Tag: Composer

  • Richard Wernick Pulitzer Winner Almost Hit Me

    Richard Wernick Pulitzer Winner Almost Hit Me

    To my knowledge, Richard Wernick is the only Pulitzer Prize-winning composer ever to nearly run me down with a car.

    Wernick was a highly visible presence in Philadelphia when I attended musical events there in the 1980s and ‘90s, and for all I know, beyond. When I started working weekend mornings at a certain radio station in 1995, I had to get up at 3 or 4:00 in the morning. Ironically, it cut into my ability to attend concerts.

    For all the times I espied Wernick around Philadelphia, I only spoke to him once. He was in the company of fellow Pulitzer Prize-winner George Crumb at a student recital at the Curtis Institute of Music. Now, I adored Crumb, and having him there in the back of the room, especially with Wernick by his side, was rather intimidating. I so wanted to speak to him, but I was conflicted. I certainly didn‘t want to bug him at a concert, especially if he was with somebody, and doubly-especially if that somebody happened to be Richard Wernick. Little did I realize, until many years later, when we had multiple opportunities to meet during rehearsals and concerts of Orchestra 2001, just how much of a pussycat Crumb could be. On this particular day, he struck me as unapproachable and as terrifying as one of his Black Angels.

    Be that as it may, I couldn’t let the opportunity pass. It just so happened that I lived only about a block away, so I was able to dash back to my apartment and retrieve a CD on Bridge Records, Inc. that contained works by both composers.

    When I got back, I caught them just as they were leaving the building, and Crumb, likely nonplussed by this 20 year-old autograph hound, was kind enough to sign. Then I looked to Wernick sheepishly, and with Crumb’s signature already on the booklet, he couldn’t very well say no. I know I mumbled a few words of appreciation, but probably didn’t say much of worth. At best, I may have provided a source of amusement on their walk back to the car, as when they left I could see they were chuckling with one another.

    When I decided I would be writing about this, I wanted to get the time-line straight. Did the autograph encounter happen first, or was it after Wernick went “Death Race 2000” on me? It took me a while, but I decided the autograph had to have come first, because when I stepped off the curb into Market Street, as Wernick hurtled toward 15th Street at City Hall, I was essentially pulled back by a friend, a classmate and coworker I hadn’t become close to until a few years after the Curtis encounter. In fact, at the time, he confirmed what had already flashed before my eyes. “I’m pretty sure that was Richard Wernick!” he said.

    Wernick was always easily identifiable from his facial hair – a mustache and goatee – and an unmistakable, black-brimmed hat he wore. I don’t remember what he was driving, but I seem to remember it was a rather incongruously compact car to be holding such a flamboyantly-hatted figure.

    So it was somehow appropriate, in my case, that Wernick won the Pulitzer Prize for Music for his “Visions of Terror and Wonder” in 1977. (Crumb was recognized for “Echoes of Time and the River” in 1968.)

    Wernick served on the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania (with Crumb and George Rochberg) from 1968 to 1996. During Riccardo Muti’s tenure as music director of the Philadelphia Orchestra, he also served as a programming consultant, suggesting new works to the maestro, with a particular emphasis on American composers – hence his frequent presence at the Academy of Music.

    Wernick studied at Brandeis University with composers of the Boston School, including Irving Fine, Harold Shapero, Arthur Berger, and Leonard Bernstein. He received further lessons in composition at Tanglewood from Ernst Toch, Aaron Copland, and Boris Blacher. His own music sounds like none of these. In fact, his music steadfastly refuses to meet an audience halfway. Make of that what you will. You’ll find plenty of it posted on YouTube.

    I didn’t know him as a man. For all I know, he could have exuded warmth and humor. I don’t hear any of that in his compositions. Still, I recognize his significance, and I am sorry to see him go, since, as I say, he was such a presence during a certain period of my life.

    Wernick died on Friday at the age of 91. Which means he was probably about my age as he barreled down on me! How did I get stuck in this time-loop?

    R.I.P.


