Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Magnard Sohy: Music, War, and Remembrance

    Magnard Sohy: Music, War, and Remembrance

    To say that French composer Albéric Magnard had a fiery disposition runs the risk of skirting bad taste.

    It was on this date in 1914 that Magnard went out in a blaze of glory, when, at the age of 59, and as a civilian, he refused to surrender his property to invading German forces. After ushering his wife and two daughters out the back door, he opened fire on some trespassing soldiers, instantly killing one of them. In retaliation, the Germans set fire to his house. Magnard is assumed to have perished in conflagration. However, his body was never found.

    A couple of weeks ago, I was streaming KWAX (as all good folks should), and for the first time encountered a symphony by Charlotte Sohy, written in 1917, that may have been composed in memory of Magnard. Sohy and her husband, Marcel Labey, were friends of the composer, and Sohy’s symphony shares the same key, the uncommon C-sharp minor, as Magnard’s Symphony No. 4.

    Her symphony is subtitled “Grand Guerre,” or “Great War.” Marcel would survive the conflict, having served in the French army. He died in 1968. Sohy, who studied composition with Vincent d’Indy and was a cousin of Louis Durey (of “Les Six” fame), died in 1955.

    Her symphony was never performed in her lifetime. It was heard for the first time in France only in 2019!

    In this age of wonders, now you can enjoy it here:

    Also, Magnard’s Symphony No. 4:


    PHOTOS: Albéric Magnard and Charlotte Sohy

  • Ennio Morricone Monument Unveiled in Italy

    A new monument to Ennio Morricone was unveiled in Viggiano, a small town in the province of Potenza, in the southern Italian region of Basilicata, on August 29.

    You’ll find details at the link. If you’re not fluent in Italian, you’ll have to use your translator function.

    Viggiano, monumento dedicato a Ennio Morricone

    Thanks to Mather Pfeiffenberger for the heads-up!

  • Jaws at 50 Still Bites at Princeton Garden Theatre

    Jaws at 50 Still Bites at Princeton Garden Theatre

    While I couldn’t be there for the Princeton Garden Theatre’s “Jaws Fest” celebrations on Friday, in honor of the 50th anniversary of the film’s release, I was able to catch the movie itself yesterday afternoon – and of course there’s no way I could pass up this banner.

    Author Peter Benchley and his wife, Wendy (who served three terms on the former Princeton Borough Council), attended the film’s Princeton opening at the Garden Theatre in June 1975.

    The Garden continues to show “Jaws” every summer, and I manage to catch it in one form or another just about every year. Last year I got shut out of the theater when I learned too late that Wendy Benchley would be speaking before the film. Still, I have seen it a lot.

    When I last caught it at the Garden two years ago, I was dazzled by just how well it still works. Yesterday, it mostly made me miss the ‘70s, when movies could still surprise and awe, while keeping one foot in “reality.” The shark may be omnipresent (if little seen), but the interplay between Roy Scheider, Lorraine Gary, the kids, Richard Dreyfuss, Robert Shaw, Murray Hamilton, and even the locals is unbeatable.

    Memorable characters, great performances that conceal their craft (Shaw gets a couple of monologues, selling himself as shark-exterminator and recollecting the horrors of the U.S.S. Indianapolis, but otherwise most of it unfolds naturalistically), breathtaking directorial invention and technical brilliance (again, only occasionally do they draw attention to themselves), plenty of foreshadowing and thematic parallels, irony even, but the whole thing is never less than relatably human, which is a quality it seems the big Hollywood movies have really lost.

    Of course John Williams’ score rachets up the tension with its inexorable rhythms and jangling dissonances, but he always has a good sense of when to lighten things up and even lift the spirits. “Jaws” begins as a horror movie, then leans into the suspense, and then finally explodes into a frequently euphoric, rip-roaring adventure.

    The local color, the bureaucratic cover-up, the inevitable panic, the yahoos who gather to take out the shark, all of it rings true. Even in a world in which police reports are no longer filled out on typewriters, everyone has cell phones, and for many books are no longer a primary source of information, “Jaws” loses none of its bite. In another 50 years, it will be as evergreen as “Casablanca.”

    “Jaws” is usually a one-night affair in Princeton – and the theater is packed – but this year showings will continue at the Garden through Thursday afternoon, diluting the crowd, perhaps, but providing more chances to catch it on the big screen. For showtimes, follow the link.

    https://www.princetongardentheatre.org/films/jaws

    If you can’t make it, there’s always next summer.

    In the meantime, do check out the Garden’s schedule of repertory films. September and October are especially strong. With offerings such as “Rashomon, “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir,” “Bicycle Thieves,” “High and Low,” “The Asphalt Jungle,” “Metropolis, “The Golem,” and the Spanish language “Dracula” (shot at night on the same sets used for the Lugosi version), I intend to be there a lot.

    https://www.princetongardentheatre.org/specials/

    Oh yeah, and they show new films too. It’s probably the only theater in which I would have watched the new “Superman,” as I can’t stand the hassle, the soullessness, the inanity, the sonic overkill, and now the seating reservations of the big chains.

    If you’re in the area, and you miss being able to watch quality movies in a decent theater, I recommend dropping by and even looking into a membership. It’s obvious that the owners and the employees really care about the entire experience of taking in a good film.

  • Skyscrapers Ballet Labor Day Transcription

    For Labor Day, here’s an effective transcription of John Alden Carpenter’s construction worker ballet, “Skyscrapers” (1926). On Saturday, I included the orchestral version on a playlist of labor-related works for my radio show, “Sweetness and Light.” This arrangement, by Yukiko Nishimura, was performed at Temple University by pianists Sara Davis Buechner & Charles Abramovic and percussionists Alyssa Resh & Andrew Malonis.

  • Klaus Thunemann Bassoon Superstar R.I.P.

    Klaus Thunemann Bassoon Superstar R.I.P.

    It’s seldom that you see the words “bassoon” and “superstar” in the same sentence, but there you have it. Klaus Thunemann was internationally famous and a familiar presence to classical music radio listeners of the ‘80s, ‘90s, and beyond. Thunemann was principal bassoonist of the North German Radio Symphony Orchestra of Hamburg from 1962 to 1978, but it was a recording contract with Philips Records that gave him a world platform as he was partnered with Neville Marriner, Alfred Brendel, Heinz Holliger, and the chamber orchestra I Musici. His recordings for Philips and Deutsche Grammophon were guaranteed crowd-pleasers, and I played them fairly frequently on my morning radio shows. Against the monotony of endless new releases of “The Four Seasons,” Thunemann’s recordings of Vivaldi’s bassoon concertos were bracing, hypnotic, and amusing. Klaus Thunemann died on Friday at the age of 88. R.I.P.

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (92) 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