Tag: Frederic Curzon

  • Happy Halloween My Musical Traditions

    Happy Halloween My Musical Traditions

    Happy Halloween!

    Hard for me not to be on the air today. For me, so much of the best Halloween music is on the shorter side, and the most enjoyable playlist intersperses fairly brief tricks (3 to 6 minutes) with medium-length treats (15 to 20 minutes), and if I’m not spinning the platters for broadcast, I just won’t get to hear them. I’m not going to put on a three-minute piece of music for myself. So no Frederic Curzon “Dance of an Ostracised Imp,” no Thomas S. Allen “Dance of the Lunatics,” No Charles Ives “Hallowe’en.” I could go on.

    At any rate, I hope you are able to find some musical enjoyment in your day. I’ll be finishing up reading some ghost stories and by mid-afternoon probably be stacking up the Halloween movies. I’ll listen to “A Faust Symphony” or something while doing my wildlife food deliveries, and I’ll be sure to get in a Halloween walk and a slice of pumpkin pie with my afternoon coffee. Mostly, I guess, I’ll be living the ideal Halloween in my head.

    Surely it would include this:

  • Mischief Night Tick-Tacking in Pennsylvania

    Mischief Night Tick-Tacking in Pennsylvania

    Tonight is Mischief Night. It’s funny, as a boy growing up in Easton, PA, tick-tacking was a way of life. Shucking corn and scraping kernels into paper bags, later to be taken by the handful and rained against neighbors’ windows and siding, and the occasional passing car. Only it was never just a night. It was more like Mischief Month.

    It was only much later, when recounting these youthful exploits, that I came to realize the looks on auditors’ faces were not so much reactions of disgust as they were disorientation, and that tick-tacking must have been a regional pursuit. I assume kids in other communities still rang doorbells and ran, soaped car windows, and draped trees with toilet paper? Recently, I was amused to discover the now-faded practice of stealing gates off fences, something I gleaned only from its representation on vintage Halloween cards. Presumably, the gate would be left somewhere inconvenient but retrievable.

    Of course, now you would be prosecuted or killed for this sort of behavior, but back in the day, it was all just good clean fun, and largely taken as such – except by the angry farmer who shot at us with rock salt.

    One thing this article left out is the blockbuster in the tick-tacking arsenal – the “doorknocker,” a corn cob soaked in water, then kept in the freezer until showtime!

    Throwing corn kernels (aka “tic-tacking”) is a long-time Mischief Night tradition for our region

    An opposing viewpoint from a writer who grew up in the region and aged into someone very cranky:

    https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1993-10-29-9310280433-story.html

    Long live Halloween!


    My trick-or-treat anthem, “Dance of an Ostracised Imp” by Frederic Curzon:

  • Frederic Curzon Dance Happy Halloween Music

    Frederic Curzon Dance Happy Halloween Music

    A little trick-or-treat music to brighten your afternoon: “Dance of an Ostracised Imp” by Frederic Curzon.

  • Halloween Music Dance of an Ostracised Imp

    Halloween Music Dance of an Ostracised Imp

    31 DAYS OF HALLOWEEN (DAY 4)

    Frederic Curzon’s “Dance of an Ostracised Imp”

  • Spooky Halloween Music Frederic Curzon

    Spooky Halloween Music Frederic Curzon

    To get you in the mood for Trick-or-Treat, here’s Frederic Curzon’s “Dance of an Ostracised Imp.”

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