a higher pitched phrase, followed by a lower pitched phrase - is repeated many times, as is a phrase in the middle of the piece.  Also, Copland uses a good amount of quiet, not silence per se, but a contrast between quieter times and then more striking beats.  About half way through the music, there seems to be a conversation between a small group, perhaps two people.  Again, this is symbolized through percussion, and it seems as though they are having a light, flirty conversation.  This piece was very happy and upbeat - as if we"re growing up in the West without a care in the world.
            
	There was not much information on this piece alone, rather there was a great deal of information to be found on Aaron Copland himself.  Hoedown is from Rodeo, a ballet about a cowgirl growing up in the Wild West, who is trying to find a man.  This was so fitting to the image that I had developed - right down to the trotting horses and the flirty conversation.  This did not really change my idea of the music, instead it heightened my mental picture and made the story a bit more enjoyable.
            
	The second piece, by Charles Ives (in Cleveland by vonDohnanyi?), was very sporadic it seemed to me.  The very first thing that I envisioned by Putnam's "camp" was a military camp.  But this camp was very disorganized and frantic right now.