When autumn arrives this morning at 8:43 EDT, I’ll be shaking the moths out of my sweaters and layering on the flannels and devouring fruit pies and Spiced Wafers and swilling pots of coffee and pans of hot cider and quaffing mugs of soup and bowls of chili and inciting leaf battles and soaping windows and watching monster movies and poring over events calendars for library book sales and hurling peanuts at squirrels and cavorting with Bacchus and building a playlist of wistful Brahms, energetic Baroque, and cloudy day Bruckner. From now until Thanksgiving life will be very good indeed. Welcome, Autumn, season of Cockaigne, Dionysian paradise, wonderland of revelry and solitude!
Tag: Thanksgiving
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Thanksgiving Phone Fail Black Friday Upgrade
First thing’s first: Happy Thanksgiving!
Second thing’s second: If anyone tries to call me today, I am phoneless!
I dropped my flip last night, and the two halves are now wholly separated. It will ring, but if I press the answer button, I can’t hear anything. Don’t know if you’d be able to hear me. So I am phone-free for Thanksgiving.
Guess who might have to make the much-delayed migration to smartphone for Black Friday.
You might say my turkey is cooked. Give thanks if you are comfortable living in the 21st century.
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St Cecilia Music Playlist for Thanksgiving
Alas, it’s too late for me at this point to come up with a fresh acknowledgment of St. Cecilia on her feast day, as the holiday may as well have begun. However, you can still celebrate the patron saint of music as you get started on your Thanksgiving preparations with this evergreen playlist of Cecilia inspirations. All hail!
William Boyce, “Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day” (overture also published as Boyce’s Symphony No. 5)
Benjamin Britten, “Hymn to St. Cecilia” (Britten was born on this date)
Ernest Chausson, “La légende de Sainte Cécile”
Norman Dello Joio, “To Saint Cecilia”
Gerald Finzi, “For St. Cecilia”
Charles Gounod, “St. Cecilia Mass”
George Frideric Handel, “Ode for St. Cecilia’s Day”
Franz Joseph Haydn, “Missa Sanctae Caecilia”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhA7LEd56ts
Herbert Howells, “A Hymn for St. Cecilia” (text by Ursula Vaughan Williams)
Franz Liszt, “Hymn to St. Cecilia”
Arvo Pärt, “Cecilia, vergine romana”
Henry Purcell, “Ode on St. Cecilia’s Day (Hail! Bright Cecilia)”
Joaquin Rodrigo, “El Album de Cecilia” (written for the composer’s daughter; Rodrigo was born on this date)
Alessandro Scarlatti, “St. Cecilia Mass”
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Thanksgiving Movie Music on KWAX
“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? Every, every minute?”
This poignant observation, from Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town,” stands as a timely reminder that there are things we should all be thankful for, while they – and we – are here to appreciate them.
This week on “Picture Perfect,” we’ll set the table for Thanksgiving.
None other than Aaron Copland wrote the music for the big screen adaptation of Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play (first performed in Princeton in 1938). The composer was at the height of his “populist” period. “El Salon Mexico” and “Billy the Kid” had already been written, and “Fanfare for the Common Man,” “Lincoln Portrait,” “Rodeo” and “Appalachian Spring” would follow within just a few years. Clearly, there was no better choice to capture the essence of small town America.
The concert version of “Our Town” has been in circulation for decades, but it was only in 2011 that a complete recording of the score was made available, briefly, as a digital download.
Gary Cooper and Dorothy McGuire star in “Friendly Persuasion” (1956), based on the novel by Jessamyn West. The film’s portrayal of family and the resolution of moral conflict, as pacifist Quakers deal with issues both big and small – from the American Civil War, to the introduction of a “sinful” musical instrument into the household – make “Friendly Persuasion,” in my opinion, a good choice for this time of year.
The film was up for six Oscars, with Dimitri Tiomkin’s score nominated twice. The title song went on to become the popular hit “Thee I Love.” Only Dimitri Tiomkin would use balalaikas to depict Quaker life!
“Witness” (1985) may seem like an unusual choice for Thanksgiving, with its themes of police corruption and violence, but when honest cop Harrison Ford goes on the lam, he experiences the “plain” lifestyle of a close-knit Amish community. The highlight of Maurice Jarre’s score is a sequence called “Building the Barn,” in which the community comes together to raise a barn for a newly married couple.
Finally, we’ll hear selections from “Plymouth Adventure” (1952), with its depictions of William Bradford, John Alden, Miles Standish, and Priscilla Mullins. Spencer Tracy stars as the cynical captain of The Mayflower, Gene Tierney is his forbidden love interest, Van Johnson appears as Alden, and Lloyd Bridges is the first mate.
The music is by Miklós Rózsa, who already, at this stage of his career, was MGM’s go-to composer for historical drama. Seven years later, Rózsa would take home his third Academy Award for his classic score to “Ben-Hur.”
It’s never too early to give thanks. There’s not a turkey among them, this week on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!
Remember, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for the Trenton-Princeton area. Here are the respective air-times of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):
PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday on KWAX at 5:00 PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EST)
THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday on KWAX at 4:00 PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EST)
Stream them here!
Martha Scott and William Holden make their mark in “Our Town” (1940)
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East Coast Autumn Cozy Delights
A perfect start to autumn here on the East Coast, with plenty of rain and drear, and early enough in the season so as not to denude the trees, only starting to color up around their temples. At any rate, it is a great time for cozy. I’m looking forward to glutting myself on library book sales, black-and-white horror movies, introspective Romantic and energizing Baroque music from my record collection (because the radio stinks), bottomless cups of coffee, and cornucopias of Spiced Wafers and pie. Bring on the soups and the chili! Summon the wool and the flannel! After mentally pushing against the summer months, it’s time to throw on the air brakes and savor every moment between now and Thanksgiving. Halloween, full of opportunity and free of obligation, for me, is always the greatest of holidays. Welcome, Autumn, season of Cockaigne, Dionysian paradise, wonderland of revelry and solitude!
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