Category: Daily Dispatch

  • My Mom, Music, and Me

    My Mom, Music, and Me

    Although I didn’t come from what is generally understood to be “a musical family,” my mother still loved music. It just wasn’t what I would call my kind of music. Carole King, James Taylor, Barbra Streisand, Cher, Barry Manilow, Stevie Wonder, Chicago. It was all agreeable enough, but it didn’t grab me by the heart. But Mom was always supportive of my passions, and when the classical music thunderbolt struck, sparked by my discovery of the orchestra by way of John Williams, she did everything she could to feed the flame.

    Needless to say, the world was a different place in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. There was no internet, so it was possible to have a life and find happiness in the world most of the time. We lived in Easton, Pennsylvania, a quiet town, though classified as a city, about 90 minutes by car from New York and Philadelphia. Downtown Easton in the ‘70s was still pretty much as it had been for decades, though clearly in the twilight of its mid-century prime. The novelty of shopping malls caused the businesses to wither, but for the most part, the town you see in “Back to the Future,” that was it.

    It was not a magnet for touring symphony orchestras, and for some reason that puzzles me, I never did see an orchestra play classical music until I left for college in 1984. But we got plenty of string quartets and pianists and opera companies that sang with piano accompaniment, mostly at the local colleges and at some of the churches. The Williams Center for the Performing Arts did not open at Lafayette College until 1983, and the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra didn’t commence its regular visits until 1987. I had already left for Temple University and the Philadelphia Orchestra in 1984, but it was easy enough to return home on a weekend, so I did manage to catch Orpheus there, at Lafayette, a number of times.

    Until I discovered likeminded friends in my teens, my mom used to scope out the arts events in the local papers and, if I was interested (of course I was), she would usually attend concerts with me. The music would inspire flights of fancy and I was always jotting down ideas as they flitted through my head almost faster than I could capture them. These I would translate into stories and sometimes Super-8 films.

    It was through records that I really got to know the orchestra (Beethoven was an early favorite), and there would always be a few LPs waiting for me under the tree at Christmas, and on one memorable occasion, after my Mom started taking a music appreciation course at Northampton County Community College, some Vivaldi records with my Easter basket. (She loved the Guitar Concerto in D.) In between, I would blow my allowance on discounted records at Listening Booth. Mom would build castles in the air for me, in the way that moms do, and encourage me, if it was something that I wanted, to work toward assembling a collection of my favorite composers. Little did she realize the seed that she planted!

    It’s interesting to me to reflect back on my development. I was curious about opera. John Williams’ music for “Star Wars” was always being described as Wagnerian, so I went to the NCCC library and used my mom’s student I.D. to take out the multi-LP box of “Die Walküre.” This was such a strange new world to me. It was so… heavy. I just imagined these grim Norsemen in dark, sparsely-accoutered dwellings, the action, such that is, transpiring as in the sinewy illustrations of Arthur Rackham. But at that age, it was a little too much. I recognized “The Ride of the Valkyries,” of course, by what was all that wailing? Now, of course, I love Wagner and can totally get lost in it. But I remember a time in high school that even listening to Richard Strauss’ “Also sprach Zarathustra” made me feel physically unwell. I was a very sensitive kid.

    Seeing Bergman’s film of “The Magic Flute” at Lafayette College was a breakthrough. That was a lot of fun. But the Metropolitan Opera broadcasts on Saturdays were still a slog. I remember those long afternoons, waiting for WFLN to get back to its regular programming. Again, it’s funny to think on it now, as I’ve long since broken the opera barrier. Certainly, by the time PBS broadcast the Met Ring Cycle in 1990, I was already well into it.

    A notable exception to my early aversion had been the light operas of Gilbert & Sullivan, which I became totally hooked on as a teenager. (That’s right, G&S was my gateway drug!) My family went to see the Joseph Papp production of “The Pirates of Penzance” on Broadway – this would have been in 1982 – and after that my mom and I contrived to see every G&S performance we could get to. I also bought many of the operas on record, back when you could actually get them at the local mall. I still know all the lyrics to most of the most popular ones, having listened to them incessantly at such an impressionable age.

    Again on PBS, I remember in the 1980s watching a series of G&S broadcasts featuring big stars in some of the principal roles (Vincent Price, Joel Grey, Robert Conrad, Peter Allen). The productions were a mixed bag, to be honest, but I enjoyed them (Clive Revill was always a treat), and my mom and I watched all of them while they lasted.

    In the mid-‘80s, there was also a superb musical theater festival that was held at Muhlenberg College in Allentown in June that always included a first-rate Gilbert & Sullivan staging. For a time, we went every year, and we saw “Pirates” and “Patience” and “The Yeomen of the Guard” and “Ruddigore.” The latter was so much fun, I don’t know why it isn’t done more often. These were far superior to a touring production of “The Mikado” we caught around the same time at the State Theater in Easton.

