Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Sawallisch’s Quiet Genius Remembered

    Sawallisch’s Quiet Genius Remembered

    Sometimes I get nostalgic for the days when classical music was very nerdy and very Teutonic.

    Here are four renowned conductors – Wolfgang Sawallisch, Fritz Rieger, Rudolf Kempe, and Rafael Kubelik (okay, so Kubelik was Czech) – rehearsing Bach at their respective keyboards, with members of Kubelik’s Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra. You get a sense that this is about as informal as these guys ever got! Anyway, it’s a pleasant diversion for a Sunday morning.

    Sawallisch, later music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, would have been 100 yesterday. I had my eye on the centenary for the past week, and had meant to post about it, but then I got busy and it just passed me by.

    My first exposure to Sawallisch’s musicmaking was in my 20s, during my days in community radio, when I stumbled across his recording of Smetana’s “Ma Vlast,” which I’m happy to say I’ve always retained an affection for. I’ve got it on CD now, but I kind of miss the original overheated cover, when it was issued on vinyl: with its harpist perched atop a jutting reef, assailed by crashing waves, against the backdrop of a diurnal supermoon; its diaphanous, sword-bearing fairy; and its naked women cavorting in a mountain lake, rendered with all the marvelous vulgarity of 1970s airbrushed van-art.

    I couldn’t believe it when a friend of mine broke the news over coffee one afternoon that Sawallisch was coming to Philadelphia. This was a more leisurely time, before we were all lashed to the internet.

    Sawallisch?!!

    That “Ma Vlast” album cover aside, his was a name I had come to associated with Old World integrity and classic (mono) recordings of Richard Strauss. Had he ever even been to the United States? How old was he? I guess at the time he must have been around 70.

    His tenure as music director in Philadelphia would prove to be a high-profile capstone to a very respectable, indeed enviable – if not exactly glamorous – career. There was always something akin to this Bach video about Sawallisch – earnest and all about the music. But there’s something kind of reassuring about returning it now, when seemingly everything is all about flash and dazzle.

    Sawallisch was music director in Philadelphia from 1993 to 2003. In addition to his directorship of L’Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, he also held posts with the Vienna Symphony (allegedly turning down offers from the Vienna Philharmonic and the Metropolitan Opera), the Hamburg Symphony Orchestra, and the Bavarian State Opera. He died in 2013, six months shy of his 90th birthday.

    Memorably, his abilities as a pianist came in handy during a ferocious snowstorm in 1994, when Philadelphia Orchestra musicians couldn’t make it in for a scheduled concert of scenes from Wagner’s “Tannhäuser” and “Die Walküre” (including all of Act I). He made the impromptu decision to throw open the doors of the Academy of Music and play the accompaniment himself at the keyboard, supporting Deborah Voigt, Heikki Suikola, and chorus, free for the enjoyment of anyone who cared to brave the elements.

    Say want you want about stolid Sawallisch, his generous spirit will not soon be forgotten. If only there were more of the spirit of that “Ma Vlast” van art in his musicmaking.


    Sawallisch conducts “Šárka” from “Má Vlast” in Japan in 1990

  • British Light Music for Late Summer Evenings on KWAX

    British Light Music for Late Summer Evenings on KWAX

    I think we can all use more light in our lives.

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” British Light Music is a genre I think perfectly suited to the month August, when it is still summer, but the light begins to take on a more lambent quality.

    Furthermore, the music is all very civilised [sic], conjuring a world of palm courts and spa orchestras, comfortable evenings spent around the radio, and carefree days by the sea.

    Take a nostalgic journey with an hour of vintage recordings of works by Albert Ketèlbey, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, Sir Edward Elgar, Richard Addinsell, George Scott-Wood, Haydn Wood, Billy Mayerl and Eric Coates.

