Friday, November 9, 2012

And Then There Is God

Religious music - I guess I'm more of a traditionalist, but there is some really great stuff out there.  I have spent most of my life involved in church music, starting from choir as a child, singing in various choirs, directing choirs, performing music in church, even stumbling through the organ (my preference is to default to the piano as I'm not much of an organist).  But I love it and will keep doing it in hopes that someone will feel some of what I feel when I hear/perform it.

I love the music of John Rutter.  One of the first pieces of his that I ever heard was his "Star Carol" which was a real breath, no, gust of fresh air in the religious music scene.  What I'm putting in here is "The Lord Is My Shepherd" from his Requiem.  Over the years, I have "collected" different versions of the 23rd Psalm, and this one really sticks out as deeply moving.


Another contemporary composer of note is Eric Whitacre.  He writes glorious music for choirs.  This piece, "When David Heard", is about David's mourning after hearing of the death of his son, Absalom, and was written for a friend who had lost a son.  I find it impossible to forget the haunting words, "My son, my son" pouring out of the heart, in a cascade, tumbling down, falling over each other in deepest grief.  Anyone who is a parent fears this kind of grief more than any other.


I also like the choral music of Craig Courtney who has been the heir of the late John Ness Beck, who wrote beautiful music when I was growing up.  I couldn't find any decent recordings of the music of either one of them on YouTube, so I'm going to try to put in one of Craig's songs from a CD.  The choir on this CD is from the church that I grew up in in Columbus Ohio.  Craig Courtney has worked closely with the director there, Ronald Jenkins, and they have done some great work together.

Well, rats.  I couldn't get that to download, so I looked some more on YouTube and found Craig Courtney guest directing the BJU choir in several of his songs.  (BJU right up against BYU - I hope they can get along.)




And last, but certainly not least, I have to put some bells in here.  The group performing here is Vivace, an extremely talented group from Puerto Rico.  I have seen them a number of times and every time is wonderful.  They do their best when they are playing their native music, although everything they play is good.  The show they put on this night was all Latin or Latin-inspired music. This piece is one of the "Four Seasons of Buenos Aires" pieces by Astor Piazzolla.


Enjoy!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Addendum to my Previous Blog

As I was sitting in class today, I remembered something that fits into our discussion.  During the 40's and 50's, there was another big name in humor.  Spike Jones had a band and they spoofed everyone.  

Times have changed and the way we express our feelings may have changed, but the emotions behind those expressions are still there.  I vividly remember visiting the New Jersey shore in 1979 with a group of teenaged girls from church and seeing a woman on the beach with a tattooed number on her arm.  A tattooed number like that on a older woman could mean only one thing - she had been in a concentration camp.  I hereby offer a response to the war that is funny in appearance, but covers some very strong emotions that are not funny.  (Some of his other stuff is really funny, though.)


Monday, October 22, 2012

Since the State Hospitals Have Been Closed, It's Hard to Find a Cheap Lobotomy When You Need One

And Other Nutty Ramblings

Since the topic is one step away from the funny farm, I'm thinking this doesn't have to make perfect sense - so it won't.  Once upon a time, I had a brain that worked.  Now?

My first funny shows my age.  I have loved Victor Borge since I was a child.  He was always on some television show or other and could always be counted on for a good laugh.  His material does not age, it's still fresh and funny.  This is one of the crazier skits.  I thought you opera fans would appreciate it.  Oh, and don't be fooled - like Dudley Moore, he is a very accomplished pianist.


What musical comedy would be complete without a little PDQ Bach?  I think his earlier stuff is the best stuff and this is a real gem from the very first concert album.  This cantata, Iphigenia in Brooklyn stars John Ferranti (?) as Bargain-counter Tenor soloist and it uses a few unusual instruments as Professor Peter Schikele points out.


To bring this collection to a close, I will add a little special treat - the Nairobi Trio.  In case you have never heard of them, they were popular in the 1950s and played on a little TV show put together by Ernie Kovacs.  If you have never heard of Ernie Kovacs, go and check him out on YouTube.  This guy was a genius and was experimenting with the new medium of television and what worked and what didn't.  My first exposure to Bartok's Concerto for Orchestra was on his show, as well as some other far less serious things.


I also enjoy totally absurd things, free associating, the Muppets (the Muppet Show was the BEST!), poking holes in sacred cows (not that kind, Sureka), and the first part of TH White's The Once and Future King.  And I love George Booth's cartoons for the New Yorker and James Thurber.  In answer to the question, do I take anything seriously? the answer is I take as little as I possibly can seriously.  Most of life is just hilarious.  And I firmly believe that God gets a good laugh from some of our antics, especially the unintentional ones.

Happy night-night!








Monday, October 15, 2012

Making Sure the Audience Finds You!

At last, I finally get around to getting this post done!  And it's an important concept to deal with.  As musicians, we have to sell not only the music, but ourselves as performers, composers, nice people, whatever.  So here are some things that I've found that I like.  (In other words, things I might be able to do.)

Accessing the "Arts Journal" section of Alex Ross' website, I found this rather quirky item that made the NY Times.  It is about culture meeting culture and both working together.  Apparently, Chinatown in New York has expanded into the neighboring Italian neighborhood.  As the Chinese have bought up land, they've also bought businesses including the funeral homes.  And the Italian brass bands that have always played at the Italian funerals now play for the Chinese ones, too.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/14/nyregion/italian-brass-for-a-chinatown-goodbye.html

It seems to have increased the awareness of this musical form into another culture.

For years, one of my very favorite art songs is by William Bolcom as sung by his wife, Joan Morris.


The song is "Lime Jello Marshmallow Cottage Cheese Surprise".  I did find a probably illegal copy of this song on YouTube, so enjoy.  It's just too good not to share.  I just wish it had video.


(Don't you love the hair!)  Anyway, what is important here, aside from hearing the song a number of times on the radio (always a form of marketing!) is that William Bolcom has a website at williambolcom.com and the two of them have a combined website at bolcomandmorris.com.  Never underestimate the power of a very simple, straightforward URL.

Lastly, but not leastly, I like the flash mob thing and have to add in one of my personal favorites.  This is a flash mob from a couple of years ago in New York City at Christmas time.


This was the first one that I found.  It is the work of a group called Improv Everywhere and they have some very interesting videos on YouTube.  And then there is one more that I'd like to add just because I like it.  More flash mob and watch the guy with the cell phone.


Hey, it's almost Christmas, at least for church musicians!  

Signing off until my next brilliant foray into the wonderful world of 20th Century Music - it's ME!

Oh, if you can't stop reading this highly entertaining stuff, check out this video from Improv Everywhere.


I gotta quit.










Thursday, September 27, 2012

Noisy Thoughts

I'm sitting here looking out the window at clouds and some sky, lots of green plants, houses built in traditional Black Forest style and wondering, "How does new music relate to all of this?"  I played Handel last night and I will be playing Bach tonight through Sunday night.  It is a bigger stretch than I'd like it to be to get to 20th century music.  However, let's get to it.

The first group I would like to present is  Relâche, a new music group that has been playing together for around 30 years in Philadelphia.  When I lived there, I attended a number of their concerts when I lived there because I knew some of the people involved.  They commission a number of new works each year and have released 7 CDs one of which was nominated for a Grammy.

Then there is the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra that is based in (can you guess?) San Francisco.  They play a wide variety of music ranging from the early 20th century to current works.  Many of the composers whose works they play perform in the orchestra.  The information on their website stresses that they do not perform "museum music" and they like to do concerts that involve new music, the way in which the "museum music" was first performed.

John Adams first came to my attention when I heard Short Ride in a Fast Machine.  I still love that piece with all of its energy and vitality.  One of his most famous pieces is the opera, Nixon in China.  He still writes pieces of imagination often based on real events.  His website includes his blog on events past and present.

