Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Fairy Tale Film Scores Childhood Magic

    Fairy Tale Film Scores Childhood Magic

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll play on the inherent nostalgia of the holidays by recalling the magic of childhood, by way of our collective and personal interactions with the world of fairy tales.

    George Pal’s “The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm” (1962) was filmed in Cinerama and features the producer-director’s trademark stop motion effects. Its all-star cast includes Laurence Harvey, Claire Bloom, Barbara Eden, Russ Tamblyn, and Buddy Hackett. The narrative incorporates a number of familiar Grimm tales, while dealing with the brothers’ real-life struggles.*

    The music is by Leigh Harline. Harline was an integral part of the Disney team that scored an earlier fairy tale adaptation, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” He would win two Academy Awards for his work on “Pinocchio,” including one for Best Original Song, for “When You Wish Upon a Star.”

    “The Company of Wolves” (1984), one of Neil Jordan’s earlier films, explores the psychological underpinnings of the tale of “Little Red Riding Hood,” here presented as an allegory of adolescence and the loss of innocence. Angela Carter co-wrote the screenplay, based on a selection of her original short stories. The film features Angela Lansbury, any number of werewolves, and Terence Stamp as the Devil. The music is by George Fenton.

    With the advent of computer animation, a snarkier, post-modern take on the fairy tale predominates, most notably with the “Shrek” series, beginning in 2001. The “Shrek” films were so successful, they led to a spin-off, centered on the character of “Puss in Boots” (2011).

    Voiced by Antonio Banderas, Puss provides ample opportunity to vamp on the actor’s swashbuckler image, especially as portrayed in “The Mask of Zorro.” Likewise, the composer, Henry Jackman, chooses to rib James Horners’ “Zorro” score.

    Finally, we’ll hear selections from perhaps the finest fairy tale ever committed to film, Jean Cocteau’s “La Belle et la Bête” – “Beauty and the Beast” (1946). Moody, atmospheric, dreamy, clever, hypnotic, funny, and romantic, and sporting production design that looks like something Gustav Doré might have dreamed up while poisoning himself on Dutch Masters cigars, Cocteau’s masterpiece stars Jean Marais and Josette Day.

    The alternately mysterious and majestic score is by Georges Auric. Cocteau, you’ll recall, was the one-man publicity machine that propelled Auric and his composer-colleagues, Francis Poulenc, Darius Milhaud, Arthur Honegger, Germaine Tailleferre, and Louis Durey, to fame in Paris, circa 1920, dubbing them “Les Six.”

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of once-upon-a-time and happily-ever-after, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


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

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

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

    Stream them here!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    *PLEASE NOTE: By coincidence, Roy and I will also be discussing “The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner, to be livestreamed on Facebook, YouTube, etc., THIS WEEK AT A SPECIAL TIME, SUNDAY EVENING AT 7:00 EST!

  • Thanksgiving Phone Fail Black Friday Upgrade

    Thanksgiving Phone Fail Black Friday Upgrade

    First thing’s first: Happy Thanksgiving!

    Second thing’s second: If anyone tries to call me today, I am phoneless!

    I dropped my flip last night, and the two halves are now wholly separated. It will ring, but if I press the answer button, I can’t hear anything. Don’t know if you’d be able to hear me. So I am phone-free for Thanksgiving.

    Guess who might have to make the much-delayed migration to smartphone for Black Friday.

    You might say my turkey is cooked. Give thanks if you are comfortable living in the 21st century.

  • St Cecilia Music Playlist for Thanksgiving

    St Cecilia Music Playlist for Thanksgiving

    Alas, it’s too late for me at this point to come up with a fresh acknowledgment of St. Cecilia on her feast day, as the holiday may as well have begun. However, you can still celebrate the patron saint of music as you get started on your Thanksgiving preparations with this evergreen playlist of Cecilia inspirations. All hail!

    William Boyce, “Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day” (overture also published as Boyce’s Symphony No. 5)

    Benjamin Britten, “Hymn to St. Cecilia” (Britten was born on this date)

    Ernest Chausson, “La légende de Sainte Cécile”

    Norman Dello Joio, “To Saint Cecilia”

    Gerald Finzi, “For St. Cecilia”

    Charles Gounod, “St. Cecilia Mass”

    George Frideric Handel, “Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day”

    Franz Joseph Haydn, “Missa Sanctae Caecilia”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhA7LEd56ts

    Herbert Howells, “A Hymn for St. Cecilia” (text by Ursula Vaughan Williams)

    Franz Liszt, “Hymn to St. Cecilia”

    Arvo Pärt, “Cecilia, vergine romana”

    Henry Purcell, “Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day (Hail! Bright Cecilia)”

    Joaquin Rodrigo, “El Album de Cecilia” (written for the composer’s daughter; Rodrigo was born on this date)

    Alessandro Scarlatti, “St. Cecilia Mass”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCExvBbVQBk&t

  • Colette Maze RIP Centenarian Pianist Dies at 109

    Colette Maze RIP Centenarian Pianist Dies at 109

    If you’re a classical music nut, the Internet Algorithm Overlords may have introduced you to Colette Maze. Maze amazed with her videos of centenarian keyboard dexterity and grace as likely the oldest pianist ever to record. Maze died this week at the age of 109. Her last record was released earlier this year.

