Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Milhaud’s King René’s Chimney

    Milhaud’s King René’s Chimney

    Darius Milhaud, the French composer who rose to prominence in the late ’teens and 1920s, as part of that loose collective known as Les Six, died 50 years ago today.

    Milhaud was such an insanely prolific composer – in common with Telemann and Heitor Villa-Lobos – that he’s often hard to pin down. An enlightened and fair-minded individual of leisure might make it a point to try to listen to everything Milhaud ever wrote before passing judgment. The rest of us content ourselves with parroting the assessments of the gatekeepers, in the assumption that anything beyond the five or six pieces that always get played must be somehow inferior.

    Be that as it may, every once in a while, I’ll stumble across a perfectly delightful Milhaud creation. Some of these have languished in obscurity; others flitter around the periphery.

    I’ve always had a special fondness for “La cheminée du roi René” (“King René’s Chimney”), the multi-movement work for woodwind quintet that grew out of a film score. The anthology “Cavalcade d’amour” (1939), directed by Raymond Bernard, portrays three love stories from three different eras – the 15th century, 1830, and 1930. Milhaud opted for the former, a segment set at the court of René I. (Arthur Honegger and Roger Désormière provided music for the other two.) Milhaud felt a certain affinity with the subject, as he himself grew up in Aix-en-Provence, the location of René’s castle and court.

    The title alludes to a Provençal proverb that plays on words for “fireplace,” “chimney,” and “promenade,” as the king is said to have enjoyed his walks in the winter sun. The phrase “se chauffer à la cheminée du roi René,” then, means to warm oneself at “King René’s chimney” (i.e. by basking in the heat of the sun).

    Okay, so it’s a winter piece, maybe. But I don’t hear it that way. In fact, it strikes me as the perfect music for a lazy summer afternoon. A good example of how imprecise musical impressions can be and why the concept of program music – music intended to suggest extra-musical concepts and even objects – has always stirred controversy.

    The woodwind quintet was first performed in 1941 at Mills College in Oakland, CA, where Milhaud would go on to teach for nearly a quarter-century.

    I first encountered the piece as signature music for the Friday-night-at-11:00 radio program “Music through the Centuries,” hosted by George Diehl, on the late, lamented WFLN, for nearly 50 years Philadelphia’s classical music station. Diehl was on the faculty of LaSalle University. He wrote program notes for the Philadelphia Orchestra and, if I’m not mistaken, was once the station’s program director. Every week, he would use the hour as a platform to explore unusual and neglected repertoire. In fact, I credit him as a source of inspiration for my own weekly show, “The Lost Chord.”

    I suspect Diehl used the classic recording of “La cheminée du roi René” by the Philadelphia Woodwind Quintet. I also like this one, by the Athena Ensemble.

    Remembering Darius Milhaud on the 50th anniversary of his death. How many more riches are left to discover beyond the treasure room of King René?


    PHOTO: Milhaud on a typical morning, completing his third piece before breakfast

  • Midsummer Night Fairy Music on KWAX

    Midsummer Night Fairy Music on KWAX

    How now, spirit! Whither wander you?

    June 23rd is St. John’s Eve, otherwise known as Midsummer Night. In anticipation of the occasion, I invite you to begin your Saturday on “Sweetness and Light” with an hour of fairy music, all of it tying in, in one way or another, with Oberon, king of the fairies, Titania, his queen, and his feeewheeling servant, Puck. Oh yes, and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”

    We’ll enjoy selections by Carl Maria von Weber, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Walter Leigh, Henry Purcell, Montague Phillips, Erik Satie, and Ambroise Thomas.

    Rather audacious of me, I know, but one thing we will NOT hear is the famous incidental music by Felix Mendelssohn! But we hear that all the time, anyway.

    It will be as if Puck administered love-in-idleness nectar to your ears, when we’re lost in the musical enchantment of Midsummer Night, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Wild Wild West Talk Postponed

    Wild Wild West Talk Postponed

    It’s official. Roy and my scheduled conversation about “The Wild Wild West” (1965-69) has been deemed too incendiary for the infrastructure to bear. I hope you’ll join us next week, when hopefully the heat wave will have relaxed – and so will we – and we can get back to the important business of talking about Bondian supervillains and their thwarted plans to dominate the Old West on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner! See you in the comments section, when we livestream on Facebook, YouTube, etc., next Friday evening at 7:00 EDT.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

    In the meantime, watch more “The Wild Wild West” here (provided the power holds).

    https://pluto.tv/us/on-demand/series/63726e731ac5b40013b79c9f/season/1?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR1sh-rhQGL1G7UvWxm7jykOUzGTvIL-rwVFqyhGkLpsSnfOZtWoQpFg784_aem_MW9B-VBJD4NVbVMSaXrwWw

    Have a great weekend, and stay cool – like James West!