All of these websites are designed to promote the composers/performers and their works.  If the web didn't exist, all information would have to be passed the way it was in the past - by word of mouth.  I knew of Relâche because I worked with someone who was in it.  I knew John Adams because I heard one of his pieces on the radio.  I never would have known of the San Francisco Composers Chamber Orchestra unless they came to the place where I was living.  It's great to be able to find out these things and to hear excerpts (without buying the record, tape, CD, etc) and to discover which ones we like and which ones not.  Welcome to the 21st Century!




Monday, September 17, 2012

Sanity - What Are They?

What keeps me sane?

That question presumes that I am sane, well, at least sort of sane.  And you could probably get some debate on that question if you really wanted to.  However . . .

I have discovered one thing and that is that as I get older, I worry a LOT less about sanity and more about am I cultivating the properly curmudgeonly attitude.  So, some of my choices may be a bit unconventional, and that doesn't really bother me.

When I was in high school, the Beatles were still together, but not for long, Simon and Garfunkel were still on top, and the Tijuana Brass were flying high.  I got to see the TJB once at the Ohio State Fair, which managed to pull in top acts for the grandstand shows.  But my favorite group of the time was a group called Harpers Bizarre.  They had a number of hit songs including "Chattanooga Choo-choo" and the "59th Street Bridge Song" aka "Feelin' Groovy" (by Simon & Garfunkel).  They also recorded a number of Randy Newman songs, back before Randy Newman became famous in his own name.  This is one of those songs,
"Simon Smith and His Amazing Dancing Bear".  I love his satire!  (And Harper's Bizarre sang it - even better!)




I also love jazz.  I discovered Dianne Reeves a number of years back when she was promoting her album "The Calling".  One of the songs on it was this one, George & Ira Gershwin's "Fascinating Rhythm".  I love not only the arrangement, but the fact that I can understand every word she sings!  What a singer!!!!!


I also grew to love Bob James' music from watching "Taxi", one of the greatest TV shows ever.  This is good music to get mellow, "Angela".



Lastly, but not leastly, I got a love of Bach and organ music.  I actually took organ lessons for a few years after I graduated from college, but it definitely helps to be able to play the piano first.  However, I have seen Virgil Fox, Wilbur Held, Keith Chapman, Peter Richard Conte, Alexander Schreiner, and Richard Elliott in concert on various organs (including the Wanamaker organ and the Mormon Tabernacle organ).  I actually got to play the Tabernacle organ once and didn't make a fool of myself!

At any rate, I am putting in a recording of Richard Elliott playing the Tabernacle organ.  Rick is a friend of mine and I knew him when he was still a student at Curtis.  He is now the Principal Organist of the Tabernacle organ.


And then to finish things off, I am including one of my favorite organ works, Louis Vierne's "Carillon de Westminster".  This is a fairly popular work and not terribly difficult, so it is played and recorded often.  My favorite recording is one made by Alexander Schreiner in the 1970's on the Tabernacle organ.  Schreiner studied with Vierne and Schreiner played his works often.  Unfortunately, the album is out of print and has never been reissued on CD.  So, you will get the next best performance that I could find.



So, sanity - well, it's a bit overrated, I think, but I guess I prefer dealing with sane people than not-sane people.  In addition to music, I like walking in the woods with Jim or alone.  I spent many, many hours in the woods growing up.  It was my place to go when I wanted to talk to myself and see how I was doing with life.  Time spent in a canoe on the water is also wonderful.  Watching clouds  change as they go in the sky.  Being by myself in my house, putting on favorite music, turning the volume up, and dancing, if I feel like it.  Solitude.  Quiet.

Oh, and the title of this posting is a play on a quote from a book I read when I was a kid.  The actual quote was "Brahms - what are they?" so it was a short hop to "Sanity - what are they?"  

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Art not necessarily with Music

Art!  Ah, that most elusive of topics.  (OK, it's a cliche.)

I do have definite tastes in art and have spent many hours in art museums.  When I was in junior high and high school, I would go to the library and check out books of art works and pour over them.  Columbus had an art museum, but it wasn't very big and didn't have a lot of the types of paintings that I liked.  It wasn't until I moved to Philadelphia that I got to indulge my passion.

