Tag: Ballet mécanique

  • Trenton’s “Ballet Mécanique” Revisited

    Trenton’s “Ballet Mécanique” Revisited

    In a week full of holidays and anniversaries, I’m only just getting around to sharing these photos of the Capital Philharmonic of New Jersey’s ambitious Saturday night concert, a showcase for George Antheil’s “Ballet Mécanique” – the most notorious work by Trenton’s native son. (It instigated a riot at its premiere in Paris 100 years ago.) The piece was heard on Saturday in its 1953 revised version for four pianos and percussion, because, let’s face it, even Antheil was pragmatic enough to deduce that if it were ever to be performed again, a requirement of 16 player pianos, on top of everything else, would be a bit much to expect.

    The stimulating program also included unusual fare by John Cage and Lou Harrison (well, maybe usual for them), incorporating industrial and found objects. I would have liked to have heard the rest of Lou Harrison’s Concerto for Violin with Percussion Orchestra, as soloist (and Capital Philharmonic concertmaster) Nina Vieru played the first movement ravishingly.

    The concert opened with music director Dan Spalding’s “Overture to Industry,” a lively curtain-raiser, repurposed, like so many of the program’s unconventional instruments – in this case, from a percussion piece of his youth. Also featured was J.S. Bach’s Concerto for Four Harpsichords in an arrangement (also by Spalding) for four pianos and xylophones.

    The event was greatly enhanced by entertaining interludes, executed as the stage was reset, by Trenton Circus Squad, with its jugglers, acrobats, clowns, and stilt-walkers, largely supported by the positive energy of the Plenty Pepper Steel Band, and of course the apt setting, inside Trenton’s historic Roebling Machine Shop. An enormous backdrop displayed an abstract rendering of an airplane propeller, another unusual item featured in Antheil’s score (reproduced on Saturday’s concert electronically).

    The photos of the musicians were taken by Dan Aubrey, my editor at U.S. 1, because they are more interesting and came out much better than mine. Equally, most of my photos of Trenton Circus Squad were in poor resolution. For a more rounded view of what it was like to be there, there are additional photos and videos posted on the Facebook pages of the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra and Trenton Circus Squad. Thanks to everyone involved for the unusual experience!


    In case you missed it, here’s the preview I wrote (with more colorful Antheil anecdotes) for U.S. 1 newspaper.

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/george-antheil-and-a-marriage-of-music-industry/article_28e86b32-fbfb-11ee-ad9e-5f434e9d5447.html?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR14Jx8VZTsW2KrV_UUqk-JXVxMIWglmoWZ9k1VqSwA3mFRiPddMnBKIkVA_aem_AWcMgljwZDgWoj8JqTyahhpYMNb5ApIpcCiJg3eb5zVWd83rw2MdqyjF-NoYckn7ebDQAxzBrFbjKRHFlbHuvaQK

  • Central Jersey Concert Weekend Antheil Elgar

    Central Jersey Concert Weekend Antheil Elgar

    Quite a concert weekend for Classic Ross Amico – perhaps for you too, if you live in Central Jersey – and we won’t even have to drive to New York or Philadelphia!

    Yesterday, I posted about George Antheil’s cacophonous masterpiece of the Machine Age, “Ballet Mécanique,” which will be performed in Trenton, with members of the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra, Plenty Pepper Steel Band, and Trenton Circus Squad. The concert – nay, event – will be held at Trenton Machine Shop on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

    For tickets, visit

    https://www.capitalphilharmonic.org/

    You’ll find more information in my article in this week’s U.S. 1:

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/george-antheil-and-a-marriage-of-music-industry/article_28e86b32-fbfb-11ee-ad9e-5f434e9d5447.html?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTAAAR2sUhzhgk5O1R2mJUyDfgykK9m_h6m4s96NCQqp-8TLnvoXrfbdTdAVuuk_aem_AdMeH761OjYf6QKs7z3oFquKM2prwQNFcqz_3Xr1NduAwJ3_p-lQcXAUYaksC8qHVCEONIwPPSOIzYA4woG4kana

    As if the Capital Phil’s industrial vaudeville weren’t enough, the Princeton University Glee Club will also join the Princeton University Orchestra for two performances of Edward Elgar’s monumental “The Dream of Gerontius.” Alongside the “Enigma Variations,” this is the work that cemented Elgar as the foremost English composer of his generation. It’s not something you will encounter live on this side of the pond every day. Dream along with two performances, at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium in Alexander Hall, Friday & Saturday at 7:30 p.m.

    A link to info for the Friday concert (Saturday is identical):

    https://music.princeton.edu/event/the-walter-l-nollner-memorial-concert-dream-of-gerontius/2024-04-19/

    Tickets for either night available here:

    https://music.princeton.edu/events/

    Look for me on Sunday, and you’ll find me swinging my legs on a cloud, half-deaf and wearing a beatific smile.


