May your New Year’s Day be filled with pleasant diversions.
It’s said that Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart composed his “Kegelstatt” Trio in E-flat major, K. 498, while playing skittles (essentially bowling). The work, scored for clarinet, viola and piano, takes its name from a venue devoted to the pastime.
But it was Mozart’s dad, Leopold, who wrote a “Frog Divertimento.”
Nothing says Happy New Year like a good frog party.
2019 can’t be any worse, can it? CAN IT??? Happy New Year.
If you’re experiencing a Strauss deficiency, “New Year’s Day from Vienna 2019,” with Christian Thielemann leading the Vienna Philharmonic, will commence at 11 a.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.
Philadelphia Mummers are by no means common knowledge once you venture outside the area. It is, after all, a peculiar custom: a bunch of contractors dressing up in feathers and sequins so that they can strut and play banjoes on Broad Street in freezing temperatures, as they compete against one another for bragging rights in this very Philly New Year’s Day tradition.
What appears to be even less known to Philadelphians is the tradition of Old World mumming, in which amateur performers careen from door to door at Christmas or Midsummer, enacting traditional plays. These mummer’s plays feature fantastic characters such as St. George and the Dragon, Robin Hood, the Turkish Knight and Beelzebub. Typically, at the end of the play, a “doctor” brings a slain character back to life. The actors wear outlandish, often unsettling costumes and masks.
The custom of mumming in Britain dates back to at least the 16th century, though the wider practice appears to be of ancient origin. It was the Swedes who brought it to Philadelphia in the 17th century. Participants aren’t supposed to fire guns in the air anymore, but it still happens. It’s best to stay away from open windows on New Year’s Eve.
Lots of fun stuff about the Philadelphia Mummers here: