• Cinco de Mayo: How Mexico Saved the U.S.

    Cinco de Mayo: How Mexico Saved the U.S.

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    On May 5, 1862, the Mexican army routed superior French forces at the Battle of Puebla, in the process quite possibly saving the United States’ bacon.

    You see, Napoleon III was not entirely unaware of a little something raging here in the U.S. called the Civil War. It was Napoleon’s idea that by moving in while the union was compromised, he might be able to strike an alliance with the Confederacy and further advance French interests in North America. If not for the events of Cinco de Mayo, we could all be wearing berets right now and saying things like “mais oui.”

    Mexico’s underdog victory at Puebla postponed the French advance for an entire year, plenty of time for Lincoln’s generals to score enough decisive victories that no matter what Napoleon’s designs, they likely would have had very little impact on the outcome of the War Between the States.

    Since Mexico’s historic upset, acquisitive European forces have thought twice before attempting to invade any country in the Americas. So be sure to hoist a margarita to our brothers and sisters to the south.

    I’ll be adding tequila to my coffee and nachos to my oatmeal for Cinco de Mayo!

    ¡Viva México!


    “Sones de Mariachi” by Blas Galindo

    “Xochipilli” by Carlos Chavez, composed for MoMA to showcase pre-Columbian Aztec instruments

    Segovia plays “Sonata Mexicana” by Manuel Ponce

    “The Night of the Mayas” by Silvestre Revueltas

    An encore by Revueltas, “Ocho por radio”

    “Huapango” by José Pablo Moncayo

    I love how YouTube assumes that since I am clicking on videos of Mexican music that my ads should now be in Spanish. Mayo my!


  • Producing a Light Music Radio Show

    Producing a Light Music Radio Show

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    You might think, bon vivant that I am, that a light music show would be something I can simply toss off, but “Sweetness and Light” is actually the most difficult of my three shows to produce. Even though the repertoire can often be a little on the frivolous side (by design), with so many recordings played in an hour, there are a lot of moving parts.

    First, I have to settle on a theme. That’s by far the easiest. Then I have to figure out what to play. Even within a theme, I want to keep it diverse, and I want the pieces to be of different lengths, so that, musically, it’s pleasing to listen to, and I’m not breaking in with chatter every three minutes. It’s possible to play six or seven pieces an hour on a well-constructed show and to plan everything so as to keep the talk fairly unobtrusive. By extension, the musical selections often have to be shuffled until I feel I’ve achieved the optimal sequence. In the end, I always wind up with a lot of extra material, and plenty to reshelve, hopefully to remember for another time.

    One of the great frustrations of brainstorming repertoire can be turning things up through searches on the internet, falling in love with a certain performance or a piece of music, and realizing that not only do I not have it in my collection, but discovering that it doesn’t seem to be available anywhere as a digital download. Perhaps it was only ever issued on vinyl, decades ago, in another country. C’est la vie! In the end, I just have to let it go, with a touch of regret and the understanding that my listeners will never know what they missed. But it is none the easier for that!

    On the bright side, I sometimes turn up related gems that I had no idea ever existed. Putting together a show about birds and birdsong took me to some pretty stratospheric places. Listen to this 1959 recording of the “Nightingale Waltz” from Carl Zeller’s operetta “Der Vogelhändler” (“The Bird Seller”), with Belgian soprano Lise Rollan – totally new to me, and totally unavailable as a download – and you’ll understand why I fell instantly in love.

    It was hard for me to give up the search, but in the end, I had to “settle” for the considerable charms of Elisabeth Schumann.

    If you liked that, perhaps you will enjoy this 1938 film, “Nanon,” with “the German Nightingale,” lyric coloratura soprano Erna Sack. Another happy discovery.

    Thankfully, a love for music is a lifelong passion that is never truly spent!


  • Avian Music Playlist Sweetness and Light KWAX

    Avian Music Playlist Sweetness and Light KWAX

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    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” I’ve assembled a playlist of avian music for the month of May.

    Yes, yes, I’ve programmed Ottorino Respighi’s “The Birds,” his evergreen suite for small orchestra based on musical bird portraits of the 17th and 18th centuries, and Handel’s Organ Concerto in F major, “The Cuckoo and the Nightingale.”

    But I’ve also included a lesser-heard selection by Hubert Parry, from his incidental music for Aristophanes’ “The Birds,” a bridal march revived for the weddings of both Princess Elizabeth (soon to be Elizabeth II) and Prince William; a piece of light music kitsch juxtaposing bird song and chanting monks by Albert Ketèlbey; and a galop by Danish composer Hans Christian Lumbye, the Johann Strauss of the North, celebrating the exotic birds of the Tivoli Volière.

    Finally, it’s very much my pleasure to have dusted off some vintage recordings of Elisabeth Schumann (whose hobby it was to engage in bird-whistling) and John McCormack, who will sing works by Carl Zeller and Eric Coates, respectively.

