Tag: Titanic

  • Titanic’s Echo: Music and Memory 1912 to Today

    Titanic’s Echo: Music and Memory 1912 to Today

    In yet another demonstration of history becoming shorter as I grow older, at 54 I look back to realize I was born only 54 years after the tragedy of the HMS Titanic.

    On this date in 1912, the Titanic sank off the coast of Newfoundland at 2:27 a.m. Over 1,500 souls were lost. But the band played on.

    A number of composers wrote music to commemorate the disaster. Cyril Scott, the prolific English composer – absurdly remembered, if at all, for a piano miniature, “Lotus Land” (1905) – wrote a piece called “Disaster at Sea” (1933), a work directly related to the Titanic sinking, which he revised as “Neptune” (1935). Its large orchestra includes a wind machine and an organ. Atmospheric sea music increases in menace, until the ship is consumed in a kind of arctic wasteland.

    Apparently, for Danish master Carl Nielsen, there was no such thing as “too soon.” The wreckage had scarcely settled on the ocean floor, when he embarked on a paraphrase for wind band on “Nearer, My God, to Thee” (1912). The well-known hymn is alleged to have been the last music played by the Titanic band. Essentially, Nielsen’s work turns out to be a three-minute tone poem. Stay sharp for the violent iceberg collision, or you might just spill your coffee.

    The musicians of the Titanic, of course, are legendary for having gone down with the ship, playing for as long as possible, in an attempt to keep calm among the passengers. The eight-member ensemble was led by Wallace Henry Hartley, who drew on selections from The White Star Line Songbook. The White Star Line repertoire included 341 items, including light overtures, intermezzi, waltzes, marches, arias, sacred music, and potpourris. Here’s a complete catalogue:

    https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/white-star-line-repertoire.html?fbclid=IwAR3i7AXjg7sInQDCuif70_Yzm6PnLXxqcYyS0-ikUVpo_4t3rOS4uSitu-8

    According to an eyewitness, “Many brave things were done that night, but none were more brave than those done by men playing minute after minute as the ship settled quietly lower and lower in the sea. The music they played served alike as their own immortal requiem and their right to be recalled on the scrolls of undying fame.“

    I Salonisti portrayed the ship’s band in the 1997 film “Titanic.”

    I am now as far away from my birth as my birth was from the Titanic. Talk about a sinking feeling! Gentlemen, it’s been a privilege playing with you…


    “The Sinking of the Titanic,” iconic illustration for the newspaper “Die Gartenlaube,” by Willy Stöwer (1912)

  • Titanic’s Waltz September Song

    Titanic’s Waltz September Song

    Technically still a week away from the start of autumn, but the days are shortening, temperatures are crisp this morning, and the crickets are already finding their way in.

    Here is “Valse Septembre” by Felix Godin, really the nom de plume of a less continental-sounding Herbert Albert Brown. The work, a light waltz composed in 1909, gained notoriety for its inclusion in the White Star Line Songbook. This is the volume that was drawn upon by Wallace Henry Hartley and his eight-member band – the band that “played on,” as the RMS Titanic slipped beneath the icy waters of the North Atlantic on April 15, 1912.

    So maybe spring’s not all it’s cracked up to be.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cGuII1Hkpc8

    The White Star Line repertoire included 341 items, including light overtures, intermezzi, waltzes, marches, sacred music, and potpourris. Here’s the complete menu:

    https://www.encyclopedia-titanica.org/white-star-line-repertoire.html

  • Titanic’s Haunting “Valse Septembre”

    Titanic’s Haunting “Valse Septembre”

    As heard aboard the RMS Titanic, here’s Felix Godin’s “Valse Septembre” (1909). Godin was actually a pseudonym for light music composer Henry Albert Brown. The musicians of the Titanic, of course, are legendary for having played as long as possible during the ship’s sinking, in an attempt to keep calm among the passengers. In a sense, they wound up performing their own requiem.

    I Salonisti portrayed the ship’s band in the 1997 film “Titanic.”

  • Remembering James Horner’s Iconic Film Scores

    Remembering James Horner’s Iconic Film Scores

    The prolific film composer James Horner died on June 22, when his single-turboprop plane went down in Los Padres National Forest in Southern California. He was 61 years-old.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we honor his memory, with music from but a handful of his over 100 scores. Horner was the recipient of two Academy Awards – for Best Original Score and Best Original Song (“My Heart Will Go On”) – for his work on “Titanic” (1997). “Titanic” went on to become the bestselling soundtrack of all time.

    Horner received eight additional Academy Award nominations. We’ll hear music from at least two of the scores so recognized: “A Beautiful Mind” (2001) and “Braveheart” (1995). “A Beautiful Mind,” of course, dramatized the life of late Nobel Laureate (formerly of Princeton University) John Nash, who died in a car accident in May.

    We’ll also have music from Horner’s breakout success, “Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan” (1982).

    I hope you’ll join me, as we honor James Horner this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Friday evening at 6 ET, with a repeat Saturday morning at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.


    Horner’s obituary in the New York Times:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/24/us/james-horner-whose-soaring-film-scores-included-titanic-dies-at-61.html?_r=0

    PHOTO: His heart will go on

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