Category: Daily Dispatch

  • Atlanta Symphony Premieres on KWAX

    Atlanta Symphony Premieres on KWAX

    This Labor Day weekend, on “The Lost Chord,” enjoy an hour of Georgia peaches – a couple of American premieres courtesy of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra.

    Longtime Philadelphia-based Pultizer Prize winner Jennifer Higdon composed “On a Wire” for the new music sextet Eighth Blackbird. A concerto grosso of sorts for six soloists, the piece begins with the musicians gathered around an open-lidded piano, most of them bowing the strings. The composer asks the listener to imagine six blackbirds sitting on a wire.

    We’ll follow that with “Q.E.D.: Engaging Richard Feynman,” by Michael Gandolfi. Feynman, the noted physicist and Nobel laureate, was as renowned for his wit as for his inquisitive mind.

    Gandolfi’s piece does not focus on scientific inquiry. Rather it takes as its starting point two anecdotes shared by the physicist in interviews with the BBC, which the composer discovered on YouTube. In performance, the video clips were shown to the audience preceding the work’s two sections. Understandably, these have been omitted from the recording.

    The sections themselves are settings of texts by various poets illustrating a specific theme. The first concerns a challenge put by an artist friend of Feynman suggesting that as a scientist he cannot truly appreciate the beauty of a flower. Feynman counters that scientific knowledge, a greater understanding of the flower, only adds to its beauty, rather than detracts.

    The second grows out of an anecdote concerning Feynman’s boyhood ignorance of the name of a certain kind of bird, a brown-throated thrush, and his realization that a name tells one nothing about the bird, but rather something about the people of various cultures who named the bird. He concludes, “Now, let’s look at the bird.”

    Part One is titled “On Waking,” and includes settings of Gertrude Stein, Emily Dickinson, and the Irish Republican poet Joseph Campbell. Part II, “Song of the Universal,” includes settings of Walt Whitman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Siegfried Sassoon.

    The sung texts are mostly incomprehensible. However, it sure is nice to listen to.

    That’s a double-helping of “Georgia Peaches” with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Labor Day Music Marathon on Sweetness and Light

    Labor Day Music Marathon on Sweetness and Light

    How laborious it was to put together this morning’s “Sweetness and Light!” Which I suppose is only appropriate, since today’s theme is music for Labor Day.

    It’s not uncommon when producing a show that the running time can come up a little long. I try to avoid it, but when it happens, it’s usually remedied with a few snips. But this week I was a full 90 seconds over, which meant trimming my commentary to the bone. It can take a while to whittle it all down.

    In the end, I was still 30 seconds over. The rock was high and Classic Ross Amico was so small!

    So I had to swap out Aaron Copland’s rarely-heard “John Henry” (at 4 minutes) for something decidedly more “Common” (at about 3:30). If you’re at all familiar with the composer and his output, I think you can deduce what that is.

    Another casualty was my fine encapsulation of the essence of John Alden Carpenter’s construction worker ballet “Skyscrapers.” There’s an awful lot of color in that score to convey a few sentences!

    “The scenario involves workers in overalls, who struggle to bring order to a confusion of girders and flashing red lights; all around them the hustle and bustle of the city. Eventually the whistle blows. There’s a diverting side-trip to a Coney Island-type amusement park, with its crowds and attractions and popular dance rhythms. Again the whistle blows, and the laborers return to work.”

    The music is still there, but I wind up basically saying “here it is.”

    Life is full of frustration, folks, but it still beats digging ditches.

    I hope you’ll join me for a program that will also include works by George Frideric Handel, Nikolai Medtner, Michael Torke, and Eric Coates, with Princeton’s own Paul Robeson singing Earl Robinson’s labor classic “Joe Hill.” How that’s sweet OR light, I have no idea, but I’m playing it.

    As always, I earn my bread by the sweat of my brow. Just in time for breakfast, I’ll be bringing home the bacon, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it wherever you are at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


    IMAGE: One of ten dynamic panels from Thomas Hart Benton’s mural, “America Today” (1930-31). You can click through thumbnails of all of them here:

    https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/499559

  • Bernstein’s Waterfront A Hollywood Contender

    Bernstein’s Waterfront A Hollywood Contender

    “I coulda had class. I coulda been a contender. I coulda been somebody – instead of a bum, which is what I am.”

    We’ve all had those kinds of days, haven’t we?

    Yet Leonard Bernstein’s score for “On the Waterfront” (1954) was always a contender, even if at times the composer found himself on the ropes.

    “On the Waterfront” was the only original film score composed by Bernstein (the screen adaptations of his stage musicals were adapted by other hands). Narrative film, of course, is a collaborative effort, in which music is usually the last to the table and the first to go. Bernstein’s score was edited and dialed down to suit the overall needs of the film.

    Unused to such rough treatment, Bernstein found his brush with Hollywood to be dispiriting, to say the least. He arranged his music into a concert suite, over which he had complete control, and the work has gone on to become one of his better-known pieces. That said, what can be heard in the film remains a powerful statement, and one of the great film scores.

