Check all rationality at the door. Coming up on today’s Noontime Concert: “Dada at the Movies” – music by Erik Satie, Darius Milhaud, and George Antheil – with pianist Guy Livingston, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
Tag: Guy Livingston
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George Antheil Futurist Radio Chat
He was a savage pianist. He was an avant-gardist. He was a patriotic symphonist, a film composer, a journalist, a mystery novelist, an advice columnist, an endocrinologist, and the prophet of Wi-Fi technology.
Trenton’s George Antheil was a lot of things.
Pianist Guy Livingston and I will talk about a few of them. Join me this afternoon at 4:00 EDT, as Livingston will chat with me by telephone from his home in The Hague. We’ll swap Antheil anecdotes in advance of Livingston’s upcoming recital, which will be presented next week in New York City.
Dada at the Movies – Guy Livingston will take place at the Baruch Performing Arts Center, One Bernard Baruch Way (25th Street between Lexington & 3rd Avenues), on Wednesday, October 17, at 7:30 p.m. The multimedia event (with costumes) will recreate elements of a riot-inducing concert that was held in Paris on July 6, 1923. Included will be films by Man Ray and Hans Richter, with music by Antheil, Darius Milhaud, and Erik Satie.
Flanking our conversation, I’ll share Livingston’s recordings of Antheil’s “Jazz Sonata” and “Airplane Sonata,” from his album “Antheil the Futurist.”
Livingston is a world authority on the composer, having recorded all of his piano works. He also oversaw a landmark Antheil conference in Trenton in 2003.
Learn more about “Dada at the Movies” here: http://guylivingston.com/dada/index.shtml
Then stick around: between 4 and 6 p.m., we’ll enjoy music by Paul Creston, Johann Ludwig Krebs, Johann Sebastian Bach, Sergei Prokofiev, Vernon Duke, Giuseppe Verdi, and Gerónimo Giménez.
At 6:00, it’s another “Music from Marlboro” – chamber music performances from the legendary Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page – this week featuring works by Niccolò Paganini and Ildebrando Pizzetti. Performers will include a young Yo-Yo Ma and the venerable pianist Mieczyslaw Horszowski.
Solfège will be augmented to accommodate “Dada” today, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
PHOTO: Tune in for reflections of Guy Livingston
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George Antheil Bad Boy of Music on WWFM
We’ll be breaking bad on today’s Noontime Concert on The Classical Network. I hope you’ll join me for music by Trenton’s own George Antheil.
Antheil, the self-proclaimed “Bad Boy of Music,” was born in Trenton, NJ, in 1900. His “Ballet mécanique,” for synchronized player pianos, siren, electronic bells, xylophones and airplane propellers, caused a riot at its Paris premiere in 1926.
We’ll hear a live concert performance of Antheil’s magnum opus, arranged for solo piano and eight loudspeakers, by Guy Livingston. Livingston, who makes his home in Paris, is one of the foremost authorities on Antheil and his music, having recorded the composer’s Piano Concerto No. 2, for New World Records, and an album of “The Lost Piano Sonatas,” for the Wergo label, from which we will also be sampling. In 2003, Livingston was artistic director of a George Antheil festival in Trenton.
This performance took place at Tufts University in March, as part of a two-day festival, “The Film Music of George Antheil: The ‘Bad Boy’ in Paris and Hollywood.” The festival included the first American screening of a restored print of the experimental film “Ballet mécanique” by Fernand Léger and Dudley Murphy.
At the time of the composer’s greatest success, Antheil and his wife lived in a one-bedroom apartment above Sylvia Beach’s Shakespeare & Company bookshop, a favorite haunt of Ezra Pound, Ernest Hemingway and James Joyce. Relishing his notoriety, Antheil carried a pistol, in a silk holster sewn into his jacket, which he would ostentatiously place on the piano prior to commencing a recital.
Later, he was co-holder of a patent with actress Hedy Lamarr for a communications system based on frequency-hopping, as applied to radio-controlled torpedoes. Though the idea of spread spectrum became the basis for modern cell phone technology, neither Antheil nor Lamarr ever saw a dime for their invention.
In his spare time, Antheil wrote a column of advice to the lovelorn for Esquire magazine, a couple of murder mysteries and a book on criminal endocrinology.
It will be all-Antheil in the noon hour today. Then stick around for Ottorino Respighi’s rarely-heard lyric poem for soloists, chorus and orchestra, “La Primavera,” and Dame Ethyl Smyth’s “Serenade in D major,” among our featured works, from 12 to 4 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
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