I’ve been too busy to concentrate on posting today. But it is summer. Remember to take some time for yourself and enjoy some “Midsummer Ale.”
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Summer Self-Care Enjoying Midsummer Ale

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Kurt Schwertsik Birthday Celebration

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Even if Erik Satie had never claimed the mantle of “Velvet Gentleman,” there would still be Kurt Schwertsik. Schwertsik, impish and dandified on the one occasion I met him (pictured, right), was born in Vienna on this date, 90 years ago.
A pupil of both Joseph Marx – a self-professed romantic of rather conservative bent – and avant-garde icon Karlheinz Stockhausen, Schwertsik was a founding member of the so-called Third Viennese School. He also co-founded the ensembles die reihe (the series), with Friedrich Cerha, the composer who completed Alban Berg’s “Lulu,” and MOB art and Tone ART, with his friend HK Gruber. (All uses of upper and lower case are Schwertsik’s. Clearly, he is rather loose in his application of the shift key!)
In addition, he played horn with the Vienna Symphony, and taught at the Vienna Conservatory and Vienna Musikhochschule.
Schwertsik’s music is frequently characterized by irony and humor, and invariably rooted in melody and tonality.
I had the privilege to interview him during a concert held at Austrian Cultural Forum New York in March 2012. The Aron Quartett performed his “skizzen und entwürfe” (“sketches and drawings”), from 1974, and a Schwertsik world premiere, “Lammersammlung” (“Song Collection”), which had been commissioned for the occasion. Also on the program were works by Erich Zeisl and Erich Wolfgang Korngold.
Schwertsik, sporting Freudian beard and spectacles, was all smiles, and rather dapper, in cravat and red velvet jacket. He exuded much charm and held the audience in the palm of his hand.
By the time of our meeting, his “Dracula’s House-and-Court Music” had already become a staple of my Halloween programming, just as I try to include his Strauss tribute, “Vienna Chronicles 1848,” in my playlists around New Year’s. Neither piece is posted on YouTube.
Here’s one that’s new to me, “Adieu Satie,” for bandoneon and string quartet:
“Conversation Piece” for guitar and marimba:
“Drei späte Liebeslieder” (“Three Late Love Songs”) for cello and piano:
Happy birthday, Kurt Schwertsik!
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Terry Riley Turns 90 Minimalist Music Pioneer

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Terry Riley is 90-years-old today.
Riley’s music may not be everyone’s cup of “tea” (or cannabis, as the case may be), but there’s no denying his influence on the development of Minimalism, progressive rock, and the avant-garde.
Riley himself has acknowledged his debt to Indian singer Pran Nath. The composer made a number of trips to India to study with and accompany Nath. He returned to share his experiences, teaching Indian classical music at Mills College. Riley has also cited the influence of John Cage and contemporary jazz artists, such as John Coltrane, Miles Davis, and Bill Evans.
Already in the 1950s, Riley began experimenting with looped tape and time-lag techniques. He also composed using just intonation and microtones. His electronic album “A Rainbow in Curved Air” (released in 1969) became something of a landmark, attracting musicians from across a variety of genres.
Riley’s best-known work is probably “In C,” often credited as the first widely-acknowledged Minimalist composition. The piece was given its premiere at the San Francisco Tape Music Center in 1964, by an ensemble that included Steve Reich, Jon Gibson, Pauline Oliveros, Stuart Dempster, and Morton Subotnick, among others.
Much ink has been spilled – and acid dropped – over Riley’s music.
Happy birthday, Terry Riley!
Vibrant performance of hypnotic “In C”
Landmark Columbia Records release
“A Rainbow in Curved Air”
Riley at Holland Festival, with interview, 1977
Riley’s trippy website
Recent advice from the composer. Terry looking great at 87.
Like that? Here’s more.
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Disney’s “Fantasia” Wrong About Walpurgis Night

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In Walt Disney’s “Fantasia,” the narrator, Deems Taylor, sets the film’s childhood-scarring climax on Walpurgis Night. Deems Taylor was wrong!
It’s actually tonight, St. John’s Eve, that the Slavic demon Chernobog emerges from the “Bare Mountain” (the translation preferred by Leopold Stokowski). For sure, there should be plenty of nudity on a good old-fashioned St. John’s Eve. And Disney obliges with bare-breasted harpies!
St. John’s Day holds a place on the Christian calendar akin to that of Christmas, in that it coincides, roughly (thanks to miscalculation by the Romans), with solstice time. For the pagan North, summer began on May Day. Midsummer was originally a pagan festival, which was co-opted by the Church into the observance of the birth of John the Baptist, which St. Luke implies took place six months before that of Jesus.
So while the actual summer solstice might occur anytime between June 20 and June 22, depending on the year, June 24 was designated the Feast Day of St. John.
St. John’s Eve is a time for leaping over bonfires. Doing so was believed to ensure prosperity and good luck. The bigger the fire, the further at bay were kept evil spirits. The further the evil spirits, the better the guarantee of a good harvest. If you didn’t light a bonfire… well, it was as good as tempting fate to burn your house down. It’s a time when dragons roam the earth, as the sun again pursues a southerly course. And it’s a time when witches are believed to rendezvous with powerful forces, such as Chernobog.
The idea for Modest Mussorgsky’s famous musical picture “A Night on Bald Mountain” haunted him for his entire creative life. In 1858, while still in his teens, he planned to write an opera on the subject of Nikolai Gogol’s short story, “St. John’s Eve.” A couple of years later, in 1860, he toyed with another projected opera called “The Witch.” Not long after, according to Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, he wrote a diabolical piece for piano and orchestra under the influence of Franz Liszt’s “Totentanz.” If it was so, it has not survived.
It wasn’t until 1867 that Mussorgsky reconfigured the idea as an orchestral piece, “St. John’s Eve on Bald Mountain.” He began to compose it on June 12. He finished it on June 23 – ACTUALLY ON ST. JOHN’S EVE. Mussorgsky was ecstatic finally to have completed it. Then he showed it to his mentor, Mily Balakirev, who savaged it. The composer, no doubt ashamed, put it aside. This version of “A Night on Bald Mountain” would not be published until 1968.
Mussorgsky may have been cowed by Balakirev, but he was not done with his dream of a witches’ sabbath. In 1872, he revised and recast the material for vocal soloists, chorus, and orchestra, as part of Act III of the opera-ballet “Mlada,” a collaborative effort undertaken with his “Mighty Handful” fellows, Rimsky-Korsakov, Alexander Borodin, and César Cui. In this new version the music was to form the basis of the “Night on Mount Triglav” scene. Mussorgsky now referred to the piece as “Glorification of Chernobog.”
Unfortunately, the “Mlada” project foundered, and again “Bald Mountain” sank into oblivion. “Glorification of Chernobog” was never published or performed and this version is now lost.
Mussorgsky took one more crack at it, as “Dream Vision of the Peasant Lad,” designed to serve as an intermezzo in his opera “Sorochyntsi Fair,” begun in 1874. He went back to the short story “St. John’s Eve,” from Gogol’s book “Evenings on a Farm Near Dikanka.” The collection, steeped in Ukrainian lore, also proved to be a fount of inspiration for Tchaikovsky, Rimsky-Korsakov, and others. If you can find an edition coupled with Gogol’s “Mirgorod” (which includes “Taras Bulba” and “Vij”), all the better.
Alas, the opera was left incomplete when Mussorgsky drank himself to death in 1881. There are at least five performing editions of the work, completed by other hands. Sadly, Mussorgsky NEVER HEARD “A Night on Bald Mountain,” in any of its versions, in his lifetime. How’s that for a sucker punch?
I’ve got the Sorochyntsi incarnation all cued up to the relevant passage at the link. If you’re interested in hearing the rest of the opera, you can drag the audio bar back to the beginning with your cursor.
For many years, this was the standard version, edited and orchestrated by Rimsky-Korsakov.
Disney is notoriously vigilant about guarding its content, but you can view the “Fantasia” segment here, the video posted for educational purposes. In the film, Mussorgsky’s music is heard in Stokowski’s orchestration.
With heat index values around here projected to push 110 through Wednesday, the idea of dancing around a bonfire is not exactly at the top of my list. On the other hand, at least I wouldn’t have to worry about catching a chill on the Bare Mountain.
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Lost Music Treasures Florence Smithson’s Charm

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Yesterday, I was all set to post something fun for a Sunday morning, but now everything feels rather ominous. I’m hoping that’s thunder I’m hearing on this grim, overcast morning. How many times do we have to adjust to just how horrible everything is, only for it to get worse?
But life goes on, at least for the time being. And there’s something to be said for escapism. What is art, after all (or at least the art I choose to embrace), but the pursuit of beauty, order, and affirmation of the better parts of ourselves.
In preparation for yesterday’s broadcast of one of my radio shows, “Sweetness and Light,” I constructed a playlist around the theme of summer reading. One of the candidates, which would have been a shoe-in, was this recording, by Florence Smithson, of Sophie’s Waltz Song (“For Tonight”) from Edward German’s operetta after Henry Fielding’s “Tom Jones.” I fell totally in love with it and was crestfallen not to be able to locate it anywhere as a digital download. The few recordings I could find all left me cold – Joan Sutherland may have been a fabulous singer, but her version lacks the charm, personality, and diction Smithson conveys in her recording, made all the way back in 1912. Since the few modern recordings I could find all paled in comparison, I had to settle for an orchestral arrangement by Ernest Tomlinson.
This is not the first time I’ve fallen in love with a recording, only to discover it never made it to CD. So much is lost every time we change formats. Let this be a lesson to you, folks. Hang on to your physical media!
Florence Smithson, beguiling in 1912
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