• Hungarian Night Music Rozsa Dorati Kodaly

    Hungarian Night Music Rozsa Dorati Kodaly

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    “Children of the night – what beautiful music they make!” So says Hungarian superstar Bela Lugosi in his signature role of Dracula. The observation (spoken in response to the howling of wolves) might equally be applied, under less chilling circumstances, to three of Lugosi’s composer-compatriots, whose nocturnal meditations we’ll enjoy this week on “The Lost Chord.”

    Miklós Rózsa, himself a figure with cinematic associations, wrote nearly 100 film scores and won three Academy Awards – for “Spellbound” (1945), “A Double Life” (1947), and “Ben-Hur” (1959). He was also an active concert composer, writing concertos for Jascha Heifetz, Gregor Piatigorsky, Leonard Pennario, , Janos Starker, and Pinchas Zukerman.

    In the summer of 1962, Rózsa composed “Hungarian Nocturne” on a commission from Edward B. Benjamin, a New Orleans millionaire with a fondness for quiet music. However, in order to maintain interest, the composer realized, there was no way he could remain quiet for the entire span of the piece. So the nocturne eventually builds to a climax before returning to the serene mood of its opening. His patron wasn’t entirely pleased, though he did draw enjoyment from the quieter parts. The piece was an attempt by the composer to recapture the rare beauty of nights on his estate in rural Hungary.

    Though Antal Doráti would ultimately become world famous as a conductor, he studied composition at the Franz Liszt Academy under Zoltán Kodály and Leó Weiner. He also studied piano with Béla Bartók. A fine Bartok interpreter, Doráti would later conduct the world premiere of his teacher’s Viola Concerto.

    Doráti’s own music has always been regarded as something of a sidelight. His “Night Music,” from 1970, is a collection of evocative miniatures for flute and orchestra. We’ll hear it performed by Alison Young, now a host for Minnesota Public Radio.

    Unlike Rózsa and Doráti, who were both natives of Budapest, Zoltán Kodály was born in a small town in Southern Hungary. He claimed that his first exposure to folk music was through the singing of servant girls in his own home. He went on to become one of the most important figures in Hungarian musical life, as composer, ethnomusicologist, and educator.

    Kodály will be represented by his orchestral idyll, “Summer Evening,” music originally composed in 1906, then revised in 1929, to fulfill a commission from Arturo Toscanini. Kodály himself will conduct, on a gorgeous recording with the Budapest Philharmonic.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Children of the Night.” Hungarian composers take wing, on “The Long 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/


    IMAGE: “New Moon,” by Mihály Zeller


  • Christmas in July Wintry Movie Music on KWAX

    Christmas in July Wintry Movie Music on KWAX

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    It’s the 25th. Christmas in July! This week on “Picture Perfect,” there won’t be a manger or a Santa Claus in sight, but I’m sure we’ll all be grateful for a blast of frigid air and some chilly scenes from world cinema.

    We’ll begin with music from “The Snow Storm” (1964), an adaptation of Pushkin’s “The Tales of the Late Ivan Petrovich Belkan.” The score’s Waltz and Romance enjoyed particular popularity, earning its composer, Georgy Sviridov, two of his greatest hits.

    Then Arthur Honegger will take us to higher altitudes with his music for “The Demon of the Himalayas” (1935), complete with the eerie electronic timbre of the ondes Martenot.

    Ralph Vaughan Williams will guide us to the South Pole with selections from his score for “Scott of the Antarctic” (1948). The music perfectly reflects the sublime, austere beauty of an unforgiving landscape. The score became the basis for the composer’s seventh symphony, “Sinfonia Antartica” (note the Italian spelling; hence the single “c”).

    Finally, the “Battle on the Ice” from “Alexander Nevsky” (1938) provides a textbook marriage of music and film. Director Sergei Eisenstein granted the composer, Sergei Prokofiev, the unusual luxury of having the images cut to suit his music, as opposed to the usual practice, which is the other way around. The result is not only one of the great films, but also one of the great film scores.

    Feeling hot under the collar? Chill out with wintry scenes from world cinema this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music from 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/


  • Stoogeum PA A Nyuk Nyuk Visit to 3 Stooges Heaven

    Stoogeum PA A Nyuk Nyuk Visit to 3 Stooges Heaven

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    Spent the afternoon today visiting the Stoogeum in Ambler, PA, an eccentric institution, chock full of Three Stooges collectibles and memorabilia. I must say, there is more in there than you might suspect – yellowed newspapers, candid glossies, and theatrical broadsides share space with state-of-the-art touch screens (activated by poking an image of Curly in the eyes), pinball machines and video games, a “Hall of Shemp” (which endeared the place to me immediately), statues and sculptures of the team, costumes and posters from the films, a Joe Besser ceremonial banner (!), a gallery of autographed photos of Stooges associates and contemporaries (ranging from Mae Clarke, memorable recipient of Cagney’s grapefruit in “Public Enemy,” and Dick Powell, to Jimmy Durante and Hugh Herbert, to Lloyd Bridges and Adam West), salutes to Stooges regulars Christine McIntyre, Emil Sitka, and director Jules White, a sit-down movie theater that continuously runs Stooges shorts, and of course monitors all over the place.

    The third floor is crammed with Stooges art, storyboards from the cartoon series and floor-to-ceiling Stooges tributes – somebody actually managed convincing likenesses of Moe, Larry, Curly, and Shemp on four different Etch-a-Sketches, now preserved behind plexiglass (let’s hope there’s not an earthquake!); but perhaps most striking for those with long memories is a stained glass window by Stanley Livingston, who played Chip on “My Three Sons.” Bizarrely, there is no photography allowed in the museum (what are they trying to hide?), but if you Google it, you will find some images.

    If you’re interested in visiting – and it is worth the trip if you’re fascinated by the era – plan ahead and make a reservation, as the museum keeps very specific, roaming hours. You’ll be admitted with everyone else approved for the period (two hours) and then set loose to explore. I went with my former newspaper editor (now retired, but he can’t stop writing), Dan Aubrey, and one of his acquaintances. We passed the car trip recalling our favorite Stooges shorts and marveled at just how surreal they could be. For example, we rewatched “Idle Roomers” on one of the museum monitors – that’s the one where the boys get trapped in an elevator with a werewolf – which has one of the great WTF Stooges endings!

    Here’s the website. Have fun figuring it out. Nyuk nyuk nyuk…

    https://stoogeum.com/


  • Tolstoy’s Bach Diss: A Literary Mystery

    Tolstoy’s Bach Diss: A Literary Mystery

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    Last week, while reading Tolstoy’s “The Cossacks,” I was amused to come across this unexpected putdown of J.S. Bach:

    “One evening, the Nogai driver pointed with his whip to the mountains shrouded in clouds. Olenin looked eagerly, but it was dull, and the mountains were almost hidden by the clouds. Olenin made out something grey and white and fleecy, but, try as he would, he could find nothing beautiful in the mountains of which he had so often read and heard. The mountains and clouds appeared to him quite alike, and he thought the special beauty of the snow peaks, of which he had so often been told, was as much an invention as Bach’s music and the love for women, which he did not believe in.”

    Early the next morning, under clear skies, Olenin changes his tune about the Caucasus. Some time later, he falls under the spell of Maryanka, a haughty Cossack beauty. But Tolstoy never does tell us if his protagonist ever softens in his assessment of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach.


  • Smetana’s “Dalibor” US Debut at Bard SummerScape

    Smetana’s “Dalibor” US Debut at Bard SummerScape

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    As something of a preamble to this year’s Bard Music Festival, devoted to the Czech master Bohuslav Martinů (“Martinů and His World,” to be presented at Bard College over two weekends, August 8-10 and 14-17), this year’s Bard SummerFest, now in progress, will offer the U.S. stage debut of Bedřich Smetana’s 1868 opera “Dalibor” in four performances, beginning this weekend at Bard College’s Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, July 25 at 6:30 p.m., July 27 at 2 p.m., July 30 at 2 p.m., and August 1 at 4 p.m.

    If it sounds enticing, but you can’t make it, the July 30 matinee will be available for livestreaming, in real-time, with an encore broadcast on August 2 at 5 p.m. There’s more information at the “Dalibor” link below.

    Smetana is regarded as the father of Czech national music, his immediately identifiable sound an inspiration to Dvořák and those who followed.

    His best-known opera, by far, is “The Bartered Bride,” with its rousing overture and rustic dances. Also, I’ll wager you can’t listen to classical radio for a week without encountering “The Moldau,” the second of the collection of symphonic poems that comprise the composer’s epic patriotic tableau “Ma Vlast” (“My Country”).

    “Dalibor” is very far from “The Bartered Bride.” It’s a drama, for one thing, full of Teutonic iconography: medieval castles, minnesingers, and resourceful damsels. There’s some “Lohengrin” in it, and some “Fidelio.” (The heroine disguises herself as boy in order spring the man she loves from imprisonment.) Having attended performances of Richard Strauss’ “Guntram” and Wagner’s “Tristan und Isolde” in recent weeks, you’d think I’d have had enough of this sort of thing, but no!

    At any rate, Smetana’s music, despite the scenic trappings, is unmistakably Czech to its core. Hey, the Czech lands have their castles too. “Dalibor” was tepidly received at its premiere, but it gained traction following the composer’s death and its significance is now deemed to be considerable among Smetana’s countrymen. Although programmed in Europe, in its early years performed throughout the Austro-Hungarian Empire, by Gustav Mahler, among others, it has yet to make it to these shores.

    It was Bard president and festival artistic co-director Leon Botstein who oversaw the presentation of “Guntram” at Carnegie Hall in June, with the American Symphony Orchestra. Conductor and orchestra will also take part in these performances of “Dalibor.” On top of everything else, Botstein has been music director of the ASO since 1992.

    The production was to have been headlined by the Czech tenor Ladislav Elgr and Polish soprano Izabela Matula, but due to visa issues, some talented Americans have stepped up to address the challenges of learning what must be for them new roles in an uncommon language. Slavic opera is much less frequently encountered here than Italian, German, and French.

    But don’t for a moment think that you’ll be getting shortchanged. I was at the performance of “Guntram” at Carnegie, featuring tenor John Matthew Myers, and I can attest that anyone who attends “Dalibor” will be in for a real treat. This guy has a clarion voice, with a warm, radiant tone, guaranteed to fill the entire house. Soprano Cadie J. Bryan is unfamiliar to me, but she has received praise for her radiance and vocal luster. I’m very much looking forward to hearing her as Mlada. Glancing through the rest of the cast, I also recognize bass-baritone Alfred Walker, another Botstein favorite (among other things, he sang the title role in Bard’s production of Saint-Saens’ “Henri VIII”). He’ll return as King Vladislav.

    The stage director is Jean-Romain Vespirini (also the director of “Henri VIII”). There are two endings to the work, both of them tragic. Which one will be used?

    Botstein and Bard are all about resurrecting unusual and neglected repertoire. Other rarely-encountered operas revived at Bard include Ernest Chausson’s “Le roi Arthus,” Dvořák’s “Dmitrij,” Korngold’s “Das Wunder der Heliane,” Meyerbeer’s “La prophète,” Anton Rubinstein’s “Demon,” and Ethel Smyth’s “The Wreckers,” among many others.

    For anyone in search of a little respite from Puccini, Verdi, Wagner, Mozart, and the four or five others who dominate the world’s opera houses, Bard’s offerings are like manna in a desert of seemingly endless repetition.


    Smetana’s “Dalibor” at Bard SummerScape

    https://fishercenter.bard.edu/events/dalibor/

    Bard Music Festival, “Martinu and His World”

    Bard Music Festival

    Some of the past Bard operas are available for streaming here

    SummerScape Opera in HD

    Fisher Center at Bard


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