    Wernick interview with Bruce Duffie:

    https://www.kcstudio.com/wernick.html


    CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT: Wernick, Rochberg and Crumb; amiable-looking Wernick; Wernick in the Chapeau of Doom; Wernick’s autograph

  • Maurice Ravel: A 150th Birthday Celebration

    Maurice Ravel: A 150th Birthday Celebration

    He was a natty dresser, a reckless driver, a lover of cats, mechanical toys, and American jazz. Most of all, he was an exquisite composer. Frequently pigeonholed as an Impressionist, he could certainly evoke mood and atmosphere in his music, but he also expressed himself with the transparency and precision of a classicist. I’ve posted a lot about Maurice Ravel over the years. On the 150th anniversary of his birth, here are links to just a few of my past observations. If you’re interested, I hope you’re able to access everything.

    Merci, Maurice Ravel!


    Ravel’s love of toys

    https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=559132580920703&set=a.279006378933326

    Ravel and cats (there are multiple images, so you’ll have to click “view post” at the upper right after following the link)

    https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=2064327513734528&set=pcb.2064339847066628

    Ravel and Gershwin (and, by extension, jazz)

    https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1265378057714588&set=a.883855802533484

    Ravel and Vaughan Williams (again, there are multiple images, so you’ll have to click “view post” at the upper right after following the link)

    https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1057531578499238&set=pcb.1057534635165599

    Ravel and war

    https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=784646281702664&set=a.279006378933326

    Ravel’s “Bolero” (multiple images, so you’ll have to click “view post” at the upper right after following the link)

    https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1253515038900890&set=pcb.1253593182226409

    Ravel delays possible

    https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1176348285865793&set=a.279006378933326

  • Martinu A Quick Dive into the Composer

    Martinu A Quick Dive into the Composer

    Sorry, no time for a substantial post today. I’m writing about Bohuslav Martinu!

  • Happy Birthday Robert Moran Composer & Friend

    Happy Birthday Robert Moran Composer & Friend

    Today is the birthday of my good friend and steadfast companion for Mahler concerts at the Philadelphia Orchestra, composer Robert Moran. A pupil of Darius Milhaud, Luciano Berio, and Hans Erich Apostel, Bob’s experimented with all kinds music, from city-encompassing performance art “happenings,” to collaborations with Philip Glass, to commissions from Houston Grand Opera, Scottish Ballet, and Trinity Wall Street. Throughout his career, he’s often been fascinated by spatial effects in music. This is one of his more recent works, “Solenga,” from 2023:

    Bob, if you see this, I’ve been trying to contact you. My computer died the other week and my email account is now over the storage limit, so I can’t write. I’ve been trying to phone, but of course you don’t have voice mail. (Come to think of it, neither do I!) But you can call me, text, or private message me on Facebook, if you are so moved. There’s a dinner invitation in it for you. Happy birthday!


    An aria from Bob’s Beauty and the Beast opera, “Desert of Roses”

    Selections from “Trinity Requiem,” for the tenth anniversary of 9/11

    Flying high over Albania

    “Alice” for Scottish Ballet

    Looking groovy and introducing his “Lunchbag Opera” for the BBC

    “Buddha Goes to Bayreuth,” Part 1

    “Buddha Goes to Bayreuth,” Part 2

    “Modern Love Waltz” by Philip Glass, arranged by Robert Moran for accordion and cello

    “Waltz. In Memoriam Maurice Ravel”

  • Kile Smith Composer Music and Coffee in Princeton

    Kile Smith Composer Music and Coffee in Princeton

    In Princeton this morning, out for coffee with my former WRTI colleague, composer Kile Smith, always interesting, a great voice, super-talented, and a person of real substance. I must say, he’s not usually so squinty. But he’s also a much better photographer than I am. (Like he probably knows not to have his subjects face the sun.) Don’t believe me? Check out his website. Then follow his Facebook page. And definitely, do yourself a favor and listen to his music. Having coffee with Kile is a great way to start a day.

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