Tag: Ancient Rome

  • Ides of March Ancient Rome in the Movies

    Ides of March Ancient Rome in the Movies

    Beware the Ides of March!

    March 15th is a day that has lived in infamy and superstition, ever since the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 B.C. After declaring himself Dictator for Life, Caesar was set upon by members of the Roman Senate and stabbed 23 times.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” toga is the dressing of choice for a Caesar salad of films set in Ancient Rome.

    We’ll begin with Joseph L. Mankiewicz’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar” (1953). A two-time double Oscar winner, Mankiewicz – who won back-to-back Academy Awards for writing and directing “A Letter to Three Wives” in 1949 and “All About Eve” in 1950 – wrote and directed this big screen version of the Bard’s historical drama, which was produced by John Houseman, and features an all-star cast, including Marlon Brando as Mark Antony, James Mason as Brutus, John Gielgud as Cassius, and Louis Calhern as Caesar.

    The music is by MGM’s go-to composer for spectacles of this sort, Miklós Rózsa, who had earlier provided the score for “Quo Vadis,” and would go on to win his third Academy Award for “Ben-Hur.”

    Ten years later, Mankiewicz would return to Rome, at least in part, for “Cleopatra” (1963), though it was a decision he would come to rue. For budgetary and interpersonal reasons, “Cleopatra” became a nightmarish experience for practically everyone involved. Although a box office success – the year’s highest grossing release – the film achieved the dubious distinction of becoming the most expensive ever made. Its massive cost overruns and production woes nearly bankrupted 20th Century Fox.

    “Cleopatra” stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, whose scandalous, extra-marital romance caught fire during the making of the film. Despite the behind-the-scenes drama, both film and score were nominated for Academy Awards, as was Rex Harrison for Best Actor, in the role of Julius Caesar.

    Alex North, who had written the highly-regarded music for “Spartacus” three years earlier, follows up on his success with another one of his finest scores.

    By contrast, the Pax Romana was an era of relative peace and stability. It spanned two centuries, from the reign of Augustus Caesar to the death of Marcus Aurelius. The movies would have us believe that Marcus was the victim of foul play, murdered by his son Commodus. Hollywood never did let history get in the way of a good story!

    Joaquin Phoenix plays Commodus in “Gladiator” (2000), something of a missed opportunity, with a dream cast, including Russell Crowe, Richard Harris, Derek Jacobi, and Oliver Reed. Alas, it gave most of its over-qualified supporting players very little to do.

    More damningly, the visual storytelling was marred by the over-use of shaky handheld cameras and an over-reliance on computer generated imagery, supplanting the traditional – though likely prohibitive – lavish sets and cast-of-thousands. Even so, the film was honored with five Academy Awards, including that for Best Picture.

    One of those Oscars went to Hans Zimmer for his score, though the music is not without controversy. As is often the case with this composer, Zimmer was heavily assisted by a lot of under-credited hands, who appear in fine print in the soundtrack’s CD booklet. Also, one of the battle scenes adheres so closely to “Mars, the Bringer of War” that Zimmer was actually sued by the Holst Foundation. That said, the score was tremendously popular, and the soundtrack remains one of the best-selling of all time.

    One of my biggest beefs with “Gladiator” is that, although never acknowledged as a remake, it essentially lifts most of its plot from “The Fall of the Roman Empire” (1964). Anthony Mann directed the old school sword-and-sandal epic, which stars Sophia Loren, Stephen Boyd, Alec Guinness, and James Mason. On this occasion, Christopher Plummer plays mad Commodus.

    The grandiose score is by Dimitri Tiomkin, who conducted a 110 piece orchestra, made up of (as advertised) “England’s finest musicians.” Only Tiomkin, a pupil of Alexander Glazunov, would include balalaikas in a score about Ancient Rome.

    Watch your back! Rome wasn’t built in a day. It falls in an hour this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Remember, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for those of you listening in the East. Here are the respective air-times for all three of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday on KWAX at 5:00 PM PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EASTERN)

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday on KWAX at 8:00 AM PACIFIC TIME (11:00 AM EASTERN)

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday on KWAX at 4:00 PM PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EASTERN)

    Stream all three, at the times indicated, by following the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Saturnalia Ancient Roman Holiday & Playlist

    Saturnalia Ancient Roman Holiday & Playlist

    December 17. Io Saturnalia!

    In keeping with winter solstice tradition, it is a day to visit friends and bear gifts, especially candles. Schools are closed. Courts are not in session. Oh yeah, there’s also a sacrifice to Kronos (a.k.a. Saturn) and a riotous feast with benefits.

    On this most popular holiday to emerge from Ancient Rome, the social order is inverted and strictures are loosened. Slaves are served by their masters. Gambling is permitted in public. There is drinking, noise, mirth, and wantonness. The populace is showered with figs, nuts, and dates, women fight in the arena, and cranes are hunted by dwarfs. In short, it’s an old-fashioned Christmas, before there was even such a thing as Christmas. Hey, if the Flintstones can celebrate the birth of Jesus, why not?

    In the interest of converting rather than alienating, Christianity kept the candles, but frowned on the orgies, or at least looked the other way. But Saturnalia traditions continued to be practiced down the centuries, as evidenced in the medieval Feast of Fools, in the Victorian revival of gift-giving, in the lighting of candles, and in the eating, drinking, singing, and dancing.

    Saturnalia, at its peak, was practiced through December 23. Wishing you and yours a merry one!