    PHOTOS: Eddie and George, ready to raise the roof in Central Jersey

  • Antheil’s Ballet Mécanique Returns to Trenton

    Antheil’s Ballet Mécanique Returns to Trenton

    When “Ballet Mécanique” was given its world premiere in Paris in 1926, the onslaught of synchronized player pianos, airplane propellers, siren, electric bells, and percussion whipped the audience into an opening night frenzy. Some of the most prominent artists of the day began to throttle one another and rain fists upon their neighbors’ heads. Even in a city jaded by musical scandals (“The Rite of Spring” was unveiled there in 1913, sparking surely classical music’s most-discussed riot), “Ballet Mécanique” was something special.

    The composer was George Antheil (pronounced “ANN-tile”), born in Trenton, New Jersey, in 1900. Antheil went on to pursue an unusually varied career, but he never could live down this masterpiece of the Machine Age. It is not for nothing that he titled his autobiography “Bad Boy of Music.”

    This week, Trenton’s Bad Boy will make good, when he is embraced by his hometown orchestra, the New Jersey Capital Philharmonic Orchestra, under circumstances that will not soon be forgotten.

    In a prime example of form following function, “Ballet Mécanique” will be the centerpiece of a kind of industrial vaudeville to be held at the Roebling Machine Shop, 675 South Clinton Avenue, in Trenton, on Saturday, April 20, at 7:30 p.m.

    But that’s not all. There’s also John Cage, Lou Harrison, the Plenty Pepper Steel Band, and Trenton Circus Squad!

    Read more about it in my article in this week’s U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo, available from local vending machines and at area business, or online, today.

    https://www.communitynews.org/princetoninfo/artsandentertainment/george-antheil-and-a-marriage-of-music-industry/article_28e86b32-fbfb-11ee-ad9e-5f434e9d5447.html

  • George Antheil Bad Boy of Music Birthday

    George Antheil Bad Boy of Music Birthday

    George Antheil, classical music’s original Trenton cracker, was born on this date in 1900.

    The self-proclaimed “Bad Boy of Music” (the title of his autobiography) had to travel all the way to Paris to make good. It doesn’t make my transcontinental exile to Eugene, Oregon seem so bad! I hope you’ll join me for “The Lost Chord,” now on KWAX, as we divvy up the nut bread for a musical celebration of Antheil’s birthday.

    Antheil’s “Ballet Mécanique” sparked one of classical music’s great riots when it was unveiled at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in 1926.

    The work made preposterous demands on performers and audience alike, with its battery of player pianos, sirens, bells, and airplane propellers – all difficult to coordinate, but worth it, if they were to transform concert halls into free-for-alls and secure Antheil’s status as enfant terrible. His notoriety earned him the respect, friendship, and envy of Paris’ artistic community. From the stage, he watched as Man Ray punched a heckler in the face, as Satie cheered, “Quel precision!,” and as Ezra Pound shouted, “Shut up, you are all stupid idiots.” Pound became one of Antheil’s most ardent champions, taking a break from poetry to publish an inflammatory book, “Antheil and the Treatise on Harmony.”

    Antheil speculated, perhaps facetiously, that his mechanistic nightmares may have been inspired by his having been born across the street from a noisy machine shop. In fact, a number of his works bear the boisterous imprint of the factories he knew in Trenton as a boy, including the “Airplane Sonata,” “The Death of Machines,” and the “Sonata Sauvage.”

    It was all rather forward-looking. Antheil was one of the first composers to search beyond conventional instruments for musical means. He not only presaged the alien soundscapes of Edgard Varèse, but also anticipated the stupefying repetitions of minimalism – though infusing his own compositions with enough violence to prevent them from ever becoming numbing. Stravinsky was his hero. He fed off the savagery of “The Rite of Spring,” then followed the master’s subsequent hairpin turn into neoclassicism. Both artists suffered a backlash from former idolaters who felt betrayed by what was perceived as a cowardly retreat into the past.

    In Antheil’s case, his reputation never recovered. The one-two punch of his Piano Concerto No. 2, transparently influenced by Bach, and the spectacular failure of his “Ballet Mécanique” to impress at its American premiere at Carnegie Hall (mostly due to faulty machinery) cast Antheil, rebel angel that he was, from the lofty heights of notoriety to the slag heap of has-beenery.

    But if it is true that the remainder of his career was indeed that of a has-been, we should all be so lucky.

    The composer of six symphonies, Antheil also wrote books on endocrinology and speculative war tactics, a murder mystery, a nationally syndicated column of advice to the lovelorn, and over 30 Hollywood film scores. With the actress Hedy Lamarr, he patented a torpedo guidance system that became the basis for modern Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and cellular phone technology.

