Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Comedy Film Scores Picture Perfect

    Comedy Film Scores Picture Perfect

    April fools! No, not the holiday (such that it is); I’m talking about the performers.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll have musical selections from big screen comedies. For whatever reason, it’s seldom that we get a chance to sample from comedy scores. The emphasis is usually on drama or action. The more I think about it, it seems very few scores for comedies tend to achieve classic status – proportionately speaking, of course.

    Henry Mancini never seemed to have a problem with that, thanks in no small part to his long association with director Blake Edwards. We’ll hear music from my three favorite installments in “The Pink Panther” series – the original (1963), “A Shot in the Dark” (1964), and “The Pink Panther Strikes Again” (1976). That’s right, the one in which Chief Inspector Dreyfus goes stark raving mad and determines to destroy the world with a doomsday ray, as the franchise hilariously jumps the shark.

    Imagine how difficult it must be to write music for comedy, without it coming across as sounding like cartoon music. Which isn’t always necessarily a bad thing. “Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure” (1985) marked the feature debut of director Tim Burton. It was Burton’s first teaming with composer Danny Elfman, who would become a regular collaborator. Elfman is obviously a big fan of Nino Rota.

    If you ever wanted to see Alastair Sim in drag, then I’ve got the film for you. Sim, you’ll recall, played Ebenezer Scrooge in the classic 1951 film version of “A Christmas Carol.” A few years later, he appeared in “The Belles of St. Trinian’s” (1954) in two roles – as the headmistress of a girl’s school and her criminal brother. None other than Malcolm Arnold provided the music hall-style score.

    “It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World” (1963) is a relic from the “more is more” school of comedy, with Milton Berle, Sid Caesar, Ethel Merman, Mickey Rooney, Phil Silvers, Terry-Thomas, Jonathan Winters, Jimmy Durante, and a tired Spencer Tracy. Ernest Gold’s approach to the music is defined by a manic waltz.

    Before John Williams became a household name, with music for blockbusters like “Jaws” and “Star Wars,” he was known as Johnny Williams, when writing for television shows like “Lost and Space” and “Gilligan’s Island,” and for a string of mostly forgettable movie comedies.

    “A Guide for the Married Man” (1967) starred Walter Matthau and Robert Morse. Interestingly, the film was directed by Gene Kelly, and a number of cast members from “It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World” have cameos. (It seems you couldn’t make a film of this kind without Terry-Thomas.) Looking back on the score is fascinating, in that there are already hints of the Williams we know in the thick of very period-specific music.

    Elmer Bernstein, who wrote music for such classics as “The Ten Commandments,” “The Magnificent Seven” and “To Kill a Mockingbird,” received a second wind in the late ‘70s, when he was offered the chance to score “National Lampoon’s Animal House,” produced by Ivan Reitman and directed by John Landis. This led to opportunities to work on “The Blues Brothers” and “Ghostbusters,” among others. We’ll conclude with some of Bernstein’s music for the Reitman service comedy, “Stripes,” which teamed Bill Murray and Harold Ramis. The key to Bernstein’s big success as a comedy composer during the era is that, musically, he mostly played it straight.

    We’ll be unscrewing the tops on all the salt shakers and swapping out the hard-boiled eggs, as we spring into April with a smile on our face, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!


    Does your dog bite?

  • Rachmaninoff at 150 Anniversary Celebration

    Rachmaninoff at 150 Anniversary Celebration

    Sergei Rachmaninoff may have been born on April 1, but he was nobody’s fool. Frequently derided by critics, he knew just what the public wanted – good tunes and heart-on-the-sleeve emotion! His Piano Concertos Nos. 2 & 3, the “Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini,” the Symphony No. 2, the “Vocalise,” and more solo piano works than I care to list, including the Prelude in C-sharp minor – so ubiquitous the composer himself came to hate it – have never been out of the active repertoire.

    Rachmaninoff has been my focus on “The Lost Chord” several times over the years – I devoted a show to his friendship with Nikolai Medtner and another to his achievements as a recitalist – but the program most easily referenced is the one that aired this past Sunday on WWFM – The Classical Network.

