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Once Upon a Time and Happily Ever After on “Picture Perfect”

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This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll play on the inherent nostalgia of the holidays by recalling the magic of childhood, by way of our collective and personal interactions with the world of fairy tales.
George Pal’s “The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm” (1962) was filmed in Cinerama and features the producer-director’s trademark stop motion effects. Among the all-star cast are Laurence Harvey, Claire Bloom, Barbara Eden, Russ Tamblyn, and Buddy Hackett. The narrative incorporates a number of familiar Grimm tales, while relating the brothers’ “real-life” struggles.
The music is by Leigh Harline. Harline was an integral part of the Disney team that scored an earlier fairy tale adaptation, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” He would win two Academy Awards for his work on “Pinocchio,” including one for Best Original Song, for “When You Wish Upon a Star.”
“The Company of Wolves” (1984), one of Neil Jordan’s earlier films, explores the psychological underpinnings of the tale of “Little Red Riding Hood,” here presented as an allegory of adolescence and the loss of innocence. Angela Carter co-wrote the screenplay, based on a selection of her original short stories. The film features Angela Lansbury, any number of werewolves, and Terence Stamp as the Devil. The music is by George Fenton.
With the advent of computer animation, a snarkier, post-modern take on the fairy tale predominates, most notably with the “Shrek” series, beginning in 2001. The “Shrek” films were so successful, they led to a spin-off, centered on the character of “Puss in Boots” (2011).
Voiced by Antonio Banderas, Puss provides ample opportunity to vamp on the actor’s swashbuckler image, especially as portrayed in “The Mask of Zorro.” Likewise, the composer, Henry Jackman, chooses to rib James Horners’ “Zorro” score.
Finally, we’ll hear selections from perhaps the finest fairy tale ever committed to film, Jean Cocteau’s “La Belle et la Bête” – “Beauty and the Beast” (1946). Moody, atmospheric, dreamy, clever, hypnotic, funny, and romantic, and sporting production design that looks like something Gustav Doré might have dreamed up in a haze of Dutch Masters cigars, Cocteau’s masterpiece stars Jean Marais and Josette Day.
The alternately mysterious and majestic score is by Georges Auric. Cocteau, you’ll recall, was the one-man publicity machine that propelled Auric and his composer-colleagues, Francis Poulenc, Darius Milhaud, Arthur Honegger, Germaine Tailleferre, and Louis Durey, to fame in Paris, circa 1920, dubbing them “Les Six.”
I hope you’ll join me for an hour of once-upon-a-time and happily-ever-after, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of 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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Thanksgiving 2025: Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down

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29 responses
No time for a thought piece today. Suffice it to say, we may be living through troubling times, but there’s still much to be thankful for. Look around you, be appreciative, and enjoy it while you can.
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100 Years and 88 Keys of Eugene Istomin