    Better start lining the cage with newspaper. It’s “For the Birds” this week 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/


  • Swedish Spring Music on The Lost Chord

    Swedish Spring Music on The Lost Chord

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    This week on “The Lost Chord,” we focus on “The Virgin Spring.” No, not the Bergman film, in which Max von Sydow exacts terrible vengeance on those who… well, nevermind. See the movie.

    Anyway, the show’s not about that. The spring in the film is a body of water, a symbol of rebirth and renewal. But we’re using “spring” in the purely seasonal sense, as we enjoy an hour of vernal expressions by Swedish composers.

    We’ll hear Gunnar de Frumerie’s “Pastoral Suite” and two works by Wilhelm Peterson-Berger: Book III from “Flowers of Frösö” and the “Earina Suite.” “Earina,” derived from the Greek “earinos,” meaning “spring-like,” according to the composer, conjures a world of “cult deeds and magic rites… belonging to some undefined natural religion.”

    Nobody does spring quite like the Swedes. I hope you’ll join me for an hour of well-seasoned music, 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/


  • Kurosawa Film Music Seven Samurai & More

    Kurosawa Film Music Seven Samurai & More

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    This week on “Picture Perfect,” carve out some time for music from the films of Akira Kurosawa. We’ll hear selections from three historical classics by the influential Japanese director.

    “Seven Samurai” (1954) concerns a band of ronin who come together to defend a farmers’ village against invading brigands. The simplicity of that synopsis doesn’t begin to hint at what a marvelous achievement it really is. In fact, “Seven Samurai” is regularly included on lists of the greatest films of all time. It was remade in the United States as “The Magnificent Seven.” And though “The Magnificent Seven” enjoys great popularity, a terrific cast, and an unforgettable film score by Elmer Bernstein, the movie itself stands only knee-high to the original. The music is by Fumio Hayazaka.

    “Seven Samurai” was Kurosawa’s first, full-out samurai film, but a samurai does feature as one of the characters in his earlier, break-out international hit, “Rashomon” (1950). In this instance, the discovery of a murdered samurai leads to a series of courtroom-style examinations, during which everyone present at the killing gives his or her own account of what transpired – including (through a medium) the murdered man himself! The conflicting testimonies reveal the slippery subjectivity of what we understand as “truth.” The film, the first from Japan to receive wide exposure abroad, had such an impact that the term “Rashomon effect” entered the English language.

    Kurosawa had great respect not only for American movies, but also Western classical music. This led him, on occasion, to request of his composers that they emulate certain well-known pieces. In the case of “Rashomon,” Hayazaka was encouraged, during one of the segments, to channel Ravel’s “Bolero.” “Rashomon” was remade as, among other things, “The Outrage,” a middling western starring Paul Newman.

    Masura Sato sought out Hayazaka as a teacher on the merits of his music for “Rashomon.” Following his master’s early death from tuberculosis at the age of 41, Sato stepped in to fill the void as Kurosawa’s composer of choice. Sato would score eight of Kurosawa’s films (his first, a completion of Hayazaka’s score for “Record of a Living Being”). He too could be called upon to conjure the spirit of Western composers, with the ghost of Verdi hovering over “Throne of Blood,” Haydn and Brahms coloring “Red Beard,” and in the case of “Yojimbo” (1961), Franz Liszt lending attitude to masterless samurai Toshiro Mifune, who wanders into a remote town and sets about playing two rival families off one another to his own profit.

    “Yojimbo” provided the basis for the first of Sergio Leone’s spaghetti westerns, “A Fistful of Dollars.” What’s interesting about that is not only Leone’s reliance on the scene-by-scene structure of the plot, but also that its composer, Ennio Morricone, emulated the kind of goofy juxtapositions and unexpected orchestrations used by Sato in the original film. Kurosawa himself was inspired by the western tropes of John Ford movies and the pulp fiction of Dashiell Hammett.

    As a bonus, I will include just a little music from one of my least favorite Kurosawa films (beside “Rhapsody in August”), “Dodes’kaden” (1970). “Dodes’kaden” marked a break with Kurosawa’s classic style. It was his first film shot in color, for one thing – truly lurid Technicolor – and the first made after his break with Mifune (who was brilliant in “Rashomon,” “Seven Samurai” and “Yojimbo,” among others). The title can be translated, roughly, as “clickety-clack,” the sound of an imaginary trolley car in the fantasy world of a mentally-challenged boy who literally lives in a dump. Though it earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Film, its commercial failure drove Kurosawa into a deep depression and even to attempted suicide.

    For as much as I personally dislike the film, the composer of its soundtrack, Toru Takemitsu is regarded as one of Japan’s most important classical concert composers. Interestingly, like Sato, Takemitsu was a protégé of Kurosawa’s friend and frequent colleague, Fumio Hayazaka.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of Kurosawa classics (AND “Dodes’kaden”), 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/


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