    For Rachmaninoff’s 150th birthday, enjoy an hour of vintage recordings of his music, including one of the composer playing his own “Symphonic Dances,” on the piano of Eugene Ormandy, in 1940. Also, Ormandy introduces – and conducts – the Philadelphia Orchestra in a memorial performance of “Isle of the Dead,” given only days after Rachmaninoff’s death in 1943. The hour concludes with a literal party piece, as Rachmaninoff tosses off the folk song “Bublichki,” or “Bagels,” in 1942.

    The recordings are taken from a 3-CD boxed set on the Marston Records label. Get a piece of the Rach! Enjoy the webcast by following the link and clicking on “listen.”

    https://www.wwfm.org/show/the-lost-chord-with-ross-amico/2023-03-24/the-lost-chord-march-26-rach-of-ages

    Happy 150, Sergei Rachmaninoff!

  • Liszt vs. Thalberg Piano Duel in Paris

    Liszt vs. Thalberg Piano Duel in Paris

    Paris of the 1830s was swarming with superstar pianists, who drifted from recital to salon with the grace and mystique of cinematic gunslingers. On this date in 1837, the two most mythologized virtuosi of the day, Franz Liszt and Sigismond Thalberg, were brought together at the home of Princess Cristina Belgiojoso-Trivulzio, an Italian patriot living in exile, to prove once and for all who was the King of the Keys.

    The duel would prove to be a clash of styles and temperaments. In contrast to Liszt’s humble beginnings and acquired polish, Thalberg was an aristocrat by association, having been taking under the wing of a wealthy patroness very early on. A large part of his allure was in his unruffled appearance. He was handsome, educated, genteel. At the piano, he remained absolutely placid, sitting as still as possible while performing the most incredible, acrobatic feats.

    One of his much remarked upon, crowd-pleasing effects was his ability to simulate the sound of three hands, which he was able to accomplish by picking out a melody with his thumbs and using the rest of his fluttering digitals to ornament with brilliant arpeggios and arabesques. Matters of showmanship aside, his legato was of such beauty that even Liszt commented, “Thalberg is the only artist who can play the violin on the piano.”

    Liszt, by contrast, was a fire-eater, who would literally destroy pianos on the stage of the Paris Opera before an audience of 3000. His playing had ladies clawing at one another to retrieve a glove or a cigar calculatedly left behind after a concert.

    Partisans and newspaper critics long speculated on who was the greater pianist. The flame of animosity was fanned by rival journalists, as Hector Berlioz (who embraced Liszt) and critic and musicologist Francois-Joseph Fétis (who championed Thalberg) played out their latest grudge match, polarizing music-lovers into two camps.

    As the debate grew in intensity, it seemed that whenever one was in town, the other was on tour or vacationing. It all finally came to a head on the morning of March 31, 1837, at Belgiojoso-Trivulzio’s salon, in a war of the gargantuas engineered for charity. March definitely went out like a lion that year, as two titans of the keyboard faced off in the ultimate piano showdown.

    The verdict was diplomatic: the princess declared Thalberg the finest pianist in the world; Liszt, she proclaimed, the ONLY pianist.

    Popular tradition holds that Liszt mopped the floor with Thalberg, but apparently this wasn’t entirely the case. Nor was there any apparent animosity between the two men, who were cordial and even dined together several times after their legendary face-off. The two would collaborate, along with Chopin and three others, on one of Belgiojoso’s other schemes, the keyboard crazy quilt “Hexameron,” which Liszt titled, orchestrated, and toured with. Proceeds generated from both the duel and the “Hexameron” project went to the benefit of Italian refugees.

    An ironic epilogue to this story: in 2017, Thalberg’s final resting place, in Naples, was desecrated, his mummified corpse tossed callously into the corner of a vault. You can wade through a dizzying array of fonts and italics to learn more here:

    https://unravelingmusicalmyths.blogspot.com/2017/03/a-neapolitan-nightmare-virtuoso-pianist.html?fbclid=IwAR3YTjyhNnigLp-ZnnChsF_enDOBsc-6aW0BjI8q6SpiO6DjvgifZmrLsWA

    On a related note, as today is also the birthday of Franz Joseph Haydn, it is perhaps worth noting, as I have on this page several times in the past, that for 150 years Haydn had no head.

    Thalberg transcribed a chorus from Haydn’s “The Seasons” as part of his collection “L’art du chant appliqué au piano” (“The Art of Singing Applied on Piano”), Op. 70. You can listen to the complete set of primarily operatic transcriptions if you want to, but I’ve cued the link to jump right to the relevant movement.