    The original recordings, as they appear in the film, were long believed to have been lost. However, in the course of restoration of “On the Waterfront” for release on BluRay, it was discovered that audio had been preserved on acetate discs used for playback during the original recording sessions. Material from these were issued for the first time in 2014, on the Intrada label.

    Bernstein’s music would be nominated for an Academy Award, one of twelve total nominations for the film. “On the Waterfront” would win in eight categories, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Marlon Brando), and Best Director (Elia Kazan). Bernstein may have lost out to Dimitri Tiomkin for his work on “The High and the Mighty.” However, like Brando’s Terry Malloy, his score to “On the Waterfront” proves itself a champion.

    We’ll hear selections, alongside some of Aaron Copland’s music for “The Red Pony” (1949), once again, from the film’s original elements; dances from the only film score ever to be awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Music, “Louisiana Story” (1948), by Virgil Thomson; and the music that lends “Picture Perfect” its signature tune, “They Came to Cordura” (1959), by Elie Siegmeister.

    It’s an hour of New York composers in Hollywood this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Rodion Shchedrin Obituary & Music

    Rodion Shchedrin Obituary & Music

    In my early days in classical radio, I was advised that in pronouncing Rodion Shchedrin’s last name, the “shch” should be said as in “freSH CHeese” (i.e. “SH-CHedrin”). His obituary writer in today’s New York Times begs to differ, using the phonetic “shu-deh-REEN.”

    However you say it, Shchedrin, who has died at the age of 92, was perhaps the most successful composer in Russia during the late and post-Soviet eras – an indefatigable creator of concert works, chamber, instrumental, and vocal music, opera, film scores, and ballets. (He was married to Bolshoi prima ballerina and choreographer Maya Plisetskaya.)

    And he managed it all without having joined the Communist Party. He took pride in the fact that no one in his family ever had. He was warned by the authorities not to become involved with Plisetskaya, whose parents had been labeled dissidents. (Her father was executed on Stalin’s orders and her mother exiled to Siberia.) But he went ahead and married her anyway. The couple lived under constant surveillance.

    Nevertheless, despite official impediments, they managed gradually to attain recognition at the top of their respective fields. Shchedrin’s status earned him the post of chairman of the Composers Union of the Russian Federation, which he held from 1973 to 1990.

    His international reputation was enhanced during the era of perestroika. Following the collapse of the USSR, he and his wife lived mostly in Munich. Despite the hardships they had endured under the Soviet regime (he himself admitted they were among the luckier ones), he expressed gratitude to have been born in Russia to pursue music.

    I first encountered Shchedrin’s best-known work, the “Carmen Suite” (1967) – an audacious reimagining of Bizet’s famous themes for strings and percussion – in 1992, on a concert of the Philadelphia Orchestra conducted by Erich Leinsdorf. In 2021, the work was revived in Philadelphia with fresh (cheese?) choreography by Brian Sanders, performed by JUNK.

    I suppose it is possible I had already heard it over the radio at some point, as a listener, but hearing it live really made an impression. I was happy to be able to hear it again at the Princeton Festival in 2022.

    Shchedrin also wrote a series of concertos for orchestra. The most notorious of these is called “Naughty Limericks” (1963). (The naughty Shchedrin once slashed the hand of one of his conservatory classmates with a razor!) My favorite is the Concerto for Orchestra No. 3 (1989), subtitled “Old Russian Circus Music.”

    The liturgical work “The Sealed Angel” (1988), for choir and flute, is based on a story by Nikolay Leskov. The plot concerns a rural community which protects a religious icon that has been confiscated by officials and sealed with wax. Shchedrin’s grandfather was an orthodox priest.

    Here’s a nifty video of Shchedrin playing Rachmaninoff with Evgeny Kissin and Daniil Trifanov – piano six-hands!

    Shchedrin was born on December 16, Beethoven’s birthday. I spare a thought for him every year, when the Master from Bonn sucks all the air out of the room.

    R.I.P. Rodion Shchedrin.


    PHOTO: The composer with his wife, Bolshoi ballerina Maya Plisetskaya, for whom he frequently composed. (The “Carmen Suite” was written for her.) Plisetskaya died in 2015 at the age of 89.

  • Kile Smith Recovery and Birthday Wishes

    I’m so used to writing about musicians of the past that when dealing with one from the present I am given pause. I try to be especially mindful about intruding on someone else’s privacy, particularly when it concerns a medical matter. But this was posted on social media over a week ago, by the subject himself, so it’s had plenty of time to circulate.

    Kile Smith is a hell of a nice guy. He’s generous, he’s insightful, he’s clever, he’s funny, and he’s real. And he’s so damn talented – as a composer, a writer, a photographer, and probably a lot else I don’t even know about.

    Of course, he also has a great voice. Those of you who’ve listened to Philadelphia’s WRTI surely remember him as the founding host of “Discoveries from the Fleisher Collection,” which eventually he spun off into a podcast. Whenever he covered a live air shift, it always made my day. I am wishing him a speedy recovery, and I know you are too.

    To add insult to injury, I missed his birthday on Sunday!

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