Tag: Pope Francis

  • Remembering Pope Francis Compassion and Influence

    Remembering Pope Francis Compassion and Influence

    It used to be common sense, handed down by those who learned it through hard experience, never to discuss religion or politics. But I hope it’s uncontroversial to state, regardless of one’s personal convictions or interpretation of Scripture or feelings about the Church, Pope Francis was a good man. He was a voice of compassion in an often cruel world that of late seems to be racing downhill on a banana peel. No one in his position could ever be all things to all people, but the very fact that in at least one of the world’s highest and most influential offices there was an adult with his hand on the tiller was somehow reassuring. May his successor continue to be a moderating influence. R.I.P.

    Ennio Morricone, “Mass for Pope Francis”

  • Pope Francis, Philly, and Pontifical Pomp

    Pope Francis, Philly, and Pontifical Pomp

    With Philadelphia under martial law – I guess for the protection of Pope Francis – there’s plenty of time to stay indoors and enjoy some papal trivia.

    Charles Gounod, perhaps most famous for that great devil opera, “Faust,” composed this “Pontifical March” in 1869 to mark the golden jubilee of Pope Pius IX’s priestly ordination. 80 years later, Pope Pius XII decided to make it the Vatican City’s official “hymn,” replacing Viktorin Hallmayer’s “Marcia trionfale” (composed in 1857). The first eight bars are played whenever the Vatican’s flag is raised.

    In 1949, Antonio Allegra, an organist at St. Peter’s Basilica, provided an Italian text to be sung to the anthem. In 1991, Raffaello Lavagna, a Catholic priest from Savona, composed Latin lyrics for four-part choir.

    Here it is, in all its pontifical pomp:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FDB6JZXfZQ

    If you’re interested, here’s Hallmayer’s original, which I imagine would sound really great on a calliope:

    You can learn more about the “Pontifical Anthem” here:

    http://www.vaticanstate.va/content/vaticanstate/en/stato-e-governo/note-generali/inno.html

    Naturally, as the city’s premiere musical institution, the Philadelphia Orchestra will be getting in on the act, performing at two events during Francis’ visit. The orchestra will appear as part of a massive concert on the Ben Franklin Parkway, which will take place tonight from 5:30 to 9:45. Andrea Bocelli will be there. So will Aretha Franklin. The orchestra will perform from about 7:30 to the end.

    Then tomorrow, the orchestra will participate in an open air Papal Mass. It will deliver a musical prelude at 3. During the Mass, which begins at 4, the orchestra will provide relevant musical interludes. And then, beginning at around 6:10, the orchestra will perform a postlude. The Mass will include a 500 member choir. Since you’ll never be able to get close, you might as well be thankful for the streaming, which you can enjoy by way of the links provided here:

    https://www.philorch.org/blog/news/watch-philadelphia-orchestra-festival-families-concert-and-papal-mass#/

    Here’s the playlist for the Papal Mass. Quite a hodgepodge, if I do say so myself.

    http://wrti.org/post/performing-pope-francis-and-world-moment-history-philadelphia-orchestra#stream/0

    I wonder what the Pope thinks of it all. In private, he turns out to be a rather cultivated figure:

    http://www.wqxr.org/#!/story/pope-reveals-his-tastes-classical-music/

    It’s interesting to see Caravaggio on his list of favorites. Pope Paul V issued a death warrant for the artist after the fatal castration of one of his foes during a street brawl. Then again, by all accounts Wagner wasn’t such a nice guy, either.

    For the past few weeks my thoughts have been flashing back to Pope John Paul II and Father Guido Sarducci. Am I the only one who remembers this, I wonder?

    PHOTOS: Jolly Charles Gounod (left) and Pope Francis

  • Vatican Movie Music Pope Visit Philadelphia

    Vatican Movie Music Pope Visit Philadelphia

    “POPE IN PHILADELPHIA THIS WEEKEND… PLAN AHEAD… EXPECT DELAYS,” warn the flashing signs all up and down I-95, 295, and Route 1.

    The Ben Franklin Bridge will be shut down until Monday. Access to I-676 will be no more. All Center City exits will be sealed. The Pope Fence is up, mailboxes have been removed, and the car carrier trailers are full of impounded vehicles, bound for who-knows-where. Are we having fun yet?

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we tap into the zeitgeist and celebrate what’s become a Pope cultural phenomenon with music from movies set in the Vatican.

    It would appear that Alex North (born just south of Philadelphia, by the way, in Chester, Pa.) was Hollywood’s “go to” composer for Vatican movies, with scores for two major films about the Pope.

    In “The Shoes of the Fisherman” (1968), Anthony Quinn plays Kiril Pavlovich Lakota, an archbishop who serves 20 years in a Siberian labor camp. He is released and sent to Rome where is promoted to the cardinalate. When the Pope dies, suddenly, Lakota, a dark horse candidate, is elected as his replacement. The story balances Lokata’s internal struggles and personal torments with mounting global turmoil. North juxtaposes the melancholy lyricism of Russian folksong with the steely grandeur of his music for the Vatican.

