Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Neil Sedaka, Prodigal Son of the Piano

    Neil Sedaka, Prodigal Son of the Piano

    When Neil Sedaka died on Friday, I think everyone of a certain age, regardless of their musical proclivities, must have felt it. “Breaking Up Is Hard to Do,” “Laughter in the Rain,” and “Love Will Keep Us Together” have been a part of our lives since it was still okay to feel good about the world – in no small part thanks to Sedaka’s contributions to it.

    The man was pure music. I knew something of his classical music background from a piano concerto he composed, called “Manhattan Intermezzo,” a recording of which I’ve played on the air a few times, but I never realized the extent of his training and ambition until reading up on him after his death.

    Both Sedaka’s parents – his father a taxi driver of Lebanese Jewish descent and his mother an Ashkenazi Jew of Polish and Russian descent – played piano. When Neil revealed his own musical aptitude at school, his mother took a part-time job to raise money for a second-hand upright. Sedaka took to it like laughter in the rain. He successfully obtained a scholarship to the Juilliard School of Music prep division.

    However, he took an unexpected turn (secretly, so as not to break his mother’s heart) when he teamed with a neighbor, Howard Greenfield, three years his senior, a poet and an aspiring lyricist. Sedaka claims that the two churned out a song a day for the next three years. They pounded the pavement and knocked on doors until Connie Francis recorded “Stupid Cupid.” That was followed by “Where the Boys Are.” When Sedaka received a five-figure royalty check for “Calendar Girl,” he must have thought, hey, maybe this is the way to go, after all – for now anyway. At least it made his mother feel better.

    But after a few years, he was starting to get the itch to get back to the long-hair stuff and began to practice seriously, three and four hours a day, with the intent to compete in the Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow. You’ll remember Van Cliburn won the inaugural competition in 1958, earning himself a ticker-tape parade on Fifth Avenue.

    Sedaka, however, would be rejected by the Soviet authorities for his association with “American popular capitalistic music.”

    He retained a lifelong love of the classics. Later in his career, he put out a kitschy album of classical music melodies outfitted with his own lyrics.

    For Frédéric Chopin’s birthday, I wondered if there might be any videos or recordings of Sedaka playing Chopin. Lo and behold, here he is talking with Steve Allen and then doing just that on “I’ve Got a Secret.”


    “Classically Sedaka”

    https://archive.org/details/neil-sedaka-classically-sedaka

    “Manhattan Intermezzo”


    It seemed like Sedaka was around forever, but at the time of his death, he was only 86 years-old.

    R.I.P.

  • Perambulations with Walker on “The Lost Chord”

    Perambulations with Walker on “The Lost Chord”

    It’s crazy that the first time an African American composer would receive the Pulitzer Prize for Music was only in 1996. I remember when it happened. It was a pretty big deal. A special award had been made to Scott Joplin in 1976 – 59 years after Joplin’s death – and there have been some special citations and a number of Black honorees since. In more recent years, it’s not been unusual for composers of all races to be recognized. But it was George Walker who broke the glass ceiling.

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll celebrate this trailblazing artist with a program of four of his original works, including his Piano Sonata No. 2 (with the composer himself at the keyboard), the award-winning “Lilacs” (after poetry of Walt Whitman), “Address for Orchestra” (his first major orchestral work), and “Lyric for Strings” (his most famous music, in its original version for string quartet).

    By his own assessment, Walker was a composer more interested in building “elegant structures” than in “creating beauty.” Depending on one’s sensibility, it could be argued that he achieved both.

    In an interview given in 2012, he commented, “I’ve always thought in universal terms, not just what is Black or what is American, but simply what has quality.”

    I hope you’ll join me for “Perambulations with Walker” on “The Lost Chord,” now syndication on KWAX Classical 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 EST/5:00 PM PST

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST

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

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu

    ——–

    A fascinating interview with Walker by Frank J. Oteri, which, among other things, lends an added dimension to Walker’s most frequently performed music (the “Lyric”) and offers insights into his life and musical philosophy. Also, some great photos!

    https://nmbx.newmusicusa.org/george-walker-concise-and-precise/

  • Feline Affection and Frivolity on “Sweetness and Light”

    Feline Affection and Frivolity on “Sweetness and Light”

    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” the cat’s out of the bag. It’s an hour of felicitous feline music!

    On the 150th anniversary of the birth of American composer John Alden Carpenter, we’ll hear the ballet “Krazy Kat,” inspired by George Herriman’s cult comic strip. Carpenter characterized it as a “jazz pantomime”, but if there’s any jazz in it, it’s “white man” jazz of the 1920s (i.e. less jazz than “Rhapsody in Blue”). Believe it or not, I’ve actually seen this performed – twice! If memory serves, Sergei Prokofiev, in the U.S. for the debut of his opera “The Love for Three Oranges” and to perform his Piano Concerto No. 3 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, was present at the work’s premiere. I can’t find anything on the internet to back it up right now, so it looks like I’ll be sleuthing around my library.

    Carpenter’s music will headline a meow mix of melodies by Leroy Anderson, Ernst von Dohnányi, Richard Rodney Bennett, Gioachino Rossini, Nino Rota, Samuel Barber, and Zez Confrey.

