Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Leo Arnaud Olympic Fanfare’s 120th Birthday

    Leo Arnaud Olympic Fanfare’s 120th Birthday

    Leo Arnaud was born in Lyon, France, on this date 120 years ago. You may not know his name, but from July 26 to August 11, yet again his most famous music will resound everywhere, as the 2024 Summer Olympics take place in Paris.

    Arnaud composed the most widely recognized of Olympic fanfares, “The Bugler’s Dream,” for Felix Slatkin, for inclusion on his 1958 album, “Charge!” It was originally part of a larger work, the “Charge Suite.” However, in 1968, it was picked up by ABC, for use in its coverage of the Winter Olympics from Grenoble. As a result, the fanfare entered the popular consciousness, and it has been used by ABC in all its subsequent Olympics coverage. When the games moved to another network, the fanfare fell into dormancy for a time, but was revived by NBC for the Barcelona games in 1992.

    Arnaud, who worked as an orchestrator in Hollywood for many years, studied with Maurice Ravel and Vincent d’Indy. His orchestrations can be heard in films ranging from “The Wizard of Oz” to “Ryan’s Daughter.”

    In the 1980s, he revisited “The Bugler’s Dream” for a new recording on the Telarc label with legendary symphonic band director Frederick Fennell. This is a very interesting recording, since the composer not only expanded the fanfare into an Olympic triptych – adding a second movement, called “La Chasse,” and a third, titled “Olympiad” (written only a few days before the recording session) – but he also appears with the ensemble as a percussionist.

    In more recent years, Arnaud’s fanfare has often been heard in an amalgam with John Williams’ “Olympic Fanfare and Theme,” written for the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

    When it comes to Olympic music, these guys are pure gold. Happy birthday, Leo Arnaud (1904-1991)!


    Slatkin’s recording of “The Bugler’s Dream” (Olympic Fanfare at 2:52):

    The third of Arnaud’s fanfares, “Olympiad,” for Fennell:

    John Williams’ “Olympic Fanfare and Theme”:

    The amalgam:

  • Maria João Pires at 80 A Musical Life

    Maria João Pires at 80 A Musical Life

    The Portuguese pianist Maria João Pires is 80 today. Critics have turned handsprings over her Schubert and Chopin, but my favorite recordings are two made with Augustin Dumay.

    Together, they hold me in their thrall with the three violin sonatas of Edvard Grieg. Who knew the unassuming Norwegian miniaturist harbored such volcanic passion? Okay, so there’s every possibility that theirs are not the most idiomatic interpretations, but who cares? I’ll take these above all others. Here’s a taste:

    They also collaborated on a very fine collection of the Beethoven sonatas, perhaps more suited to their collaborative temperament. You can sample any of them here:

    Dumay, now 75, also set down my preferred recording of Édouard Lalo’s “Symphonie espagnole.” I guess the French really do know how to cook.

    Many (including myself) assumed the couple were married, but it turns out they were actually cohabitating. Following their split, they continued to play together and, according to Pires, remain good friends.

    In 2006, Pires left Portugal to live in Brazil for 11 years, because of sustained negative publicity over an experimental primary school she established to introduce the arts into the lives of underprivileged children. She also tried to set up a program for sexually abused children, but claims she was stonewalled by the previously-cooperative Portuguese government, over the raging controversy. During her expatriation, the arts program continued to operate on her farm, overseen by a trusted friend. In the meantime, she initiated similar programs in Brazil.

    With all the anxiety over the attacks in the press – which then invented a story that the reason for her move was so that she could be with her Brazilian lover (who did not exist) – she fell ill and had to undergo major heart surgery. She later dedicated one of her recordings to her medical team.

    Pires returned to Portugal in 2017 and announced her retirement from the concert stage (after all, she had been performing in public since the age of 5), but every time she thought she was out, it seems, the instrument pulled her back in. There have been spills and injuries along the way – pianists are a lot like athletes – but she’s basically been back to concertizing since 2020.

    There’s a video that’s been circulating on the internet for a number of years now, in which Pires shows up for a concert having prepared the wrong Mozart concerto and then delivers a note-perfect performance of the scheduled piece, despite not having played it for quite some time. Some combination of adrenaline, muscle memory, and/or the Force sees her through.