    I hope you’ll join me for music by this eccentric and multitalented figure, including “Ballet Mécanique,” in all its original, uncompromising glory; then selections from his neo-classical Piano Concerto No. 2, his wartime Symphony No. 4, and dance music from his score to the ballet film noir “Specter of the Rose.”

    The irony is blistering that Trenton’s own classical music station no longer hosts “The Lost Chord,” but you can still enjoy this celebration of Trenton’s (other) bad boy, thanks to the miracle of worldwide streaming. I hope you’ll be able to join me for “Antheil Establishment,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!

    For more information, see below.


    Keep in mind, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for the Trenton-Princeton area. Here are the respective air-times of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):

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

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

    Stream them here!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Antheil & Grainger Wacky Music Geniuses

    Antheil & Grainger Wacky Music Geniuses

    When they were handing out the looney, they must have found themselves with an overabundance when it came to July 8.

    Today marks the birthday anniversaries of two of music’s wackiest pianist-composers.

    George Antheil, self-proclaimed “Bad Boy of Music,” was born in Trenton, NJ on this date in 1900. His “Ballet Mécanique,” scored for synchronized player pianos, airplane propellers, siren and electric bells, inspired one of the great classical music riots at its Paris premiere in 1926.

    Antheil would practice the piano with such ferocity that he would have to pause, periodically, to thrust his hands into two fish bowls filled with ice water. Before the start of a recital, he would remove a pistol from a silk holster sewn into his jacket and place it atop the piano, to telegraph the message that he would brook no nonsense.

    Later, he became a Hollywood film composer, a war correspondent, the author of a column of advice to the lovelorn, an expert in endocrinology, and co-inventor, with actress Hedy Lamarr, of a frequency-hopping system for the guidance of Allied torpedoes that would become the basis for modern spread-spectrum communications technology. Neither Antheil nor Lamarr would ever see a dime for their invention.

    In 1944, he scored a notable success with his Symphony No. 4, after it was taken up by Leopold Stokowski and later Sir Eugene Goossens, who recorded it. Antheil was also the author of a bestselling autobiography, “Bad Boy of Music.” He died of a heart attack at the age of 59. A third recorded cycle of his symphonies is currently underway, on the Chandos label. Not bad for a boy from Trenton.

    Wouldn’t you know, Percy Aldridge Grainger was also born on this date, outside Melbourne, Australia, in 1882. Another one of classical music’s great eccentrics, Grainger was obsessed with physical fitness. Rather than drive or take the train between towns and recitals, it was his preference to jog. He was also known to throw a ball over one side of a house, and then race around to the other side to catch it.

    Enamored with Nordic culture, he went out of his way to use only Anglo-Saxon words, avoiding in his letters anything of Norman or Latin origin. This extended to his scores, in which he eschewed Italian musical terms in favor of their English equivalents. In 1928, he married Ella Ström, from Sweden, during a concert at the Hollywood Bowl. On the program was his new work, “To a Nordic Princess.”

    Lest his cultural quirks be misconstrued in an increasingly black-and-white world, Grainger’s embrace of “blue-eyed English” was as idiosyncratic as everything else in his character. He bristled against the dominance of German music, he served in the U.S. Army against Germany in WWI, he embraced music from a wide diversity of cultures, all the way to Bali, he championed works by African-Canadian-American composer R. Nathaniel Dett, and he adored Duke Ellington and George Gershwin.

    Grainger was unusually close to his mother and exhibited sadomasochistic tendencies. He donated whips and blood-stained clothes to the Grainger Museum, which he founded in 1932. His request to have his skeleton displayed – posthumously, of course – was denied.

    Later, while living in White Plains, NY, he experimented with electronics and “machine music,” in a sense paralleling an obsession of Antheil, who besides “Ballet Mécanique,” wrote such works as “Airplane Sonata” and “Death of Machines.”

    Sadly, only the tiniest portion of Grainger’s output is known by the general public, and he is celebrated as the composer of such folksy trifles as “Country Gardens,” “Molly on the Shore,” and “Shepherd’s Hey.” But Grainger’s treatment of harmony and rhythm could be highly original. He was a brilliant musician, and wholly unconventional in more ways than one.

    Grainger died in White Plains in 1961 at the age of 78. His remains, including his skeleton, rest in Adelaide.

    Happy birthday, you wacky, wacky boys.


    Grainger, “Scotch Strathspey and Reel”

    Grainger orchestration of Debussy’s “Pagodes”

    His imaginary ballet, “The Warriors”

    Grainger plays “Molly on the Shore”

    R. Nathaniel Dett’s “Juba”

    Antheil, “Ballet Mécanique” – presumably in its revision, because of the use of live pianists – with the annoying Fernand Léger film

    Antheil, “Jazz Symphony”

    Antheil, Symphony No. 4 “1942”

    Antheil, “Specter of the Rose” (from the film score, 1946)

    Antheil speaks!


    PHOTOS: Antheil packing heat (top), and the multifaceted Grainger

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