In no particular order, one piece that I like is not a painting, but a sculpture.  I don't know that this was the exact piece that I saw, but it is very similar.  One evening shortly after my son was born, we visited the museum and went into the Medieval art section.  There were a number of sculptures of the Virgin Mary with Child and most of them obviously hadn't had real models as they all had women holding a child off to their side.  Then I found one little, unglorified statue that captured a mother and child perfectly.



This woman has held a child on her hip, which is what all mothers do.  And she had her hip jutted out to one side to rest the weight of the child on it rather than hold the child to the side with all of the weight solely on her arms.  This particular piece is by an unknown French artist in the 14th century.  What I like about this object is its realism.  It's real life.  This woman really lived.

A painter that I discovered in high school is El Greco (The Greek).  His real name was Doménikos Theotokópoulos and he was actual from Crete, not Greece.  He spent most of his life painting in Spain where he got his nickname.  Most of his paintings were religious in nature, either of saints or portraits of church officials.  The painting below is from 1607-1614 and is entitled The Visitation.  Neither of the figures are identified, but it seems to me that there is love and compassion and solace here and maybe even healing and it feels peaceful.




In comparison with that is the painting below entitled "A View of Toledo".  The first time I saw it, I fell in love and had a copy hanging in my room for years.  It is one of the few landscapes that El Greco painted and this was done around 1597.  What always attracted me to this was the raw emotion in the sky - storm clouds at the ready, but still with blue sky peeking through.    The painting hangs in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and no reproduction can do it justice.


I love the Impressionist school of painting.  Just about any of the artists would do as an example, but I have always particularly like Renoir's "Girl With a Watering Can".  She is so innocent and self-possessed.  And the level of detail is amazing, also.  The lace on her dress is obviously lace and not just painted blobs giving the impression of lace.  I find this a very tranquil, domestic painting and it's real, too.  I've seen this little girl any number of times, all dressed up in her good clothes and being a little girl.



I also love the work of Georgia O'Keeffe.  She spent much of her time on her Ghost Ranch outside of Taos, New Mexico.  While I haven't visited the Ghost Ranch, I have been to Taos and the surrounding region and this painting captures the starkness of the southwestern desert and its vibrant colors.  It shows a desert canyon in ways words could never capture.  I feel like I can jump into the picture and be in that canyon.



I also love the watercolors of Andrew Wyeth.  This painting is of the Brandywine River valley near Chadd's Ford, Pennsylvania, where Wyeth lived.  It is one of the most beautiful places on earth and magical.  It is an area steeped in history - this house is colonial and probably saw the Battle of Brandywine during the Revolution.  What I like about this is the tranquility and beauty of the place - you just know there is a fire in the fireplace and the family is gathered around it sharing the warmth.


Lastly,  (at last), I will finish my mini-exhibition with another 3-dimensional piece, "Ghost" by Alexander Calder.  This mobile hangs in the Great Stair Hall in the Philadelphia Museum.  It floats gently on the air and the title is very apt.  It makes no noise, but moves gracefully in the air currents produced by visitors walking under it.  It, like most of the other art works in this blog, is very peaceful.  If it is indeed a ghost, it is a friendly one and offers no threat to the observer.



If there is a common theme that collects all of these works together, it is peaceful domesticity.  All of these works say something about tranquility and life with family.  The virgin is at peace with her child and is lovingly caring for him.  "The Visitation" conveys comfort and solace.  The Renoir is the kind of scene we would wish to see with our children (or grandchildren).  Georgia O'Keeffe's cliffs are not threatening, but a statement of majesty and beauty.  Wyeth's watercolors show a world where opposition exists (there is snow on the ground), but there is safety and security within the strong stone walls.  Even things we would normally fear, the storm in Toledo and Calder's "Ghost" are not threatening, but are another part of life.  The storm clouds may threaten the town, but the town itself is tranquil.  And the "Ghost" floats freely above us, reacting to our movements, not causing them.

Enjoy!