    For Liszt’s part, the pianist Alfred Brendel drew a parallel with Haydn in his introduction to a certain Liszt biography:

    “Arguably, Liszt and Haydn are the most frequently misunderstood among major composers; their biographers afford little food for pity.… In old age, Haydn reigned over the musical world as its undisputed leading light. For this, the nineteenth century punished him – as it punished Liszt for his undisputed supremacy as a performer.… Not until our century did a greater number of composers – from Richard Strauss, Ravel, and Busoni to Schoenberg, Bartók, and Boulez – appreciate Liszt by taking him seriously.”


    “Hexameron,” six variations on a theme from Bellini’s “I puritani.” Five well-known composer-pianists – Frédéric Chopin, Carl Czerny, Henri Herz, Johann Peter Pixis and Sigismond Thalberg – each contributed a variation. Liszt composed the introduction, second variation, interludes, and finale, and integrated the piece into an artistic unity.

  • Bob Perkins WRTI Legend to Podcast

    After over a quarter century on the WRTI airwaves, BP is taking his GM to the PC.

    Anyone who listens to jazz on the radio in Philadelphia is familiar with broadcast legend Bob Perkins’ shorthand. “BP with the GM” is “Bob Perkins with the Good Music,” naturally.

    Perkins eased into semi-retirement last year, going from full-time hosting on WRTI to anchoring its “Sunday Jazz Brunch.”

    The “PC” is my own unauthorized addition to Perkins’ lingo. It stands for podcast. At 89, Perkins will be taking the leap into producing fresh digital audio content. You can learn more about it at the link.

    During my time at WRTI, we crossed paths occasionally, if I happened to be filling in on an afternoon classical shift. Knowing his sly sense of humor, I offered once, “It’s not every day that British Petroleum meets American Oil Company” – a play on BP and Amico (Amoco).

    I wish Bob the best. With a lifetime of experience in jazz and the media, the man himself is living history. And of course he’s always had impeccable taste. Whether it’s Yusef Lateef’s “Love Theme from Spartacus” or Dakota Staton’s “The Late, Late Show,” I’ve always enjoyed his GM.

    https://www.wrti.org/wrti-spotlight/2023-03-29/as-bob-perkins-signs-off-at-wrti-a-broadcasting-legend-looks-ahead?fbclid=IwAR0GnvcZ-hHUhffcgm0ZI5RlZOd47j3KjAC9zKjMAvxLTkfwt5yP7c6Q2XA

  • Happy 80th Birthday Vangelis! Blade Runner & Chariots

    Happy 80th Birthday Vangelis! Blade Runner & Chariots

    On February 11, I posted about the 80th birthday of Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou. You know him better as Vangelis.

    But it turns out I was misinformed. TODAY is the actual anniversary of Vangelis’ birth. You know, when he sprang fully-formed from the head of Zeus.

    So you’ll forgive me, I hope, if I repeat the post, with some minor alterations. It’s not every day that we get to celebrate four-score Vangelis. At least I picked a new photo!

    Vangelis, of course, achieved world fame with his ubiquitous music for “Chariots of Fire” in 1981. The score not only earned him an Academy Award, but its main theme shot to number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Chart. For anyone who was alive at the time and in possession of a radio, it was inescapable, and as a result much-parodied.

    In 1982, he composed the score for another film with legs, Ridley Scott’s “Blade Runner.” Vangelis’ dreamy electronics perfectly complemented the dystopian visuals by Douglas Trumbull, a worn-out, high-tech future, after concept art of Syd Mead.

    Earlier, he received wide exposure through the use of his music in the 1980 PBS television series “Cosmos.”

    “Chariots of Fire” is ranked at 19 on the British Film Institute’s list of Top 100 British Films.

    Happy birthday in the cosmos, Vangelis.

    Vangelis, enjoying his morning regimen of smoking a cigarette over a cup of coffee while playing piano to footage of athletes wearing themselves out running on the beach

    Rowan Atkinson playing it for Sir Simon Rattle

    1. You called it, Ridley.

    8 hours of “Blade Runner” in the rain


    PHOTO: Vangelis, Greek god of synthesizers

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