With the Kentucky Derby drawing near, it’s all about horses and horseraces on “Sweetness and Light.”
We’ll hear William Bolcom’s ballet “Seattle Slew;” a concert piece arranged from one of John Williams’ breakout film scores, for Mark Rydell’s “The Reivers,” adapted from William Faulkner’s coming-of-age novel about a boy swept up in automobile theft and illicit horseracing; and of course Stephen Foster’s “Old Kentucky Home.”
In addition, there will be Derby and thoroughbred-related works by Robert Farnon, Louis Moreau Gottschalk, William Schuman, and Leroy Anderson.
Meet me at the starting gate. It will be an hour of jockeys and juleps on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EDT/8:00 PDT, exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!
Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
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I had this Sports Illustrated in 1977. I wonder if I have it still? I don’t know why, but I was crazy about Seattle Slew. But then, everyone was. The kind of media attention focused on the race back then would be baffling to anyone who grew up in the internet age. I was 10 years old in May 1977. I named my hermit crab Seattle Slew.
Tag: Kentucky Derby
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Jockeys and Juleps on “Sweetness and Light”
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Derby Day My Bet’s on Mendelssohn
May 5 = Derby Day. I have no idea who else is running, but my money is on Mendelssohn!
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/03/sports/horse-racing/mendelssohn-kentucky-derby.html
As every sportswriter in the land scrambles to explain the origin of his name… (“You know, the guy who wrote the Wedding March…”)
Post time is at 6:34 EDT; the race begins at 6:46.
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Horse Racing Movie Music Kentucky Derby Special
And they’re off! On the eve of the 143rd running of the Kentucky Derby, “Picture Perfect” will focus on music from movies about horse racing.
“The Black Stallion” (1979), based on the classic novel by Walter Farley, depicts the bonding of a shipwrecked boy and an Arabian stallion, whose shared destiny takes them to the race track. Mickey Rooney’s uncharacteristically subdued performance as the former trainer who finds a new lease on life earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.
Francis Ford Coppola executive produced the film, and his father, Carmine Coppola, wrote the music. Reportedly the unsung Shirley Walker, who had been hired as an orchestrator, wound up contributing a fair amount to it, when the composer was put off by requests from director Carroll Ballard that portions of the music be rewritten.
“The Reivers” (1969), after William Faulkner’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel, is a coming-of-age story about a boy swept into automobile theft and illicit horse racing in the American south. Mark Rydell directed, and Steve McQueen starred as the rakish Boon Hogganbeck. The narration was by Burgess Meredith, who reprises his role in the recording we’ll hear, with John Williams conducting his own music.
For the film, Williams provided an alternately wistful and carefree Americana score. It’s said that the music for “The Reivers” is what moved Steven Spielberg to hire him to write the music for his first theatrical feature, “The Sugarland Express.” The Spielberg association brought Williams to “Jaws,” and the first of his truly iconic film scores. He also worked with Mark Rydell again, on “The Cowboys” (1972), “Cinderella Liberty” (1973), and “The River” (1984).
It was inevitable that the nonfiction bestseller “Seabiscuit: An American Legend” would be given the big Hollywood treatment. The miraculous ascent of the real-life dark horse who became a symbol of hope during the Great Depression seemed tailor-made for dramatization.
Though it presses all the right buttons, “Seabiscuit” (2003) is not to be confused with a superior documentary that was shown on PBS around the same time. Nonetheless, the film, which starred Tobey McGuire, Jeff Bridges and Chris Cooper, was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Randy Newman wrote the music.
Finally, we turn to “Hidalgo” (2004), also allegedly based on a true story, though the source material – the memoir of distance rider Frank T. Hopkins – has also inspired a fair degree of skepticism. In 1890, Hopkins became the first American invited to compete in a centuries-old 3000-mile survival race across the Arabian Desert.
Viggo Mortensen plays Hopkins, and Omar Sharif is the sheik who asks him to put up or shut up, over the claim made by Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show that he and his horse are the greatest distance runners in the world. The music is by James Newton Howard.
It’s a rare horse race in which everyone comes out a winner. Start your weekend with a mint julep on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
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Picture Perfect New Underwriter Rice Insurance
“Picture Perfect” has a new underwriter! Thanks so much to Joseph Rice and Rice Insurance Agency of Somerville, NJ, for their generous support.
Tune in to WWFM – The Classical Network at 6 p.m. EDT, on this, the eve of the Kentucky Derby, to hear music from movies about horse races.
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