    One of the actors at Muhlenberg still stands out in my memory. As with the original D’Oyly Carte productions from back in the day, some of the Muhlenberg players were basically repertory. They returned year after year in roles suited to their “types.” I always delighted in John Hallman’s hammy performances and comic patter songs. In his bio, I learned he worked at one of the area hospitals, but clearly theater was in his blood. I wonder if he’s still around. Donald Spieth, who was music director of the now-defunct Lehigh Valley Chamber Orchestra, conducted the performances. There would also always be a standard musical, a show like “The King and I,” but that wasn’t quite my scene. I remember there was also a pretty good chamber music series.

    I posted the other week about discovering some old programs in my parents’ attic, things that have sat there undisturbed for the past 40 years, and among them, I came across some Muhlenberg programs from the era.

    Mom’s been gone 16 and ½ years now. The last concert we saw together was of Mozart’s last three symphonies, performed by the Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia at the Kimmel Center in 2007. I can’t believe how cool my parents were about agreeing to see concerts with me when they came down to visit me in Philadelphia. My stepfather, in particular, was never a classical music guy and not one to sit still for long periods. He was a good sport to put up with us, in the upper levels of the old Academy of Music.

    Mom and I had some great times together. She really made me what I am, or rather allowed me to become who I could be. She facilitated everything. Both my parents did, actually, she and my stepfather, but she was the one who was wholly simpatico. I am sorry to say, she was taken too soon. One of her greatest gifts to me is that she left me with no regrets, beyond the fact I could have had her in my life for perhaps another 30 years. Unsurprisingly, I am thinking of her, with gratitude, on Mother’s Day.


    IMAGE: A little past our G&S heyday, but still a favorite photo

  • Rachmaninoff Shine at Princeton Symphony

    Rachmaninoff Shine at Princeton Symphony

    For better or worse, whenever I think of Sergei Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 3, I can’t help but remember John Gielgud in the 1996 film “Shine.” Can it really have been 29 years ago?

    Gielgud addresses Noah Taylor, as the psychologically frail Australian pianist David Helfgott, in Yoda-like bromides, cautioning him against the hazards of the “Rach 3” and shepherding him through a training sequence pitched somewhere between Dagobah and “The Mask of Zorro.” I guess this is effective shorthand for the masses, communicating the concerto’s challenges in a concise, three-minute montage that honestly has very little to do with the music.

    “Shine” was showered with Oscar love in 1997 – the recipient of seven Academy Award nominations and a Best Actor trophy for Geoffrey Rush – but no amount of “pop” corn can convey the true drama of arguably Rachmaninoff’s most intense masterpiece, which can be heard on two concerts of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra this weekend. PSO favorite Natasha Paremski will be the soloist. Rossen Milanov will conduct at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium.

    The Westminster Symphonic Choir will also appear, on the program’s first half, to perform Pyotr Ilych Tchaikovsky’s “Hymn to the Cherubim” from the “Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom” and Johannes Brahms’ “Schicksalslied” (“Song of Destiny”).

    All the shine will be in the music, tonight at 8:00 and tomorrow afternoon at 4:00. For tickets and information, visit princetonsymphony.org.

  • Mother’s Day Music on KWAX

    Mother’s Day Music on KWAX

    In a rare display of efficiency and common sense, learned from Mom, I promote both my Saturday specialty shows – “Sweetness and Light” and “The Lost Chord” – within a single post, under the unifying theme of Mother’s Day.

    First the light stuff, as we indulge in a suite of sweets on nursery themes by Grace Williams, Charles Williams, and Vaughan Williams (all unrelated). Also, Wolfgang Amadeus Williams – er, I mean Mozart.

    Of course, Mom deserves more, so we’ll also hear Yo-Yo Ma (despite his name, not really a mother, though if inflected a certain way when spoken, guaranteed to get Mom’s attention) and Luciano Pavarotti (accompanied by Henry Mancini, no less).

    Start the day with a musical candygram on “Sweetness and Light, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 EDT.

    Then drop back later, as we go long-hair, on “The Lost Chord,” with an hour of more substantial works honoring mothers.

    Josef Suk, former pupil and son-in-law of Antonín Dvořák, composed the bittersweet cycle of piano pieces “About Mother” to enshrine his tenderest memories of his wife – Dvořák’s daughter Ottilie – in music, for his son, who would have been too young at the time of her death to remember her himself.

    Craig Russell conceived the second movement of his Symphony No. 2, “American Scenes,” as a homage to his mother. Given the title “Gate City: Methodist Hymn,” the work is intended not only as a reflection of her personal faith but also the Appalachian beauty of her hometown of Gate City, Virginia.

    Finally, Camille Saint-Saëns had his mother very much in mind when he composed his Cello Sonata No. 1. Here, the second movement is constructed on a theme from Giacomo Meyerbeer’s opera “L’Africaine,” of which his mother was particularly fond. Her influence also looms over the last movement, which the composer wrote as a hasty replacement after she objected to the original version (which was premiere at one of her salons). Gabriel Fauré described the sonata as one of Saint-Saëns’ finest works.

    Mama knows best, on “I Remember Mama,” on “The Lost Chord,” this Saturday evening/afternoon at 7:00 EDT/4:00 PDT.

    It’s a multifaceted celebration of Mom for Mother’s Day, on “Sweetness and Light” AND “The Lost Chord,” exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream them wherever you are at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Vatican Movie Music Pope-pourri on Picture Perfect

    Vatican Movie Music Pope-pourri on Picture Perfect

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” with conclaves and popes very much in the news lately, it’s an hour of music from movies set in the Vatican.

    It would appear that Alex North (born just south of Philadelphia, in Chester, Pa.) was Hollywood’s “go to” composer for papal scores. In “The Shoes of the Fisherman” (1968), Anthony Quinn plays Kiril Pavlovich Lakota, an archbishop who serves 20 years in a Siberian labor camp. He is released and sent to Rome where is promoted to the cardinalate. When the Pope dies, suddenly, Lakota, a dark horse candidate, is elected as his replacement. The story balances Lakota’s internal struggles and personal torments with mounting global turmoil. North juxtaposes the melancholy lyricism of Russian folksong with the steely grandeur of his music for the Vatican.

    “The Agony and the Ecstasy” (1965), about the war of wills between Michelangelo (played by Charlton Heston) and the warrior-pope Julius II (played by Rex Harrison) over the painting of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, suggested a completely different approach. North’s other Vatican score is rich in allusions to authentic music of the era – and of the Church – which is most impressive when we think that the Early Music Movement was, at the time, in its very infancy, and the music of the pre-Baroque would not have been particularly well known.

    Otto Preminger’s “The Cardinal” (1963) follows a fictional Boston Irish Catholic priest from his ordination in 1917 to his appointment as cardinal on the eve of World War II. Tom Tryon played the lead. Tryon later became a best-selling author (as THOMAS Tryon), with books such as “The Other” and “Harvest Home.” An interesting factoid: the Vatican’s liaison officer for the production was none other than Joseph Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI.

    The composer this time was Jerome Moross. The producers of the recording we’ll be sampling incorporate the sound of the actual bell of St. Paul’s Cathedral into the opening of the suite.

    Christopher Reeve may have been trying just a bit too hard to shake his “Superman” image when he signed on to “Monsignor” (1982). Reeve stars as a Roman Catholic priest whose ascent through the ranks at the Vatican parallels his underhanded dealings with a mafia don and an affair with a woman in the postulant stage of becoming a nun (none other than Geneviève Bujold).

    Likewise, composer John Williams received his only nomination from the Golden Raspberry Awards for Worst Original Score. Tune in for this rare opportunity to hear music from Williams’ first project after his Academy Award-winning contribution to “E.T.”

    It’s a Pope-pourri of scores from movies set in the Vatican this week, on “Picture Perfect,” 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/

  • Raritan River Music Festival NJ 2024

    Raritan River Music Festival NJ 2024

    More accurate than a Farmers’ Almanac is a prediction for enjoyable music-making in scenic West-Central New Jersey. That’s right, the first of the warm-weather music festivals is practically upon us. Now in its 36th year, Raritan River Music will beat the summer crush, once again presenting acclaimed soloists and ensembles in a variety of programs to be performed at historic venues in Raritan and Warren Counties.

    The first of this season’s concerts will take place this Saturday at 7:30 pm, at Bethlehem Presbyterian Church in Pittstown. A trio of musicians from the Philadelphia-based Tempesta di Mare Baroque Orchestra will perform music by Bach, Couperin, Marais, and Telemann, among others, on flute, recorder, viola da gamba, cello, theorbo, and lute.

    On Saturday, May 17 at 7:30 pm, at Old Greenwich Presbyterian Church in Stewartsville, pianist David Korevaar will share repertoire from his new release, “Beethoven: Heroic to Hammerklavier,” on the Prospero Classical label. The program will include the Sonata in F Major, Op. 54, the Sonata in F Minor, Op. 57 “Appassionata,” the Sonata in E Minor, Op. 90, and the Sonata in A Major, Op. 101.

    On Saturday, May 24, at 7:30 pm, at Stanton Reformed Church in Stanton, Raritan River Music founders (and Warren County residents) Michael Newman and Laura Oltman, a.k.a. the Newman and Oltman Guitar Duo, will be joined by the Bergamot String Quartet for “Music from the NEW World: 21st Century Masterpieces.” The program will include RRM-commissioned works by Daniel Binelli and Lowell Liebermann, the premiere of a new string quartet by New Jersey composer Payton MacDonald, selections by Bergamot violinist and composer Ledah Finck, and a work by Pulitzer Prize-and-Grammy Award-winning Princeton University alum Caroline Shaw.

    The festival will conclude on Saturday, May 31, at 7:30 pm at Historic Hunterdon County Courthouse in Flemington, with “Americana Meets Old Masters.” Classical favorites and showpieces by Gershwin, Piazzolla, Bach, Rimsky-Korsakov, and others will be played on marimba, vibraphone, and piano by Greg Giannascoli, Behn Gillece, and Ron Stabinsky. Sounds like a good time to me.

    The festival can also be accessed via online streaming. For more information, directions, and archived videos of past concerts, visit raritanrivermusic.org.

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