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Louisiana Purchases on “The Lost Chord”

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It’s Mardi Gras season! This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll adorn ourselves in purple, gold, and green, and carve ourselves some King Cake, as we listen to music from and about New Orleans.
Henry F. Gilbert, a slightly older contemporary of Charles Ives, and a composer of the New England School, was concerned with introducing folk song and the vernacular to the concert hall. His interest in the music of African Americans, then considered controversial, is reflected in works like “The Dance in Place Congo,” from 1908, a programmatic piece on Creole themes, suggestive of Sunday afternoon festivities of off-duty New Orleans slaves gathered in Congo Square.
We’ll also hear a piece by Chicago area composer Edward Joseph Collins, actually titled “Mardi Gras,” from 1923. Collins described the work as “boisterous and bizarre by turns,” evocative of the spirit of Carnival, with its enormous masks and clowns on stilts, colored streamers, confetti, lurid lights, fantastic floats and grotesque costumes.
Three Creole Romantics will offer some insiders’ views, as we hear works by Edmond Dédé, Charles Lucièn Lambert, and Louis Moreau Gottschalk, all figures born in New Orleans.
Laissez les bons temps rouler! I hope you’ll join me for “Louisiana Purchases,” on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX Classical Oregon!
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Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:
PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST
THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST
Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!
https://kwax.uoregon.edu
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Musical Confections for Valentine’s Day on “Sweetness and Light”

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4 responses
This morning on KWAX, it’s flowers and chocolate for breakfast. I’ll do my best to indulge your sweet tooth and lend a serotonin boost with a special Valentine’s Day sampler.
Luxuriate with an assortment of decadent Fritz Kreisler violin bonbons, a suite from Lord Berners’ ballet “Cupid and Psyche,” Victor Herbert’s orchestration of Franz Liszt’s “Liebestraum,” Henry Mancini’s arrangement of Nino Rota’s “Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet,” and some romantic reveries by Gilbert & Sillivan, Charles Ancliffe, and Leonard Bernstein.
Better limber up those lips. It will be an hour of musical confections for Valentine’s Day on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST. Hear it exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
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Metaphorical Big Cats on “Picture Perfect”

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2 responses
Friday the 13th! Beware of ladders, broken mirrors, and… black cats?
Unluckily, metaphorical big cats is the focus this week on “Picture Perfect.”
Simone Simon’s barely repressed desires are made manifest in Val Lewton’s “Cat People” (1942). Lewton was a master of suggestion, with a majority of the horrors in his films imagined, rather than seen. Part of the approach was practical, the result of shoestring budgets imposed by RKO. Whatever the case, the insinuating weirdness undeniably produced psychological chills. In fact, it was only as a concession to the studio that a literal big cat was included at all. The music was by RKO workhorse Roy Webb.
Sean Connery plays a Berber chieftain who faces off against Teddy Roosevelt in “The Wind and the Lion” (1975). In a letter to Roosevelt (played in the film by Brian Keith), Connery’s character writes, “I, like the lion, must stay in my place, while you, like the wind, will never know yours.” Jerry Goldsmith provided one of his best scores for the Moroccan adventure. In fact, he was fairly confident he finally had a lock on the Oscar. He experienced a harsh reality check when he went to see “Jaws.” (Goldsmith would win his only Academy Award the following year for his music to “The Omen.”)
Luchino Visconti’s epic telling of Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s “The Leopard” (1963) is a melancholy exploration of the fading Sicilian aristocracy. A bewhiskered Burt Lancaster plays Prince Fabrizio, who feels himself slipping into obsolescence. Nino Rota gives the film a full-blooded, operatic soundtrack, full of lyricism and pathos.
Finally, Lyn Murray provides the breezy accompaniment for Alfred Hitchcock’s “To Catch a Thief” (1955), with Cary Grant a reformed burglar, known as The Cat, who attempts to clear himself of some “copycat” crimes while romancing Grace Kelly on the French Riviera.
We throw salt over our left shoulder and caution to the winds, with an hour of music for metaphorical big cats – any excuse to ignore Valentine’s Day and get “The Wind and the Lion” and “The Leopard” on the same program – on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX Classical Oregon!
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Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:
PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST
THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST
Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!
https://kwax.uoregon.edu
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Lincoln Portrait

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8 responses
Intelligent. Wise. Principled. Empathetic. Compassionate. Honest. Fair. Just. Kind. Courteous. Magnanimous. Visionary. Humble. Articulate. Witty. Corrigible. Hard-working. Courageous. Gracious. Resilient.
Aware of his shortcomings. Strove to improve himself. Assembled “team of rivals” to unify and learn from those with differing viewpoints. Understood leadership and sacrifice. Risked everything to preserve the Union.
16th president of the United States.
Abraham Lincoln was born on this date in 1809. They sure don’t make ‘em like they used to.“Do I not destroy my enemies when I make them my friends?”
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James Earl Jones in Aaron Copland’s “Lincoln Portrait”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmfaH5kJv3U
Roy Harris (born on this date in 1898), Symphony No. 6 “Gettysburg”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QJig7H0NJd8&t
Paul Turok, “Variations on an American Song: Aspects of Lincoln and Liberty” – conducted by Leonard Slatkin, newly-designated music director of the Nashville Symphony Orchestra
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JoD2TDrZ4Jg
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Farewell to Helmuth Rilling

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3 responses
The German choral director Helmuth Rilling has died. Rilling is probably best-known for his advocacy of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. In a career that spanned some 70 years, he established the Gächinger Kantorei, the Bach-Collegium Stuttgart, and other Bach academies around the world.
He was the first person to prepare and record on modern instruments Bach’s complete choral works. His impressive roster of vocal soloists includes Arlene Auger, Juliane Banse, Matthias Goerne, Anne Sofie von Otter, Christophe Prégardien, Thomas Quasthoff, and Christine Schäfer. The instrumental soloists include Robert Levin, Trevor Pinnock, and Dmitry Sitkovetsky, among many others. The achievement, completed in the year 2000, encompasses over 1,000 pieces of music, documented on 170 compact discs.
In 1970, Rilling cofounded the Oregon Bach Festival in Eugene, presented in conjunction with the University of Oregon (home of KWAX). Rilling served as artistic director there until 2013.
His recordings, many of them issued on the Hänssler Classic label, range far beyond Bach and his contemporaries. I’ve got a few of them in my collection, including his recording of Liszt’s oratorio “Christus” (among three of the work that I own).
His recording of Krzysztof Penderecki’s “Credo,” commissioned and performed by the Oregon Bach Festival, won the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Choral Performance.
Rilling died yesterday at the age of 92.R.I.P.
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Bach, Mass in B minorhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-gw318qPDhk
Premiere of Penderecki’s “Credo,” live from Eugene
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWOzt7zMDCo
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9 responses