    It will be programming you can sink your claws into, on “Sweetness and Light.” The music, like your host, will be the cat’s pajamas, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Cinematic Beauty Patches on “Picture Perfect”

    Cinematic Beauty Patches on “Picture Perfect”

    Beauty patches are back!

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” it’s an hour of lace and licentiousness, with music from movies set during the reign of Charles II.

    “Restoration” (1995) features quite the cast, with a pre-“Iron Man” Robert Downey, Jr. as a young doctor torn between duty and debauchery. He succumbs to the latter at the court of Charles, played by Sam Neill, before finding redemption as he battles the Great Plague and braves the Fire of London. The film also stars David Thewlis, Polly Walker, Meg Ryan, Ian McKellen, and Hugh Grant. The main title of James Newtown Howard’s score takes its impetus from Henry Purcell’s “The Fairy Queen.” And indeed there are baroque inflections throughout.

    George Sanders plays Charles in “The King’s Thief” (1955). Edmund Purdom is a highwayman who pilfers an incriminating book from David Niven. An aristocratic schemer, Niven will stop at nothing to get it back. The swashbuckling score is by Miklós Rózsa.

    I don’t recall Charles making an appearance in “The Draughtsman’s Contract” (1982), Peter Greenaway’s saucy, though strangely aloof, Restoration opus. However, there is plenty of licentiousness and an abundance of outlandish wigs. And, it being a Greenaway film, it is certainly strange in more ways than one. Michael Nyman’s score puts a minimalist spin on baroque sources.

    Finally, “Forever Amber” (1947) is based on a then-scandalous novel by Kathleen Winsor, about an ambitious young woman’s rise through the bedchambers of the Royal Court. The film was directed by Otto Preminger. Linda Darnell is Amber. Once again, George Sanders plays Charles, eight years before reprising the role for “The King’s Thief.” Cornel Wilde, Richard Greene, and Jessica Tandy are also in the cast. Philadelphia-born composer David Raksin, he of “Laura” fame, plays fast and loose with music of the era.

    Bwoo-hoo-hoo-hoo! It’s so naughty! Everyone, giggle into your handkerchiefs and wear ribbons on your shoes. We’ll be powdering our faces and going heavy on the rouge, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX Classical 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 EST/5:00 PM PST

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST

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

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu

  • Le Maître de Musique, José van Dam

    Le Maître de Musique, José van Dam

    I’ve been sick for a couple of weeks (nothing serious, just a lingering cold), so it’s been difficult for me to focus. Also, I had a deadline yesterday for a newspaper article. But now at last I am free and clear to remember José van Dam the way he deserves. The great Belgian bass-baritone died on February 17 at the age of 85.

    Van Dam was more than just a voice and left many memorable, versatile characterizations – Escamillo, Méphistophélès, The Flying Dutchman, Don Quichotte. He also sang Leporello, Don Giovanni’s servant, which must have been a stretch for him, as he always impressed me as having something of an aristocratic bearing. (Perhaps more fittingly, he also played the Don.) He certainly bore himself with confidence and dignity.

    It only seems fitting, then, that in 1998 he was made a baron by Belgium’s King Albert II – which is why you will now sometimes see him listed in references as Joseph, Baron Van Damme.

    I concede my impressions of the artist may have been colored somewhat by his performance in the film “Le Maître de musique,” or “The Music Teacher” (1988). In it, he plays an opera singer who retires abruptly at the height of his fame and retreats to a remote manor house, only to emerge from his life of brooding introspection to subject some extraordinarily gifted pupils-in-the-raw to some rigorous, tough-love training.

    “The Music Teacher” was nominated for Best Foreign Language Film at the 61st Academy Awards, but really, it’s just classical music junk food – nice costumes, beautiful settings, alluring cinematography, attractive young people, and lots of opera arias. And of course, Van Dam. During the climactic sing-off, the contestants wear concealing Amadeus-style masks and cloaks. ‘Tis a silly movie. Naturally I enjoyed it very much.

    I can’t believe my parents took me to see it (I was in college at the time), as it really was not their bag. My stepfather, in particular, has always been a shot-and-a-beer kind of guy, more at home watching football than listening to lieder. (My mom was really more my speed.) But my parents were always very indulgent, and I used to drag them to concerts whenever they visited me in Philadelphia. We saw “The Music Teacher” at the Paris Theater in New York, right around the corner from the Plaza Hotel.

    I’d always been interested to revisit the film, which was not easy to find, especially in the days before streaming. Finally, a couple of years ago, I stumbled across an import DVD at Princeton Record Exchange. While I still wouldn’t rank it as Best Foreign Language Film material, it was fun to see it again. Here’s a clip of Van Dam singing Schubert’s “An die Musik.”


    What do you know? Here it is complete – in French with Korean subtitles!


    Or if you prefer, Spanish


    The trailer


    From the lower class, he also sang Figaro and Wozzeck, and at 60, St. Francis, in the premiere of Messiaen’s “St. François d’Assise.” A versatile artist, then, a gifted singer and an actor who was able to convincingly inhabit quite a significant range of roles.

    R.I.P. José van Dam

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