    Personally, I’m not sure how such a mix-up is even possible, since, even in the modern world of fly-me-in artists, there’s usually at least one rehearsal. But it was a lunchtime concert, and they’re all world-class professionals, so there it is.

    Pires claims a strong relationship with Buddhist philosophy. While she admits Buddhism influences her playing, with its sense of breathing, space, and quietness, she refuses to be pigeonholed as a Buddhist, stating that before anything else she is a human being.

    Happy birthday, Maria João Pires. May your future surprises all be good ones!


    Pires explains the source of the Mozart mix-up here:

    Pires plays the Chopin Nocturnes, no studio trickery, live in concert:

  • Finnish Radio Bliss Lost in Translation

    Finnish Radio Bliss Lost in Translation

    I am in bliss with the Finns at Yle Klassinen (accessible via my internet radio). However, beyond the names of the composers and the performers, I can’t understand a word that the hosts are saying! Thankfully, they’ve got the playlists posted at their website. Of course, I still have to use the translate function, which results in occasional inadvertent hilarity, as with this translation of one of Vaughan Williams’ best-loved pieces, scheduled to stream later tonight:

    Vaughan Williams: The Bread Rises to the Heights (Hilary Hahn, violin, and London SO/Colin Davis)

    How much yeast is in Hahn’s RVW is debatable:

    Current playlist posted here:

    https://areena.yle.fi/podcastit/1-70823375


    PHOTO: Lark bread bun – as far as I know, a Russian, not a Finnish tradition!

  • Alan Menken Disney Legend Turns 75

    Alan Menken Disney Legend Turns 75

    His music was often beauty to Disney’s beast.

    Eight-time Academy Award winning composer Alan Menken turns 75 today.

    Menken is best-recognized as the unmistakable sound of the Disney animation renaissance that began with “The Little Mermaid” in 1989. The film earned him two Academy Awards (for Best Original Score and Best Original Song, “Under the Sea”). He went on to repeat the success with his song-driven scores for “Beauty and the Beast” (1991), “Aladdin” (1992), and “Pocahontas” (1995).

    More than anybody else, Menken was responsible for introducing the Broadway idiom that’s become so indelibly linked in moviegoers’ minds with animated features. His frequent collaborator was Howard Ashman, who, following him from the musical theater, provided lyrics for the first three mentioned films, as well as for Menken’s stage-and-screen musical “Little Shop of Horrors,” among others. With Ashman’s untimely death at the age of 40, Tim Rice stepped up to complete “Aladdin.” Stephen Schwartz was Menken’s lyricist for “Pocahontas.”

    For Disney, Menken also provided music for “Newsies” (1992), “The Hunchback of Notre Dame” (1996), “Hercules” (1997), “Home on the Range” (2004), “Enchanted” (2007), “Tangled” (2010), and “Disenchanted” (2022).

    He is the second most-prolific Oscar winner in the history of film scoring, after Alfred Newman (who won nine). John Williams, of course, is the most nominated (with 54!).

    Menken’s success has extended well beyond the big screen. He’s garnered a Tony, eleven Grammy Awards, seven Golden Globe Awards, and a Daytime Emmy (making him an EGOT: an Emmy-Grammy-Oscar-Tony winner). Richard Rodgers and Marvin Hamlisch also won the Pulitzer (making them PEGOTs).

    However, Menken has the further distinction of having won a Razzie for Worst Original Song for “High Times, Hard Times,” from “Newsies” (making him a REGOT?). He was a good sport to collect the award in person. I’m sure he cried all the way to the bank.

    Incidentally, it was for the stage adaptation of “Newsies” that Menken won the Tony in 2012.

    Happy birthday, Alan Menken!


    This is from a fun little project in which a number of notable Disney tunes were arranged in the styles of the great classical composers. Here’s Menken’s “Beauty and the Beast,” rendered in the style of Rachmaninoff.

  • Zardoz Beethoven’s 7th? France Says Hold My Wine

    Zardoz Beethoven’s 7th? France Says Hold My Wine

    Until now, I thought John Boorman’s “Zardoz” was the most peculiar use of Beethoven’s 7th.

    France: Hold my wine.

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (93) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (132) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (193) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (103) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (147) Mozart (88) Opera (206) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (108) Radio (88) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS