• Sci-Fi Music with Pianist Hugh Sung

    Sci-Fi Music with Pianist Hugh Sung

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    You might assume that, having been involved in classical music radio and journalism for nearly 40 years, I was the one to invite pianist Hugh Sung to join us tonight on Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. After all, Hugh was born and bred in Philadelphia (where I lived for 32 years) and attended the Curtis Institute of Music (for much of that period, one of my regular hang-outs). Not long after graduation, Hugh joined the Curtis faculty.

    Over the years, I have broadcast many of his recordings (he’s accompanied just about everyone, from Julius Baker and Aaron Rosand to Hilary Hahn and Leila Josefowicz), from physical media in station libraries and my own collection, while Hugh, unbeknownst to me, pursued a parallel career in technological innovation as it relates to classical music and its performance.

    He co-founded AirTurn, a company revolutionizing digital sheet music with hands-free page-turning pedals, and joined ArtistWorks, where he teaches students worldwide through a video exchange system. In the corporeal world, he serves as Vice President of Cunningham Piano Company.

    So yeah, taking all that into account, you might think I was the one who lassoed him. However, it was actually Roy who booked him, as, on top of everything else, Hugh is the music director at Roy’s church!

    More to the point, Hugh happens to be a huge sci-fi fan. So he’s going to join us tonight to talk about science fiction and music, which I’m sure will lead to a lively discussion of some of our favorite genre film and television scores.

    Whether it be Brahms or Borgs, one way or another, we’ll be geeking-out, when Hugh Sung beams in to “Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner.” The conversation will be livestreamed on Facebook, YouTube, etc., this Sunday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

    For just a taste, Hugh talks about sci-fi pianos on this video produced for Cunningham Piano Company:


  • Remembering Ronald Corp British Light Music Champion

    Remembering Ronald Corp British Light Music Champion

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    Although I was certainly familiar with the work of Eric Coates and Albert Ketèlbey, it was Ronald Corp, more than anyone, who introduced me to the wider world of British Light Music, a genre he championed on four albums released on the Hyperion Records label. After all, as an American, how else was I supposed to hear this stuff? This is music of a type that was once played on English radio, in department stores, and by palm court orchestras – by design, undemanding, uplifting, and insistently memorable.

    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” we remember – and celebrate – Corp, who died on May 7 at the age of 74. We’ll hear light music classics by Robert Farnon, Clive Richardson, Edmund White, Cecil Armstrong Gibbs, Charles Williams, Ronald Binge, and Trevor Duncan. I imagine generations of Americans might be surprised to learn that one of the pieces was borrowed by children’s show host Bob Keeshan for the theme to his television program “Captain Kangaroo!”

    Corp was also an enthusiast of, at best, dimly-recollected English musical comedies dating back to the time of Arthur Sullivan. We’ll hear selections from two of these, Sidney Jones’ “The Geisha” and Harold Fraser-Simson’s “The Maid of the Mountains.”

    I’m only sorry I had to cut out so much from this morning’s program. I got a little carried away, between selecting music and my own spoken contributions, and I wound up having to trim a good 15 or 20 minutes off the show! (Alas, Arthur Sullivan’s pre-W.S. Gilbert opera, “The Contrabandista,” had to be jettisoned to the cutting room floor.)

    Corp was also a composer himself, and an Anglican priest! He recorded much else besides, including albums devoted to European and American Light Music classics; also more substantial – some would say “more serious” – fare. Most of these were issued on Hyperion and Dutton Vocalion Records.

    Personally, I feel like I owe Corp a lot, as it only occurs to me now, that he was probably the single greatest influence on my creation of this show. Now I wish there were some way I could tell him.

    Music of this sort is often deceptively simple – breezy, carefree, a tad sentimental, and fun – but it takes a special talent to be able to craft miniature masterpieces that, at their best, satisfy through ingratiating melody, imaginative color, and evocative mood.

    We’ll trip the light fantastic with light music recordings of Ronald Corp, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    Stream it wherever you are at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/


  • TV Composers Beyond the Screen Concert Music Gems

    TV Composers Beyond the Screen Concert Music Gems

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    This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll have concert works by composers who achieved notable success writing for television.

    Bruce Broughton enjoyed early success in the movies with his score for “Silverado” (for which he received an Academy Award nomination). But already he’d been active in television for over a decade. While he continued to write music for feature films, it was for music for the small screen that he achieved his greatest recognition. He’s won ten Emmy Awards in all (of 20 nominations), for his work on documentaries, miniseries, television movies, and episodic TV, on series such as “Dallas” and “Buck Rogers in the 25th Century.” Broughton has also been active in the worlds of concert and band music, in particular composing a fair amount of music for brass. Today, we’ll take the opportunity to enjoy his Tuba Sonata.

    Jack Marshall was a session musician, an arranger, and a producer for Capitol Records. He composed the score for the Robert Mitchum cult classic “Thunder Road,” but it’s really his music for “The Munsters” that everyone knows. We’ll hear Marshall’s “Essay for Guitar,” performed by his cousin, Christopher Parkening.

    While Lee Holdridge wrote music for many films over the years, including “Splash,” “Mr. Mom,” and “The Beastmaster,” it was in the field of television, as an 18-time Emmy nominee, that he’s really mopped-up. (He’s won seven: two Primetime, two Daytime, two News and Documentary, and one Sports.) But my favorite piece of his is his Korngoldian Violin Concerto No. 2, which really goes for the heart. We’ll hear a recording with longtime New York Philharmonic concertmaster Glenn Dicterow.

    Finally, Lalo Schifrin composed influential scores for films like “Bullitt” and “Dirty Harry,” but his distinctive brand of urban cool, marked by jazz, blues, and wah-pedal guitars, also graced television shows like “Mannix” and “Starsky and Hutch.” Schifrin’s also written his share of concert music, but in the time remaining, it is a fantasy for flutes on the composer’s immortal “Mission: Impossible” theme by Mark Lathan that we’ll hear.

    Television composers think outside the box this week, on “TV or Not TV,” on “The Lost 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/


  • Mars Movies Soundtracks Space and Cinema

    Mars Movies Soundtracks Space and Cinema

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    Remember when going to Mars was fiction? Me too, and I’d like to keep it that way! This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll be seeing red, as we’re off to visit the fourth planet – or are we?

    “Capricorn One” (1978) posits, in true conspiracy theory fashion, that the first manned mission to Mars is a fabrication, filmed on a sound stage. However, when the actual capsule burns up upon re-entry into the earth’s atmosphere, the government attempts to cover it up, and the astronauts are sent scrambling for their lives. This is the film in which O.J. Simpson eats a rattlesnake. The cast also includes Elliott Gould, James Brolin, Sam Waterston, Hal Holbrook, and Karen Black. Jerry Goldsmith wrote the propulsive score.

    The Red Planet is also the destination of the crew of Mars Gravity Probe 1, in “Robinson Crusoe on Mars” (1964). In events which loosely parallel the trajectory of Daniel Defoe’s classic novel, commander Paul Mantee survives a crash on the seemingly desolate planet, along with the mission’s test monkey. Later, he develops a friendship with an escaped alien slave, whom he names Friday. The composer is Van Cleave.

    Van Cleave had much in common with Ferde Grofé. Yes, THE Ferde Grofé – he of “The Grand Canyon Suite.” You’ll recall Grofé acted as an orchestrator for the Paul Whiteman Band. His most celebrated achievement in that capacity was his arrangement of George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue.”

    Cleave had also served as an arranger for Whiteman. Later, he pioneered the use of the theremin in his television scores, for series like “The Twilight Zone.”

    It was Grofé who allegedly introduced the theremin to outer space, with his music for “Rocketship X-M” (1950). “Rocketship X-M’s” unlikely premise is that the spacecraft of the title overshoots its target, the moon, and inadvertently ends up on Mars – a difference of many, many, many millions of miles! Lloyd Bridges heads the cast.

    Sadly, “John Carter” (2012), Walt Disney’s long-overdue adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Martian tales, was branded a colossal flop. It’s a sad state of affairs when a 300 million dollar take is considered a disappointment! Though the film failed to live up to box office expectations, and some of the tropes established by Burroughs 100 years ago seem a little overly-familiar in the decades since the release of “Star Wars,” “John Carter” was nowhere near as bad as one was led to believe. It was certainly no worse than any other film of its kind made in recent years, and in fact a good deal better than many. And I would include in that assessment any of the recent Tolkien adaptations.

    True, most of the potential magic is lost in the usual over-reliance on computer effects, and the screenplay makes some unnecessary alterations to the books. But all in all, “John Carter” is a satisfying Martian adventure. Edgar Rice Burroughs never aspired to be Joseph Conrad. The film’s epic, evocative score is by Michael Giacchino.

    Red is the new black, with music from movies about the fourth planet. Mars is our destination – whether by design, by accident, by conspiracy, or by unexplained means – on “Picture Perfect,” music for 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/


  • Philly Lunch with Musicians & Romeo Cascarino’s Music

    Philly Lunch with Musicians & Romeo Cascarino’s Music

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    The weather outside may have been frightful – and the commute somewhat problematic – but I was privileged yesterday to enjoy a most convivial lunch at Sansom Street Oyster House in Philadelphia with Dolores Cascarino and Bruce Hodges.

    Dolores, a soprano who often performs under her maiden name, Ferraro, was married to composer Romeo Cascarino, whose music she indefatigably champions (most recently producing a lovely recording of his songs). Bruce is a prolific music writer, whose work has appeared in publications such as the Juilliard Journal, Playbill, The Strad, Overtones (the magazine of the Curtis Institute of Music), and WRTI’s Fanfare (accessible online).

    Prosecco and conversation flowed copiously, as we shared an appetizer of grilled oysters. Dolores ordered the lobster roll and fries and Bruce and I enjoyed the gumbo special. For dessert: butterscotch pudding for Dolores (much better than it sounds!), cantaloupe sorbet for Bruce, and honey cake with whipped cream and cherry for me, with La Colombe coffee all around.

    Is it any wonder that I was so uncharacteristically chatty? Two hours of sunshine on a rainy day. Thanks to Dolores and Bruce!


    The recent release of Romeo Cascarino’s “Pathways of Love” is available as a digital download from all the usual sources. You can sample it, with soprano Jessica Beebe, here:

    A selection of Bruce Hodges’ articles for WRTI:

    https://www.wrti.org/people/bruce-hodges


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