    I think classical music is still waiting for its great Saturnalia piece. However, here’s a game attempt at assembling a playlist, to set the mood as you prepare the table for Saturn.

    Anthony O’Toole, “Saturnalia”

    Paul Büttner, “Saturnalia”

    David W. Solomons, “Io! Saturnalia” (instrumental version)

    Adam Torkelson, “Grapes en Saturnalia”

    Caspar Diethelm, Symphonic Suite “Saturnalia”

    Aram Khachaturian, “Spartacus,” Act II, scene 1: “Saturnalia”

    Lou Harrison, “Solstice”: “Saturnalia”

    Robert W. Butts, “Saturnalia Strings”

    I appreciate the efforts, but none of them hold a candle to John Ireland’s “Satyricon Overture”

  • Saturnalia Ancient Rome’s Wild Winter Festival

    Saturnalia Ancient Rome’s Wild Winter Festival

    December 17. Io Saturnalia!

    In keeping with winter solstice tradition, it is a day to visit friends and bear gifts, especially candles. Schools are closed. Courts are not in session. Oh yeah, there’s also a sacrifice to Kronos (a.k.a. Saturn) and a riotous feast with benefits.

    On this most popular holiday to emerge from Ancient Rome, the social order is inverted and strictures are loosened. Slaves are served by their masters. Gambling is permitted in public. There is drinking, noise, mirth, and wantonness. The populace is showered with figs, nuts, and dates, women fight in the arena, and cranes are hunted by dwarfs. In short, it’s an old-fashioned Christmas, before there was even such a thing as Christmas. Hey, if the Flintstones can celebrate the birth of Jesus, why not?

    In the interest of converting rather than alienating, Christianity kept the candles, but frowned on the orgies, or at least looked the other way. But Saturnalia traditions continued to be practiced down the centuries, as evidenced in the medieval Feast of Fools, in the Victorian revival of gift-giving, in the lighting of candles, and in the eating, drinking, singing, and dancing.

    Saturnalia, at its peak, was practiced through December 23. Wishing you and yours a merry one!


    As you set the table for Saturn, here’s John Ireland’s “Satyricon Overture:”

  • Ides of March Music from Rome & Ireland

    Ides of March Music from Rome & Ireland

    It is with a mix of revulsion and admiration that Julius Caesar regarded the Celts, whom he referred to as “Galli,” or barbarians. For their savagery in battle, the Britons were a race that demanded a certain level of respect. Ironically, it would be Caesar’s own senate that would murder him on this date in 44 B.C.

    Join me this afternoon on The Classical Network, as the Ides of March meet St. Patrick’s Day. We’ll hear a fair amount of music inspired by Ancient Rome and the Emerald Isle. I’ll also mark the birthdays today of Karl Davidoff, Nicholas Flagello, Johan Halvorsen, Ben Johnston, Colin McPhee, and Eduard Strauss.

    Our Noontime Concert will be devoted to the Guild for Early Music. The Guild will present its 14th annual Early Music Festival at Grounds For Sculpture in Hamilton, NJ, on Sunday, March 24. An afternoon of mini-concerts of Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, and Early American music will be performed by over a dozen ensembles. The day will include sculpture tours, pop-up performances about the 42-acre grounds, and a “petting zoo” of early instruments. The event is free with paid admission to the park. Learn more at guildforearlymusic.org and groundsforsculpture.org.

    Today’s concert broadcast will feature performances from last year’s festival by Riverview Early Music, Les Agréments de musique, The Practitioners of Musick, and the Gloria Consort. Representatives of the Guild, John Burkhalter and Abigail Chapman, will be my guests, beginning at 12:00.

    All told, I’ll be with you straight through the afternoon. At 6:00, it’s another “Picture Perfect.” For the Ides, the focus will be on music from movies set in the days of the Roman Empire.

    I’ll console myself with the fact that Rome wasn’t built in a day, as I’m chained in the galley from 12 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Legionary vs. Celt, c. AD 98-117

  • Saturnalia Ancient Roman Holiday Traditions

    Saturnalia Ancient Roman Holiday Traditions

    December 17. Io Saturnalia!

    In keeping with winter solstice tradition, it is a day to visit friends and bear gifts, especially candles. Schools are closed. Courts are not in session. Oh yeah, there’s also a sacrifice to Kronos (a.k.a. Saturn) and a riotous feast with benefits.

    On this most popular holiday to emerge from Ancient Rome, the social order is inverted and strictures are loosened. Slaves are served by their masters. Gambling is permitted in public. There is drinking, noise, mirth, and wantonness. The populace is showered with figs, nuts, and dates, women fight in the arena, and cranes are hunted by dwarfs. In short, it’s an old-fashioned Christmas, before there was Christmas. Hey, if the Flintstones can celebrate the birth of Jesus, why not?

    In the interest of converting rather than alienating, Christianity kept the candles, but frowned on the orgies, or at least looked the other way. But Saturnalia traditions continued to be practiced down the centuries, as evidenced in the medieval Feast of Fools, in the Victorian revival of gift-giving, in the lighting of candles, and in the eating, drinking, singing, and dancing.

    Saturnalia, at its peak, was practiced through December 23. Wishing you and yours a merry one!

    I can’t promise that I’ll be playing any music for Saturnalia, exactly, but if you join me today between 4 and 7 p.m. EST, I’ll be serving up plenty for Christmas and mid-winter, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    As you set the table for Saturn, here’s John Ireland’s “Satyricon Overture:”

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