    “The Agony and the Ecstasy” (1965), about the war of wills between Michelangelo (played by Charlton Heston) and the warrior-pope Julius II (played by Rex Harrison) over the painting of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, suggested a completely different approach. North’s other Vatican score is rich in allusions to authentic music of the era – and of the Church – which is most impressive when we think that the Early Music Movement was, at the time, in its very infancy, and the music of the pre-Baroque would not have been particularly well known.

    Otto Preminger’s “The Cardinal” (1963) follows a fictional Boston Irish Catholic priest from his ordination in 1917 to his appointment as cardinal on the eve of World War II. Tom Tryon played the lead. Tryon later became a best-selling author (as THOMAS Tryon), with books like “The Other” and “Harvest Home.” An interesting factoid: The Vatican’s liaison officer for the production was none other than Joseph Ratzinger, later Pope Benedict XVI.

    The composer was Jerome Moross. The producers of the recording we’ll be sampling incorporate the sound of the actual bell of St. Paul’s Cathedral into the opening of the suite.

    Christopher Reeve may have been trying just a bit too hard to shake his “Superman” image when he signed on to “Monsignor” (1982). Reeve stars as a Roman Catholic priest whose ascent through the ranks at the Vatican parallels his underhanded dealings with a mafia don and an affair with a woman in the postulant stage of becoming a nun.

    Likewise, composer John Williams received his only nomination from the Golden Raspberry Awards for Worst Original Score. Tune in for this rare opportunity to hear music from Williams’ first project after his Academy Award-winning contribution to “E.T.”

    I hope you’ll join me for music from movies set in the Vatican this week, on “Picture Perfect,” Friday evening at 6 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

  • Blood Moons Popes & Purrs on WPRB

    Blood Moons Popes & Purrs on WPRB

    Some regard a “blood moon” eclipse as a portent of the End of Days. Others blanch at the cataclysmic implications of swapped air shifts.

    http://www.timesofisrael.com/doomsday-predicted-as-blood-moon-coincides-with-sukkot/

    Chances are you will either be in synagogue this morning, or you’ll wish you were, when flighty bird Classic Ross Amico sits in for the always reliable Marvin Rosen at WPRB. Ah well, we might as well make the best of it.

    We’ll be jumping on the media bandwagon this week to salute Pope Francis and maybe grumble a little bit about the situation in Philadelphia, where the Pope Fence is going up and tow trucks are impounding cars all across Center City.

    We’ll honor the Pope (it’s not his fault) with music inspired by his namesake, St. Francis. Francis brought forth musical tributes from many composers across the centuries. We’ll hear from Kenneth Fuchs, Paul Hindemith, Franz Liszt, Francis Poulenc, Joaquin Rodrigo, Sir William Walton, and Pulitzer Prize-winner Leo Sowerby.

    Also, because of Francis’ well-known affinity with and for the critters, we’ll leaven the proceedings with works evocative of the animal kingdom, pieces like Samuel Barber’s “The Monk and His Cat,” Jennifer Higdon’s “An Exaltation of Larks,” Peter Schickele’s “Bestiary,” and of course Gioachino Rossini’s “Cat Duet.”

    Marc Uys, Executive Director of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, will drop by at around 9:00 to tell us a little bit about the PSO’s upcoming season, which will begin on Sunday at 4 p.m. at Princeton University’s Richardson Auditorium, when violinist Jennifer Koh will perform Anna Clyne’s “The Seamstress” (after a poem of William Butler Yeats) and Rossen Milanov will conduct Sergei Rachmaninoff’s wonderfully wistful Symphony No. 2.

    Due to Yom Kippur, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar, Marvin Rosen’s Classical Discoveries will be heard on THURSDAY this week, from 5:30 to 11 a.m. ET. Despair not! This is only a temporary circumstance. Marvin will return to his regular Wednesday slot next week, and I’ll be back on Thursdays.

    For the time being, I hope you’ll join me for St. Francis and friends, this morning from 6 to 11, on WPRB 103.3 FM or online at wprb.com. The fur will fly this week, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Franciscan Music on WPRB Today

    Franciscan Music on WPRB Today

    We’re honoring Pope Francis, albeit vicariously, by way of his sainted namesake. Up next, it’s Peter Schickele’s “Bestiary,” a work for Early Music ensemble and narrator. Later on this morning, Paul Hindemith’s St. Francis of Assisi ballet “Nobilissima Visione” and Pulitzer Prize-winner Leo Sowerby’s “Canticle of the Sun.”

    Stroke the docile menagerie until 11 ET, on WPRB 103.3 FM or online at wprb.com.

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