Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Yunchan Lim Prodigy Turns 20!

    Yunchan Lim Prodigy Turns 20!

    Yunchan Lim is 20 today. 20! Two years ago, Lim became the youngest person ever to win the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, at the age of 18. Most recent information indicates that he is currently a student at the New England Conservatory of Music, but he’s already playing recitals at Carnegie Hall and appearing as soloist with the world’s great orchestras. He’s not old enough to legally take a drink, but he can play Liszt’s “Transcendental Etudes” like nobody else.

    His Cliburn final round performance of the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 has been viewed on YouTube over 14 million times.

    But nobody cares about classical music, right?

    Happy birthday, Yunchan Lim!

  • Welcome Spring Northern Hemisphere Vernal Equinox

    Welcome Spring Northern Hemisphere Vernal Equinox

    Enjoy these last few hours of winter. Spring arrives in the Northern Hemisphere at 11:06 PM EDT. With any luck, I’ll be asleep by then, or reading the last 30 pages of “The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.”

    March 19 seem a little early for spring? It’s not just because the Groundhog proclaims it so.

    https://www.almanac.com/content/first-day-spring-vernal-equinox

    For me, Frank Bridge’s “Enter Spring” (1926) most successfully encapsulates the many moods of mercurial March.

  • Byron Janis Piano Legend Dies at 95

    Byron Janis Piano Legend Dies at 95

    Yesterday, though I labored heroically against the effects of Guinness and corned beef and cabbage, before I knew it, it was time to watch “The Quiet Man.” And as a result, I’m now the last person on the internet to report on the death of Byron Janis.

    Janis, one-time Horowitz pupil, dynamo of the keyboard, who played through excruciating pain due to arthritis, forced to retire because of the effects of surgery, only to rise again, died on Thursday at the age of 95.

    Van Cliburn received all the glory – and a ticker tape parade on Broadway – for his surprise victory at the first Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition in Moscow in 1958, but Janis was just as important, as a cultural ambassador to the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War. His first recital there took place just after the Soviets had shot down the U-2 spy plane and Gary Powers was imprisoned. According to Janis, the hostility in the hall was palpable with no applause and the audience chanting, “U-2! U-2! U-2!” But by intermission, they were on their feet applauding and afterwards, people approached the stage with tears in their eyes. “… What I did was important because it showed how music could change people’s feelings,” Janis observed in a 2017 interview with Vantage Music.

    Cliburn’s shadow extended to the recording studio, in terms of which concertos his rivals were permitted to record and when. Of course, this was still in the early days of stereo, with every pianist eager to test their mettle against the standard repertoire, and the major labels all vying for a place of honor on America’s hi-fi systems.

    What’s astonishing is how many truly spectacular American pianists emerged at the time: off the top of my head, in addition to Cliburn and Janis, there were Leon Fleisher, Gary Graffman, John Browning, Eugene Istomin, Julius Katchen, Abbey Simon, Leonard Pennario. And that’s to say nothing of the international competition. A veritable embarrassment of virtuoso riches!

    In his prime, Janis possessed the jaw-dropping technique of an idiosyncratic fire-eater. But this was harnessed to an unerring sense of lyricism and line. His recordings from the 1950s and ‘60s, especially, are thrilling in their spontaneity.

    “A lot of young pianists work about eight hours a day on their technique, but they lose their sense of music – their musicality disappears because they are so focused on playing the right notes,” Janis observed, in that same interview with Vantage Music. “Musically, if it’s always the same, it’s not ‘perfect.’ If it isn’t different every time, you aren’t human, and these composers were very human. Chopin changed things all the time. The danger is, with too much freedom, people begin to do anything with it, good or bad. But ‘perfection’ is a dead state.”

    His struggles with arthritis and its treatment sent him into retirement and depression for a few years, but he clawed his way back to the concert stage to mark the 50th anniversary of his debut at Carnegie Hall in 1998.

    In 1967, Janis identified some lost Chopin manuscripts. And he did so again, in 1973 – the same pieces, in different versions, on two separate continents!

    Interestingly, he was also a songwriter who wooed Gary Cooper’s daughter.

    At whatever stage of his career, Janis demonstrated, time and again, a remarkable intuition when it came to teasing notes on a page into sustained passages of brilliance and even grandeur. His performances, as his life, defied many obstacles to reveal unanticipated vistas.

    A thrilling pianist and a great artist. R.I.P.


    Liszt, Piano Concerto No. 1

    Rachmaninoff, Piano Concerto No. 3

    Live video of him playing the third movement

    Prokofiev, Piano Concerto No. 3 (live video)

    Recorded encores

    Prokofiev’s “Toccata” on the “Ed Sullivan Show”

    Obituary in the New York Times

    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/17/arts/music/byron-janis-dead.html

  • Quiet Man to Castle Gillian The Irish Literary Journey

    Quiet Man to Castle Gillian The Irish Literary Journey

    Last year on St. Patrick’s Day, I posted some thoughts on John Ford’s perennial classic, “The Quiet Man” (1952), and Maurice Walsh’s book, “Green Rushes” (1935), the collection of stories – really a novel, as all the stories are interconnected – that inspired it. I finally got around to reading it in a reissue, as “The Quiet Man and Other Stories,” after having had it in my library for 30 years.

    Toward the end of the post, I mentioned a forthcoming musical, based on another Walsh novel, “Castle Gillian” (1948). (An earlier musical based on “The Quiet Man,” “Donnybrook,” tanked in 1960.) Well, it appears “Castle Gillian” is upon us, and it looks like one freaky, virtual reality uncanny valley. To borrow from the title of yet another one of Walsh’s books, trouble in the glen, indeed!

    Home

    More about it here

    https://fivars.net/spotlight/fivars-2023-spotlight-on-castle-gillian-an-irish-tale/

    More still

    https://www.kazanandpurcell.com/castle-gillian/

    My reflections on Maurice Walsh and “The Quiet Man”

    An interview with Maurice Walsh

    https://www.rte.ie/archives/2022/1030/1330613-writer-maurice-walsh/

  • Stephen Dodgson Centenary Broadcast

    Stephen Dodgson Centenary Broadcast

    The English composer Stephen Dodgson was born on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, 1924. At the time I spoke with him, via telephone, in 2012, he was the closest living relative to share the surname Dodgson with his famous forebear, Charles Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll.

    At 88, he was in good physical health, it seemed, but sadly he was developing serious problems with his memory. His wife, harpsichordist Jane Clark, informed me ruefully after our conversation that he had good days and bad, and that he had been perfectly lucid the day before. Be that as it may, he was clearly an articulate and charming man, who repeatedly invited me to dinner at his house outside of London. Unfortunately, I was calling from the United States, and at the end of 15 or 20 minutes, I still had nothing I could use on my radio show, “The Lost Chord.”

    Dodgson wasn’t making a lot of sense that afternoon, but when it came to his music, it was like a cloud lifted. He may not have been able to stay on topic long enough to give me any useful audio, but he had no trouble at all naming some of his favorite pieces.

    After the program aired, in October of 2012, I was told by his wife that the two were able to listen to the webcast and that it brought Stephen a lot of pleasure to hear it. I was sorry to learn that he died six months later, nearly a month after his 89th birthday.

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” I will be rebroadcasting that program, on the eve of what would have been Dodgson’s 100th birthday.

    The composer was perhaps best known for his guitar music, beginning with a commission from Julian Bream in 1952. The show will open and close with selections from “Watersmeet,” for solo guitar and guitar ensemble, from 2002, written for John Williams. (The guitarist was to have been the Dodgsons’ dinner guest on the night that we spoke.)

    Next, flutist Robert Stallman, who lived in Philadelphia for many years (and with whom I enjoyed many ebullient lunches), will perform Dodgson’s Flute Quintet, composed in 2003.

    Then we’ll hear the cantata “The Last of the Leaves,” from 1975, on texts of Austin Dobson, Ernest Rhys, G.K. Chesterton, and Harold Monro, with bass Michael George and clarinetist John Bradbury. This was an absolute favorite of the composer and his wife.

    Finally, Dodgson wrote no symphonies, but he wrote eight large-scale orchestral movements, which he called “Essays.” He selected the fifth of those for inclusion in the program. The Essay No. 5 was composed in 1985.

    Stephen Dodgson was a gentleman in all regards. He was also an educator (beginning at the Royal College of Music in 1947) and a radio host (with the BBC). I am sorry I wasn’t able to take him up on his invitation for dinner, but it was a pleasure at least to make contact with him by telephone, since I genuinely admire his music.

    I hope you’ll join me today for “Dodgson’s Choice,” a special encore broadcast of “The Lost Chord,” for the centenary of his birth, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station on the University of Oregon.


    Remember, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for those of you listening in the East. Here are the respective air-times for all three of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday on KWAX at 5:00 PM PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EASTERN)

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday on KWAX at 8:00 AM PACIFIC TIME (11:00 AM EASTERN)

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday on KWAX at 4:00 PM PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EASTERN)

    Stream all three, at the times indicated, by following the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    ON A RELATED NOTE: The Stephen Dodgson Charitable Trust has been quite active in promoting his music. You can learn more at their Facebook page, Stephen Dodgson – composer, or at stephendodgson.com.

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