Tag: Thanksgiving

  • Picture Perfect Thanksgiving Movie Music

    Picture Perfect Thanksgiving Movie Music

    Thanks to the support of listeners like you, we were able to make our 7-day goal of $70,000 yesterday, and the WWFM fall fund drive has concluded. Thank you again for your continued generosity! Here’s to a holiday season full of inspiring and cozy classics.

    My movie music show, “Picture Perfect,” ordinarily broadcast on Saturdays at 6 p.m. EST, was to have been preempted this past week, because of fundraising obligations. But then we wound up making our quota for the day, and the show aired after all!

    Due to the last-minute change in plans, the announcement wasn’t posted on Facebook until 6:00. I suspect very few people, beyond those actually listening to the station at the time, knew to tune-in in to be able to hear it.

    Therefore, here’s a link to the webcast, which might serve as an appropriate soundtrack to your Thanksgiving preparations. Enjoy selections from “Friendly Persuasion” (Dimitri Tiomkin), “Our Town” (Aaron Copland), “Plymouth Adventure” (Miklós Rózsa), and the building-the-barn sequence from “Witness” (Maurice Jarre). And if you’re so inclined, save me a piece of pie.

    https://www.wwfm.org/post/picture-perfect-never-too-early-give-thanks

    Thank you for your continued support of WWFM – The Classical Network, and Happy Thanksgiving.

  • Thanksgiving Movie Music on WWFM

    Thanksgiving Movie Music on WWFM

    IT’S A THANKSGIVING MIRACLE!

    Today’s membership drive wrapped up a little early – which means that “PICTURE PERFECT” is on the air!! Pull up a chair and join me for a Thanksgiving feast of Americana film scores.

    None other than Aaron Copland wrote the music for a big screen adaptation of Thorton Wilder’s Pulitzer Prize winning play “Our Town.” The composer was at the height of his “populist” period. “El Salón México” 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 in capturing 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, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org!


    Martha Scott and William Holden in “Our Town” (1940)

  • Thanksgiving Crossword Home Music and Holidays

    Thanksgiving Crossword Home Music and Holidays

    With Thanksgiving now behind us, and today the beginning of Advent, this week’s Classic Ross Amico crossword is all about domesticity and music.

    To fill out the puzzle, follow the link and select “solve online” at the bottom of the page. You’ll then be able to type directly into the squares. Once you feel you’ve exhausted the puzzle, you’ll find the solutions by clicking on “Answer Key PDF.”

    There’s no place like “home” for the holidays – a phrase that might have been coined for COVID.

    https://www.armoredpenguin.com/crossword/Data/2020.11/2909/29090323.937.html


    “Bowling, anyone?”

  • Music Poetry & Feeling Alive

    Music Poetry & Feeling Alive

    I often think these things, but music makes me feel them.

    e.e. cummings, and the comings and goings of back yard friends.

    Happy Thanksgiving.


    i thank You God for most this amazing
    day:for the leaping greenly spirits of trees
    and a blue true dream of sky;and for everything
    which is natural which is infinite which is yes

    (i who have died am alive again today,
    and this is the sun’s birthday;this is the birth
    day of life and of love and wings:and of the gay
    great happening illimitably earth)

    how should tasting touching hearing seeing
    breathing any–lifted from the no
    of all nothing–human merely being
    doubt unimaginable You?

    (now the ears of my ears awake and
    now the eyes of my eyes are opened)

    e.e. cummings
    1894-1962

  • Star Wars Holiday Special A Thanksgiving Horror?

    Star Wars Holiday Special A Thanksgiving Horror?

    Since it’s not my wish to spoil anyone’s Thanksgiving, I’m warning you a little early this week that Roy and my topic on Friday will be the universally-reviled “Star Wars Holiday Special.” How hated is it? “Star Wars” creator George Lucas once remarked that if he could locate every copy, he would smash them with a hammer. I’m sure you will feel the same.

    First aired on CBS television on November 17, 1978 (preempting “Wonder Woman” and “The Incredible Hulk”), the “special” takes a core plot of Chewbacca trying to reach his home planet of Kashyyyk in time to celebrate Life Day with his Wookiee family, and folds it into an improbable variety show format that includes music and comedy perpetrated by Bea Arthur, Art Carney, Diahann Carroll, and Harvey Korman (the kids just love those guys), and an appearance by The Jefferson Starship. I know, right? In the end, Princess Leia sings a Life Day song to the tune of… “Star Wars.” Yes, it’s THAT bad. The SOLE saving grace is an admittedly cool, stylized cartoon that introduces the character of Boba Fett. (This was still two years before “The Empire Strikes Back.”)

    The special was met with slack-jawed disbelief by audiences and critics alike. It has never received an authorized release on home video. Quite simply, everyone associated with it wants you to believe that it never happened, that it was a bad dream, an undigested bit of beef, a fragment of underdone potato. But we know better.

    George Lucas may wish his holiday folly would just go away, but thanks to the then practically-brand-new technology of VHS, its horribleness has been preserved to be relived again and again on YouTube.

    Enjoy your Thanksgiving, because this year Black Friday will be very black indeed. Share your excruciating memories of the “Star Wars Holiday Special” on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. We begin processing the trauma, livestreamed on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EST.

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner/

    How bad can it be? THIS bad:

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