This week on “Sweetness and Light,” the cat’s out of the bag. It’s an hour of felicitous feline music!
On the 150th anniversary of the birth of American composer John Alden Carpenter, we’ll hear the ballet “Krazy Kat,” inspired by George Herriman’s cult comic strip. Carpenter characterized it as a “jazz pantomime”, but if there’s any jazz in it, it’s “white man” jazz of the 1920s (i.e. less jazz than “Rhapsody in Blue”). Believe it or not, I’ve actually seen this performed – twice! If memory serves, Sergei Prokofiev, in the U.S. for the debut of his opera “The Love for Three Oranges” and to perform his Piano Concerto No. 3 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, was present at the work’s premiere. I can’t find anything on the internet to back it up right now, so it looks like I’ll be sleuthing around my library.
Carpenter’s music will headline a meow mix of melodies by Leroy Anderson, Ernst von Dohnányi, Richard Rodney Bennett, Gioachino Rossini, Nino Rota, Samuel Barber, and Zez Confrey.
It will be programming you can sink your claws into, on “Sweetness and Light.” The music, like your host, will be the cat’s pajamas, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
Tag: Cats
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Feline Affection and Frivolity on “Sweetness and Light”
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Ravel’s Cats A Purrfect Love Story
How much did Maurice Ravel love cats? Quite a lot, actually.
He had a particular fondness for Siamese cats. In 1921, he moved to a modest villa outside Paris, which he shared with a feline family. It’s unclear how many cats there were, exactly. Sources vary as to whether there were two, three, or six. One was named Mouni and another Jazz. At some point, there was a litter of kittens. Suffice it to say, there were a number of them, and Ravel adored them. They were with him when he worked. He played with them even as he wrote letters to his friends, documenting their antics. He mused on their intelligence and devotion, likening it to the “Basque temperament.” He even claimed to be able to speak to them in their own language.
Among the works he composed there was his one-act opera “L’enfant et les sortilèges.” (“The Child and the Enchantments”). The opera relates the transformation of a naughty, rampaging child – who terrorizes animals and wreaks destruction upon numerous household items, until they all rise up against him – into a more mature, compassionate human being, signified by his redemptive ministrations to an injured squirrel.
Here’s the barely safe-for-work “Cat Duet”
The entire opera was later choreographed as a ballet by Jiří Kylián. It’s much worth watching. If you want to get right to the singing cats, they’re at the 31-minute mark, but they are present, if silent, from the start.
Ravel was born in the Basque town of Ciboure on this date in 1875. He had difficulty finding intimacy with humans, claiming the only love affair he ever had was with music, but the companionship of cats he deemed purrfect.
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Ravel’s Cats & Bookplates A Birthday Tribute
With all that I’ve been writing about bookplates recently, it’s very interesting that I would stumble across this today, the birthday of Maurice Ravel. Ravel was not only a masterful composer, he was also crazy for cats.
Bon anniversaire, mon vieux!
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Darwin Galapagos & Vaughan Williams’ Cats
It was on this date in 1835 that Charles Darwin arrived at the Galapagos Islands aboard the Beagle.
Fun fact: Darwin was the great uncle of Ralph Vaughan Williams.
Vaughan Williams, however, was partial to cats.
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