    In 1929, at the age of 15, she entered the École normale de musique de Paris to study with Alfred Cortot and Nadia Boulanger. Alfred Cortot! This woman was living history. She continued playing daily right up to the very end, the better to maintain her memory. An amazing feat.

    The longest-lived pianist I had previously been aware of was one-time Philadelphian Leo Ornstein (founder of the now-defunct Ornstein School of Music). Ornstein, who also gained notoriety as an avant-garde composer, died in 2002 at the age of 106. I have no idea if he was still playing up to that time. He certainly was not recording.

    In 2017, I mused about Ornstein’s unlikely resurrection as a video game character. You can read the post here:

    https://www.facebook.com/search/top?q=classic%20ross%20amico%20ornstein

    Maze plays Debussy at 108

    A four-minute tribute from her 106th year

    A life dedicated to beauty can never be long enough. R.I.P.

  • Malcolm Williamson Outsider Royal

    Malcolm Williamson Outsider Royal

    How do you like that? In 1970-71, Malcolm Williamson was composer-in-residence at Westminster Choir College in Princeton, NJ.

    In 1975, Williamson would succeed Sir Arthur Bliss as Master of the Queen’s Music, a position he held until his death in 2003. Today is his birthday anniversary.

    Williamson, born in Sydney, Australia, in 1931, was the first non-Briton to be appointed Master. From the start, the decision was not without controversy. Sir William Walton quipped that they had given the job to the wrong Malcolm. He was implying that Malcolm Arnold would have been a better choice – a bold statement, since Arnold was prone to alcoholism, promiscuity, manic-depression, and possible bi-polar disorder. He once shot himself in the foot to get out of war service and attempted suicide several times. Still, he did manage to churn out much delightful music-to-order, often lickety-split, and in an immediately accessible idiom. So who knows, maybe Arnold would have been a good choice.

    Williamson was always an establishment outlier. Though he arrived in England in his late teens, his antipodean origins led to sotto voce grumblings that his Royal appointment was but a utilitarian one, “cementing the cracks in the Commonwealth,” as Walton put it.

    Whether or not a sense of alienation contributed to a kind of paralysis in the face of overwhelming pressure, Williamson developed an unfortunate reputation of being very bad with deadlines. Most particularly, he failed to complete a symphony in time for the Queen’s Golden Jubilee in 1977. His ambitious “Mass for Christ the King,” also intended for the occasion, was also delivered late. Significantly, he was the first Master of the Queen’s (or King’s) Music in over a century not to be knighted.

    Following the Jubilee debacle, his output slowed, though he was seldom unproductive. In all, he wrote seven completed symphonies, concertos for piano, violin, organ, harp, and saxophone, and numerous other orchestral, choral, chamber, and instrumental works.

    Williamson suffered from ill health in his later years. He too may have turned to the bottle as a means to numb himself against stress and depression. However, those close to him assert that, toward the end of his life, he never drank, but rather struggled with aphasia, the effect of a series of strokes.

    Be that as it may, following his death in 2003, the parameters of the Royal appointment were revised. The position is no longer one for life, but rather a fixed, ten-year term.

    What’s puzzling is that, for someone who had a reputation for being unable to meet deadlines, Williamson was able to write a fair amount of music for the cinema. The films were admittedly of varying quality. It’s always amusing to find his name in the opening credits of Hammer horror movies. But it proves that he could write to order, and he could write very quickly, perhaps when he wasn’t under the microscope.

    Williamson was not the only future Master of the Queen’s Music to spend time in Princeton, by the way. His eventual successor, Peter Maxwell Davies, who served as Master from 2004 to 2014, attended Princeton University as a Harkness Fellow, studying under Roger Sessions and Earl Kim, and received his PhD here in 1967. Max would be the first to hold the office under the new guidelines. He was succeeded in 2015 by Judith Weir, the first woman to hold the post (and yes, she is still referred to as “Master”).

    Happy birthday, Malcolm Williamson!


    Williamson plays his attractive Piano Concerto No. 2

    Rare recording of his Symphony No. 6

    “Mass of the Feast of Christ the King”

    Ballet “The Display” (inspired by Robert Helpmann’s dream of a naked Katherine Hepburn!)

    “With Proud Thanksgiving”

    Two Christmas Hymns

    “Vision of Christ-Phoenix” for Coventry Cathedral (organ)

    “Autumn Idyll”

    Lento for Strings

    Theme music for “The Brides of Dracula”

    “The Horror of Frankenstein”

    “Nothing But the Night,” starring Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing

    Spoken observations on Pär Lagerkvist, Nobel prize winning author of “Barabbas” and “The Dwarf”

    “Ochre” from Vic Lewis’ album “Colours”

    Malcolm Williamson in conversation with Bruce Duffie
    http://www.kcstudio.com/williamson2.html

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (93) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (124) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (188) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (139) Opera (202) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) 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