Arturo Toscanini leads the NBC Symphony in a 1952 performance of the first movement of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony:
(This is the latest in a weekly series of arts-related videos that appear in this space each Wednesday.)
Archives for 2008
TT: Almanac
“I never look at anything that isn’t beautiful these days unless duty compels me.”
Angus Wilson, Anglo-Saxon Attitudes
TT: Almanac
“The mention of rent put Frank on his mettle. ‘That’s all right, dear,’ he said; ‘you pay when you can.’
“Each time that he spoke this familiar phrase, and sometimes it was as often as twenty times in a week, he felt overcome by the sadness of the situation. It was seldom, he knew, that any good would come of his sympathy, but it was the hopelessness, the endless hopelessness of the lives with which he had surrounded himself, that awoke his compassion. Frank Rammage’s attitude could hardly be called sentimental, for it went farther than mere feeling–he regarded the dishonest and depraved as almost sacred. As usual, however, the little scene had satisfied the mixture of bullying and masochism that lay on the surface of his strange, Dostoyevskian philanthropy. He felt quite jolly.”
Angus Wilson, Anglo-Saxon Attitudes
TT, OGIC, and CAAF: Actually, we’re all a little fried
Into every blog a little chaos must occasionally fall, but never before have all three of us been under the crunch at one and the same time. On Sunday Terry and Mrs. T hit the road for a solid month of out-of-town reviewing. Laura will soon be departing Chicago for a couple of weeks, and Carrie is currently snowed under with cash-generating work.
Needless to say, none of this means that we’re closing up shop. There’ll always be a daily almanac entry, a Wednesday “Snapshot,” and the usual theater-related postings on Thursdays and Fridays. Nevertheless, regular readers should be forewarned that things are likely to be a bit spotty around here from now until the end of August. All three of us will post as often as we can, which might end up being more often than we expect, but we don’t want to make any unkeepable promises.
In short, expect no miracles, but do keep looking in on us–you’ll never go away completely empty-handed. And enjoy your summer!
TT: Neither crunchy nor thumpy
My friend Ethan Iverson, who plays piano with the Bad Plus, read my recent Wall Street Journal column on modern music, in which I mentioned in passing that “I don’t go in for crunch-and-thump music, nor do I care for the over-and-over-and-over-again minimalism of John Adams and Philip Glass, which puts me to sleep.” He promptly issued the following challenge on his blog:
Here’s an open invitation to Terry–who, after all, is a current collaborator with modernist composer Paul Moravec: what about a list of classical music since 1950 that he finds interesting? It should be a list of music that is neither twelve-tone or minimalist, nor particularly “crunch and thump.”
Here goes, straight off the top of my head. I’ve included links to currently available recordings of all ten pieces, which can also be downloaded from iTunes:
• Benjamin Britten, The Turn of the Screw (1954)
• Aaron Copland, Piano Fantasy (1957)
• Ned Rorem, Trio for Flute, Cello, and Piano (1959)
• Leonard Bernstein, Chichester Psalms (1965)
• Dmitri Shostakovich, String Quartet No. 11 (1966)
• Malcolm Arnold, Symphony for Brass Instruments (1978)
• George Tsontakis, String Quartet No. 3 (“Coraggio”) (1986)
• Morten Lauridsen, O Magnum Mysterium (1994)
• Lowell Liebermann, Piccolo Concerto (1996)
• Paul Moravec, The Time Gallery (2000)
Each of these pieces is more or less tonal (though Britten’s opera and the Copland Fantasy also make use of serial-type techniques). Beyond that, though, they don’t have a lot in common other than that I happen to like them all very much. Some are immediately accessible, while others are tougher nuts to crack. I chose them to suggest the breadth of musical possibility that has been available to postwar classical composers whose language is essentially traditional.
TT: Almanac
“Gerald Middleton was a man of mildly but persistently depressive temperament. Such men are not at their best at breakfast, nor is the week before Christmas their happiest time.”
Angus Wilson, Anglo-Saxon Attitudes
CD
Cy Walter, Rodgers Revisited: Cy Walter Plays Richard Rodgers Compositions (Collectables). Two years after I heralded the first CD reissue of the long-forgotten recordings of Cy Walter, the man who turned cocktail piano into an art, a sequel has finally come along. Walters’ 1956 recital of thirteen songs by Richard Rodgers, originally released by Atlantic, is as suave and elegant a display of piano playing as has ever been committed to disc–but don’t be fooled by the high gloss. Alec Wilder said in his original liner notes that “anyone who has heard his own songs played by Cy immediately has a greater respect for his own work….though utterly respectful of the composers and songwriters whose music he plays, he is also highly complex both rhythmically and harmonically in his interpretations of their music, all the while maintaining a constant balance of delicacy and sensitiveness.” Listen to “The Gentleman is a Dope” and you’ll hear what Wilder meant. More, please! (TT).
TT: Fret not
I’m pleased (and not a little relieved) to announce that www.terryteachout.com, the alternate URL for “About Last Night,” has been repaired at last and is functioning once more. If you’re in the habit of using that easy-to-remember address instead of www.artsjournal.com/aboutlastnight, our official URL, you may now return to your old ways.
Sorry about that.