Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Broadway Composers Beyond the Stage

    Broadway Composers Beyond the Stage

    Sure, it’s artistically satisfying to perform with the New York Philharmonic and to have your works choreographed by Léonide Massine and George Balanchine and all, but a popular hit is guaranteed to keep food on the table.

    This Sunday night on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll hear from two composers whose concert music has been overshadowed by their works for the musical theater.

    Vernon Duke lives on through his standards “April in Paris” and “Autumn in New York,” with his greatest stage success the Broadway musical “Cabin in the Sky.”

    However, his early ambition was to become a “serious” composer. Born Vladimir Dukelsky in what is now Belarus in 1903, Duke studied composition with Reinhold Gliere. His music was championed by Serge Koussevitzky and admired by Sergei Prokofiev. Indeed, Duke continued to write works for the concert hall (as Dukelsky) right up through the mid-1950s.

    In 1921, he came to New York. There, he was befriended by George Gershwin. It was Gershwin (born Jacob Gershowitz) who suggested the name change. Thereafter, Duke/Dukelsky lived a double-life, Duke writing for popular consumption and Dukelsky composing symphonies and concertos.

    Dukelsky’s Piano Concerto was requested by none other than Arthur Rubinstein, who recognized the 19 year-old’s promise.

    Allegedly, Rubinstein and Gershwin were delighted with the piece when they heard it in its two-piano form. Unfortunately, so was impresario Serge Diaghilev. When Diaghilev heard Dukelsky play through it in Paris (with Georges Auric on the second piano), he immediately offered the talented young man a commission to compose “Zephyr et Flore” for the Ballets Russes. This led to further offers from London’s West End. As a result, Dukelsky never got around to orchestrating the piece. It was left to pianist Scott Dunn to do so, in time for some Gershwin centennial concerts in 1999.

    Meredith Willson is best-remembered for “The Music Man” and “The Unsinkable Molly Brown.”

    However, prior to his success in musical theater, he had been a flutist in the Sousa band and with the New York Philharmonic. He worked as an orchestrator on Charlie Chaplin’s “The Great Dictator.” He was also a gifted conductor, author, librettist, and humorist. His autobiography, “And There I Stood with my Piccolo,” became a bestseller.

    Willson composed two symphonies, both of them extended love letters to specific California sites. His Symphony No. 1 pays tribute to San Francisco. The Symphony No. 2, the one we’ll be listening to, is evocative of the missions of Southern California. In contrast to Professor Harold Hill, Willson clearly “knew the territory.”

    I hope you’ll join me for “Broad Talents from Broadway,” this Sunday night at 10 ET, with a repeat Wednesday evening at 6; or that you’ll enjoy it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

    PHOTO: Meredith and Rini Willson make beautiful music together

  • Need for Speed Movie Soundtracks Mad Max & More

    Need for Speed Movie Soundtracks Mad Max & More

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ve got the need for speed.

    With Mad Max back in theaters, we’ll have music from the second installment in the series, “The Road Warrior” (1981). Australian composer Brian May wrote the music, as he did for the original. The director, George Miller, specified that he was looking for a gothic, Bernard Herrmann-type mood to underscore his dystopian vision of a post-apocalyptic Australian Outback.

    Maurice Jarre took over to write the music for the third installment, “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome,” but it’s purely by coincidence that we’ll hear selections from another Jarre score built for speed, “Grand Prix” (1966). The film’s international cast featured James Garner, Eva Marie Saint, Yves Montand, and Toshiro Mifune, but the plot’s assorted relationship and business conflicts take a back seat to driver’s-eye views of lapping the track.

    When we remember Steve McQueen, chances are one of the first images that springs to mind is that of McQueen behind the wheel of his Ford Mustang GT 390 Fastback, tearing up and down the streets of San Francisco in “Bullitt” (1968). The high-octane action sequence became the yardstick against which all big screen car chases were measured (at least until “The French Connection”). Lalo Schifrin provided the jazzy score.

    Finally, Marty McFly and Doc Brown’s time-travelling DeLoreon needs to hit 88 miles per hour in order to get “Back to the Future” (1985). Director Bob Zemeckis had already worked with composer Alan Silvestri on “Romancing the Stone,” but the producer of “Back to the Future,” Steven Spielberg, didn’t care for the music in that film. Zemeckis’ advice to his colleague: go grand and epic, since Spielberg had a marked preference for the music of John Williams. It was a very good choice.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of chases and races, this evening at 6 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast, at http://www.wwfm.org.

