Tag: Dog

  • Rachmaninoff’s Birthday Dog Prelude & His Regrets

    Rachmaninoff’s Birthday Dog Prelude & His Regrets

    According to the “Old Style” calendar, Sergei Rachmaninoff was born in Russia on March 20, 1873 – which translates to April 1 on the Gregorian calendar. However, it would appear that Rachmaninoff himself preferred to celebrate on April 2, as supported by this application for U.S. citizenship archived at the Library of Congress.

    https://www.danperforms.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Rachmaninoff-Birth-Certificate.jpg

    Today is an excellent excuse, therefore, to share this clip of some dude playing the Prelude in C-sharp minor with the assistance of his dog – which I can’t stop watching!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/FdUbPrxU7g4

    Rachmaninoff, a lifelong dog-lover, no doubt would have approved.

    Unfortunately, the composer came to loathe this particular piece, the second of five “Morceaux de fantaisie,” Op. 3. Russian publishers at the time did not pay royalties, so he basically sold it outright, at the age of 19, for 40 rubles.

    Much to his chagrin, “The Prelude” was an instant hit. Opportunistic publishers in the West issued it under many titles, and of course he never saw a penny.

    Yet he was expected to include it in every recital.

    Whenever it came time for him to play his encores, invariably audiences would cry “C-sharp!” If he refused, they hissed. The composer confided, “Many, many times I wish I had never written it.”

    The piece is so sober and portentous, how could it not have been parodied often?

    You asked for it, you got it: happy belated birthday, Sergei Rachmaninoff!


    Mickey Mouse, “The Opry House”

    Harpo Marx, “A Day at the Races”

    Igudesman & Joo

  • Dog Crashes Orchestra Hilarious Video

    Dog Crashes Orchestra Hilarious Video

    This adorable video of a music-loving dog crashing a performance of the Vienna Chamber Orchestra in Ephesus has been circulating since June 27, when Turkish pianist Fazil Say posted it on his Facebook page. It has been forwarded to me so many times, I feel I should share it already. I had been saving it for the weekend, so that I wouldn’t have to write much! The music, by the way, is Mendelssohn’s “Italian” Symphony. Mark Laycock, isn’t this your band?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdg2OGL8CIA

  • Elgar’s Melancholy Genius & Dog Devotion

    Elgar’s Melancholy Genius & Dog Devotion

    For many, Sir Edward Elgar is inseparable from “Pomp and Circumstance.” His ceremonial music conjures thoughts of Imperial England (and Stateside graduation ceremonies), though anyone with a sensitive ear will detect the melancholy underpinnings of the artist.

    Elgar was a soulful composer, whose faith, love of country, love of his wife and love of animals enriched his existence and informed his music. However, all was not peaches and cream. A Catholic in overwhelmingly Protestant England, of humble origins in a class-conscious society (his fiancée was disinherited for accepting his proposal), Elgar was seldom completely comfortable in his own skin.

    He was also a grand procrastinator, often getting lost in his experiments as an amateur chemist and shirking his duties in favor of slipping off to the races.

    Though he loved his wife devotedly, he was deprived while she lived of the pleasure of the company of dogs, which he adored. A close friend’s bulldog, Dan, became an honorary pet, and as we know from Elgar’s letters and marginalia scribbled in his manuscripts, the spirit of Dan infuses a surprising number of his works. (An episode in which Dan tumbled into the Thames is immortalized as one of the “Enigma Variations.”)

    After the death of his wife, Elgar was able to openly indulge his passion for dogs, right down to setting places for them at the table. One of these was a cairn terrier named Mina, who was the inspiration for a charming miniature, his very last work (performed here a mite under tempo):

    Happy Birthday, Sir Edward Elgar!

    PHOTO: Elgar with his spaniel Marco

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