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Although he recorded extensively as a soloist for Columbia Records (now Sony Classical), his career as a concert pianist never really seemed to catch fire. Or perhaps I should say, he never captured the public’s imagination quite to the extent of some of his more publicity-friendly contemporaries. This was certainly not for lack of skill or interpretive depth. He just wasn’t interested in playing the fame game. It could be argued that Eugene Istomin found his most comfortable fit away from the spotlight, as a conversational performer and equal voice in one the premier chamber ensembles of his time.
With violinist Isaac Stern and cellist Leonard Rose – as the Istomin-Stern-Rose Trio – he really seemed to find his niche. The trio was an unlikely creation, an all-star ensemble greater than the sum of its parts. And its parts were pretty great. All three musicians were known quantities, “name” soloists who worked very hard to shed their larger-than-life predilections and explore a shared intimacy in chamber music of the masters. Their recordings of the complete Beethoven piano trios, in particular, a Grammy Award winner in 1970, is still highly regarded. Too bad they couldn’t come up with a catchier name for the group.
On his own, Istomin, a contemporary of Leon Fleisher and Gary Graffman, never seemed to excite the way the other two pianists did. This, despite professional associations with Eugene Ormandy, Bruno Walter, Leonard Bernstein, Fritz Reiner, George Szell, Leopold Stokowski, and Pablo Casals. (Istomin later married Casals’ widow.) For one thing, he was more interested in the Viennese classics than he was the Russian showpieces that set audiences aflame. Not that he didn’t love those too. His recording of the Rachmaninoff 2nd with Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra demonstrates that, when he wanted to be, he could be very much the virtuoso. Of course, Fleisher and Graffman’s careers were curtailed by focal dystonia, a repetitive stress malady that effects the fingers and is all-too-common among hard-driving classical performers, with their unforgiving practice regimens.
Istomin had, by his own admission, “pretentious” tastes. He was interested in the music he was interested in, even if it didn’t fit the paradigm of what critics thought he should be tackling at a given stage of his career. (Surely, he was too young to be playing Beethoven and Brahms. This is the time he should be playing Tchaikovsky and Rachmaninoff!) He was also an avid reader and a book collector, at one point hired by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich as an advisor on the publication of facsimile editions of works by Joseph Conrad, Thomas Hardy, and others.
Yet he also had a common touch. An ardent fan of the Detroit Tigers, he toured the Midwest with a twelve-ton truck full of his own Steinway pianos. He wanted to be sure to make the music he loved available to the people.
It’s said that his relationship with Rose, who could be touchy and unforgiving even under the best of circumstances, was damaged when Istomin maneuvered behind the scenes with Columbia to get a shot at a concerto recording at a time when he was supposed to be documenting all the Beethoven sonatas for violin and cello with his companions in the trio. The fact that these were left incomplete because of the resulting rift with the label left Rose with a festering resentment. But nothing was simple between Rose and Istomin. They suited one another perfectly, playing together beautifully, as long as they kept their mouths shut. But they also held very strong convictions and weren’t shy about expressing them. Clearly, they remained intimates, but Rose carried hard feelings over the Beethoven debacle for the rest of his life.
Unquestionably, Istomin found depth in the Viennese masters and fire in the Russians, but it was always on his own terms. He also commissioned and performed works by living composers, including Roger Sessions (his piano concerto), Henri Dutilleux, and Ned Rorem. Again, Istomin was more interested in the substance of music-making than in the publicity machine.
Like Josephine Baker and Jerry Lewis, it’s possible he found greater appreciation in France, where he was the recipient of the Légion d’honneur in 2001.
Istomin died in 2003, 16 days before his 78th birthday. He was a terrific pianist, if perhaps not the most enduringly famous. Remembering him today, with gratitude, on the 100th anniversary of his birth.
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Turkey Day Thomson

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It’s breakfast in bed for Virgil Thomson on his birthday.
Thomson was not only a composer, he was a writer on music, who wielded power of a kind unimaginable, in this day of eroded standards, as a critic at the New York Herald-Tribune.
Perhaps his brand of “faux-naïf” Americana is not for everyone. Still, it earned him a wide and enduring audience. His music for Robert Flaherty’s “Louisiana Story” (1948) remains the only film score ever to be awarded a Pulitzer Prize.
For Thomson’s birthday, here’s some music to get you in the mood for Thanksgiving.
His “Symphony on a Hymn Tune” was composed during his Paris years. Thomson, like Aaron Copland and so many others, studied in France with Nadia Boulanger. The symphony was inspired by the composer’s memories of his Kansas City boyhood. The “Sunday best” of the church hymns occasionally gets tangled up in a few modernistic burrs – the exchanges between the violin, cello, trombone, and piccolo at the end of the first movement, for instance – but in 1928, it was a landmark in terms of helping to establish a distinctly American idiom.More austere, perhaps, is Thomson’s symphonic poem “Pilgrims and Pioneers” – but just stick around for the fiddle tunes.
Finally, a seasonal work: the Concertino for Harp, Strings and Percussion, “Autumn” – according to Thomson, actually more of a “portrait of an artist ageing.”
Happy birthday, Virgil Thomson (1896-1989) – and Happy Thanksgiving!
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PBS documentary on Thomson from 1986, for his 90th birthday – opening with “Symphony on a Hymn Tune”Thomson, sharp as a tack and full of personality, in this transcript of an interview from 1985 with radio host Bruce Duffie
https://www.bruceduffie.com/vt.html
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PHOTO: Virgil Thomson, enjoying all his pleasures at once
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Diverse, Disciplined, and Dignified: Philadelphia’s Leon Bates Dies at 76