    Just be sure you’re not driving when you do!

  • Beethoven Sonatas in Freehold NJ: A Once-in-a-Lifetime Event

    Beethoven Sonatas in Freehold NJ: A Once-in-a-Lifetime Event

    “It’s guaranteed to be the first and last time the complete cycle of sonatas is ever presented in Freehold,” quips Mark Hyczko, artistic director of the Downtown Concert Series in Freehold, NJ.

    German-born Austrian pianist Stephan Möller will conclude the organization’s 2014-2015 season, offering the grandest of grand finales, by undertaking an epic journey encompassing all 32 Beethoven sonatas. The sonatas will be presented in chronological order, on eight recitals over the course of a week, beginning tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. The concerts will be held at historic St. Peter’s Church in Freehold.

    Interestingly, the venue is just about as old as Beethoven himself. The construction of St. Peter’s began all the way back in 1771, the year after the composer’s birth. Originally conceived on a design of Philadelphia architect Robert Smith, the structure’s completion was delayed by the Battle of Monmouth, when the site is alleged to have served as a hospital.

    Following the Revolution, it was employed as an army storehouse, until the 1790s. It was in the last decade of the 18th century that the interior was finally completed so that services could be held. Throughout the 1800s, continued renovations and expansions transformed the original meeting house design into the gothic structure which stands today.

    In anticipation of Möller’s Beethoven marathon, Hyczko has been posting a “Sonata-a-Day” feature on the Downtown Concert Series Facebook page, with links to complete performances of the works by different pianists and little-known facts about the composer.

    On Sunday, the Capital Singers of Trenton will present music by one of Beethoven’s teachers, Franz Joseph Haydn. Haydn’s setting of the “Te Deum” will appear on the first half of the program, alongside selections from “The Creation” and the “Mass in Time of War.” The second half will feature works by contemporary composers Franz Biebl and Stephen Paulus. The most grandiose entry should be a second “Te Deum” setting by Mark Hayes.

    “It’s more romantic, almost like film scores of the 1950s,” says the chorus’ artistic director, Richard Loatman. “I don’t know if you know the composer Miklós Rózsa, who wrote the music for ‘Ben-Hur’ and ‘El Cid’ and those biblical epics, but it has that kind of a feel to it.”

    Sounds good to me!

    The concert will be held on Sunday at 4 p.m., at Sacred Heart Church in Trenton. You can read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/05/classical_music_haydn_coming_t.html

    PLEASE NOTE: I’m not responsible for the malaprop in the headline.

  • Otto Klemperer: A Genius Conductor’s Mad Life

    Otto Klemperer: A Genius Conductor’s Mad Life

    You were an associate, friend and disciple of Gustav Mahler. You championed new works by Schoenberg, Stravinsky and Hindemith. You tolerated no coughing or sneezing from your audience. You suffered from severe cyclothymic bipolar disorder. You answered the door to your dressing room in your boxers and covered in lipstick. You underwent surgery to remove a brain tumor “the size of a small orange.” When placed in an institution, you escaped. You took a severe spill, requiring you to conduct from a chair. You set yourself on fire and tried to douse the flames with spirits of camphor. You sired Colonel Klink. Your career was capped by a glorious Indian Summer that spanned 20 years. You lived to the ripe old age of 88. In short, you had all the qualifications to be one of the 20th century’s greatest conductors.

    Happy birthday, Otto Klemperer (1885-1973).

    Klemperer conducts Schumann in Philadelphia:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ua_m6mMhfuc

    Fascinating Klemperer interview:

    This guy loves Klemperer:

    http://www.morethanthenotes.com/read-the-book/otto-klemperer

    PHOTO: Otto the Indestructible

  • Wayne Cochran The White Knight of Soul You Need To Know

    Wayne Cochran The White Knight of Soul You Need To Know

    I’m sure everyone I’ve mentioned it to so far thinks I’m nuts, but Wayne Cochran is my new idol. Have any of you ever heard of this guy?

    Elvis took the cape and jumpsuit; Michael Jackson took the moves. All the rest, he got from James Brown – except of course the hair.

    Naturally, he’s now an evangelist preacher with a Florida ministry.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwRD1Bc_LpA

    That’s some preachin’!


    PHOTO: The White Knight of Soul

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