  • Happy Birthday Lalo Schifrin!

    Happy Birthday Lalo Schifrin!

    This week’s “Picture Perfect” will be full of music from movies focusing on indigenous tribes of Latin America. But somehow none of the scores will be by Argentinian-born Lalo Schifrin. Instead, there will be music by Heitor Villa-Lobos, Branislau Kaper, Elmer Bernstein, and Silvestre Revueltas. (Listen today at 8:00 EDT/5:00 PDT on kwax.uoregon.edu .) Schifrin was born in Buenos Aires on this date in 1932.

    He is the composer of over 100 film and television scores, including those for “Cool Hand Luke,” “Bullitt,” “Dirty Harry,” “Enter the Dragon,” “Mannix,” “Starsky and Hutch,” “Rush Hour,” and of course, “Mission: Impossible.”

    A highly-respected jazz pianist, he was discovered by Dizzy Gillespie, who hired him on spot. Schifrin composed for Dizzy an extended work for big band, “Gillespiana,” in 1958. He worked frequently with Clint Eastwood and scored George Lucas’ first feature, “THX-1138.” He was unceremoniously fired from “The Exorcist,” after director William Friedkin invited him into his office and hurled his recording of the score out the window into the parking lot. But that’s Friedkin for you.

    In all, Schifrin collected 22 Grammy nominations (winning five times), four Primetime Emmy nominations, and six Academy Award nominations. He received an honorary Oscar in 2018.

    Schifrin has been living in the United States since 1958 (he became a U.S. citizen in 1963), making a very healthy living, arranging and composing across a variety of genres, encompassing bossa nova, jazz, bebop, rock, and classical, all the while cashing those lucrative Hollywood paychecks – and collecting royalties for the continued use of his indelible theme in the “Mission: Impossible” film franchise.

    So no Lalo Schifrin on “Picture Perfect” today. (We did get to enjoy “Bullitt” a couple of weeks ago.) Nevertheless, we wish him a very happy birthday!


    “Concierto Caribeño” for flute and orchestra

    Lalo Schifrin and Dizzy Gillespie

    “Cool Hand Luke”

    Rejected score from “The Exorcist”

    The disturbing trailer

    Lalo receives his honorary Academy Award from Eastwood

    Schifrin’s greatest hit

    More about today’s “Picture Perfect”

    https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1328200414765685&set=a.883855802533484

  • Villa-Lobos’s Hollywood Rainforest

    Villa-Lobos’s Hollywood Rainforest

    When Heitor Villa-Lobos was contracted by M-G-M to write music for a big screen adaptation of W.H. Hudson’s novel “Green Mansions” (1959), expectations ran high on both sides. The Brazilian master began immediately, diving into the project with characteristic gusto. After all, he had been writing music inspired by the rainforest for his entire career.

    Unfortunately, he had very little affinity for the practicality of the filmmaking process, turning in musical impressions of scenes from the book. The studio was befuddled. Since Villa-Lobos was unable to adapt to the customary way of doing things, he was replaced by M-G-M house composer Branislau Kaper, who used the Villa-Lobos material as a springboard for his own dramatic conception. The result is part Villa-Lobos, part Kaper, and all M-G-M gloss.

    Villa-Lobos was a little embittered by his Hollywood experience. He promptly assembled a multi-movement symphonic poem, “Forest of the Amazon” (1958), some 75 minutes in length, which employed his rejected sketches. He made a recording of 45 minutes of the music in 1959, for which the soprano Bidu Sayão came out of retirement.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll hear selections from both versions of “Green Mansions,” as well as from the Mayan adventure “Kings of the Sun” (1963), by Elmer Bernstein, and “La noche de los Mayas” (“The Night of the Mayas,” 1939), by Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas.

    If you can’t beat the heat, join it! It’s an hour of tropical inspirations from films centered on the indigenous peoples of Latin America, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    PHOTO: The project that left Villa-Lobos feeling green around the gills

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