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It is with regret that I learn that Leon Bates, Philadelphia born and bred, has died. With his dual devotion to music and bodybuilding, Bates was a very interesting man, at the time he was making his name not at all fitting the image of what I imagine many people held of a typical concert pianist. Bates stood 6’ 4” and at his physical peak could bench press 300 pounds.
His repertoire was broad, ranging from the meat-and-potatoes classics to works by repertory American composers Edward MacDowell and George Gershwin to those of contemporary masters George Walker, William Bolcom, and Adolphus Hailstork; also, those of jazz pianist Chick Corea. Bates internalized the lessons of jazz in his performance of the classics. At the very least, he believed music should never be performed the same way twice. He also preferred to find his own way to the core of a piece, and when preparing for a concert, he shunned exposure to recorded interpretations by other pianists.
For as interesting as he was as a person, there was nothing flamboyant in his personality. When your interests already seem so wildly diverse and you excel at everything you do, there’s no need to make a big show of it. You just do what you do with precision and grace.
I had the good fortune to interview Bates for the Times of Trenton in 2016. Two years later, he retired from the concert stage at the age of 68, after a diagnosis of Parkinson’s Disease. For a time, he thought maybe he had been drinking too much coffee.
Bates died on Friday. He was 76 years old.
R.I.P.*****
Here’s a link to the article. Since everything is on the internet forever except for the stuff you want, I’m also including the text below.
https://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/2016/12/classical_music_new_addition_t.html
If you’re looking for the inspiration to stick to your New Year’s resolution, you need look no further than pianist Leon Bates. Bates, whose life has been enriched by both music and sports, is as disciplined as they come. The results are evident in a career that has been marked by unflagging energy and an unusual focus on physical fitness.
“It definitely helps with the stamina,” he says of his weight training. “To be able to play a piano concerto, with an orchestra, is a tremendous responsibility. It requires a lot of energy. Discipline is a thing that is extremely important. Any kind of an experience where you have a chance to demonstrate your discipline, you get results. You’re encouraged and you’re reinforced by the results that you get when you do things correctly.”
Bates will join the Capital Philharmonic of New Jersey for its annual New Year’s Eve concert this Saturday night at the Trenton War Memorial. The orchestra’s music director, Daniel Spalding will conduct a program of buoyant classics, including works by Franz von Suppé, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Leonard Bernstein, and Johann Strauss II. Bates will be the soloist in George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue.”
“‘Rhapsody in Blue’ has had such favor with audiences I think, because it’s got recognizable melodies that are very enjoyable,” he says. “People, regardless of whether they know music or not, can identify with it. As far as my association with the piece, I try to keep it fresh by injecting little aspects of improvisation here and there. Gershwin had that particular quality of being able to blend elements of jazz, elements of music from the ‘20s, with classical literature. It’s a winning combination which has worked very well for him.”
Bates’ dynamic career has included performances with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, the Cleveland Orchestra, the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and the symphony orchestras of Atlanta, Boston, Detroit and San Francisco. He has toured the United States with the Boston Pops under Keith Lockhart and the Orchestra of France under Lorin Maazel. He has appeared with leading orchestras and at prestigious music festivals around the world.
“When I got involved with weight training, I found that there was a very, very direct corollary between being able to do sets and reps in the gym, trying to train a specific muscle and finding that there was a great deal of discipline involved in doing the activity correctly, with the proper technique, and what I am saying about music, being able to practice an idea over and over until you get that right, and having the stamina and fortitude to do that.”
A native of Philadelphia, he understands just how fortunate he was as a child and teenager to have supportive and nurturing mentors in his life, starting with his parents, who were extraordinary people of limited financial means. His father drove a forklift for Sears, Roebuck & Co., and his mother was a homemaker. Yet they saw to it that Bates never wanted for a musical education.
“My mother was very attentive to me, and as she saw me gravitate towards pianos, she took the initiative to start me with lessons when I was about six,” Bates says. “From the very beginning, I was always ambitious about wanting to be able to play music. I played on a recital for the first time when I was about seven years-old, and I was hooked.” His parents bought him his first piano, which he had until he was 15, and later, a small grand piano to help him prepare for his career as a concert musician.
He is also thankful for his three influential teachers. Cristofor Sinjani taught him privately at his Germantown studio for six years. (“He was a very good role model,” Bates says. “He taught me more than how to play the piano; he taught me how to be a good musician.”) For five years, he studied with Irene Beck at the Settlement Music School. (“She had great aspirations for me to become a concert pianist, which was what I wanted to do since I was 12 or 13.”) He went on to major in Piano Performance at Temple University with the distinguished pedagogue Natalie Hinderas. (“She was really an outstanding performer as well as a very fine teacher.”)
Bates himself has made it a point to share something of his musical good fortune, through conducting master classes with young musicians and by playing for elementary, middle, and high school students. “I think it’s really important for young people to be exposed to these kinds of things, on as many different levels, and through as many different opportunities as possible. You never know what kind of door it will open to them down the road.”
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