    You provide the tea and cucumber sandwiches; I’ll supply the sweetness and light. I hope you’ll join me for “Distant Light,” on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Keep in mind, 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 EDT)

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

    Stream them here!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • RVW Symphony No 9 Premiere 65 Years On

    RVW Symphony No 9 Premiere 65 Years On

    Ralph Vaughan Williams died 65 years ago today. Here’s the world premiere recording of his Symphony No. 9 of 1956-57. Critics of the day were largely dismissive of the work, finding it enigmatic, and puzzled by the composer’s decision to include among his orchestration three saxophones and a flügelhorn. Horrors!

    In recent decades, it seems the very characteristics that confounded the gatekeepers – the symphony’s visionary, violent, elusive, and ambiguous nature – are some of the very qualities for which it is now praised. This is not the kind of valedictory anyone was expecting from the octogenarian so famous for the “Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis” and “The Lark Ascending.”

    RVW had been scheduled to attend the recording session, which, in the event, took place only hours after his passing, on August 26, 1958. The performance is prefaced by a brief, spoken introduction by his great champion, the conductor Sir Adrian Boult.

    .youtube.com/watch?v=gpiXjrxRrlY&t

  • Company Layoffs Friday News Dump

    I received this info as a press release at 4:59 this afternoon. A classic illustration of “Friday news dump.” My sympathy to anyone affected by the latest round of cuts.

  • Picaresque Novels on Film Summer’s Last Adventure

    Picaresque Novels on Film Summer’s Last Adventure

    When I think back on the summers of my youth, I remember my elation at three months of illusory freedom – sucking the marrow out of life for the first half of the season or so; then getting drawn into family visits and vacations and losing track of friends; and finally, with the new school year looming, that last desperate frenzy to LIVE SUMMER!

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” with the season winding down, it’s one last grasp for adventure. Revel in some freewheeling lack of judgment, with an hour of films based on picaresque novels.

    Novels, you say? As in literature?

    And picaresque? Ain’t that one of them 20-dollar words???

    I suppose, in its way, it is also a foretaste of the classroom. But trust me, there will be enough impulsive behavior by rapscallions and scapegraces to keep things interesting.

    In case you weren’t an English major, picaresque novels are frequently characterized by rogues and anti-heroes as protagonists, episodic, wayward structure, and not infrequently lowly humor.

    We’ll hear music from “The Reivers,” after William Faulkner’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, a coming-of-age story about a boy swept into automobile theft and illicit horseracing in the American south. Mark Rydell directed the 1969 film, which starred Steve McQueen as the rakish Boon Hogganbeck and featured narration by Burgess Meredith. John Williams wrote the breezy Americana score.

    Mark Twain’s “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” is frequently characterized as an American picaresque. It’s certainly one of the funniest of “serious” books. A middling film adaptation was made in 1960, directed by Michael Curtiz, with Tony Randall given top billing, shifting the focus of the story to the con artistry of the King and the Duke. It features an evocative score by Jerome Moross.

    If Hervey Allen’s “Anthony Adverse” had any humor to begin with, it was definitely lost in translation. (Too bad the novel was written in English.) However, the 1936 screen adaptation certainly does sprawl. One could say it’s picaresque in the worst way. It just doesn’t go anywhere. It does, however, feature a top-notch cast (Frederic March, Olivia De Havilland, Claude Rains, etc.) and an Academy Award-winning score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold.

    While the modern picaresque novel had its roots in the Renaissance, the genre really seemed to hit its stride in the 18th century, with comic novelists like Henry Fielding. Fielding’s “Tom Jones,” perhaps the quintessential picaresque, was made into a film in 1963. It went on to win Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director (Tony Richardson), Best Adapted Screenplay (John Osborne) and Best Original Score (John Addison). Addison’s music suits Richardson’s quirky virtuosity like an off-kilter powdered wig.

    Get ready to wear some holes into your new school clothes. We’re up to no good, with an hour of picaresque adventures, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Keep in mind, 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 EDT)

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

    Stream them here!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (93) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (133) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (193) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (103) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (148) 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