10-06: Amália Rodrigues Best of Fado - И́горь Талько́в Grand Collection - Rosemary Clooney Solves the Swingin' Riddle 1961 - Véronique Gens / Christophe Rousset : Tragédiennes 2




1651 – Heinrich Albert (German composer & poet)
1762 – Francesco Manfredini (Italian composer, violinist & church musician)
1786 – Antonio Sacchini (Italian opera composer)
1837 – Jean-François Le Sueur (French composer & conductor, teacher of Berlioz, Gounod & A. Thomas)
1860 – Stephen Elvey (English organist & composer)
1868 – Léon Kreutzer (French composer & pianist, nephew of Rodolphe)
1874 – Thomas Tellefsen (Norwegian pianist & composer)

1909 – Dudley Buck (American composer, organist, writer & teacher)
1933 – Zakaria Paliashvili [ზაქარია ფალიაშვილი
] (Georgian composer, conductor, hornist & folk song collector)
1935 – Sir Frederic Hymen Cowen (Jamaican-born English pianist, conductor & composer)
1940 – Ferdinando Liuzzi (Italian musicologist & composer, specialist in the Italian Trecento)
1947 – Leevi Madetoja (Finnish composer)
1954 – Hakon Børresen (Danish composer)

1973 – Arnold Walter (Czech-born Canadian musicologist, teacher, composer, pianist & writer)
1985 – Nelson Riddle (American arranger, composer, bandleader, orchestrator & trombonist)

1991 – Igor Talkov [И́горь Талько́в] (Russian rock singer, songwriter & guitarist )
1995 – Walter "Crash" Morgan (Canadian reggae & rock drummer, Messenjah, Big Sugar)
1999 – Amália Rodrigues (Portuguese fado singer, player of the Portuguese guitar & actress)

2004 – Marvin Santiago (Puerto Rican salsa singer & comedian)
2010 – Antonie Kamerling (Dutch actor & pop singer)

2010 – Colette Renard (French actress & pop singer)

They call Amália Rodrigues "Rainha do Fado" - the Queen of Fado, because it is she who did most to popularize this genre of music in the 20th century. And what is fado? It's a kind of Portuguese traditional music (one cannot call it "folk" music, because in some ways it is more a type of classical music) that originated almost 200 years ago, but has roots that go back much further. It is music with a solo singer, usually accompanied by the Portuguese guitar, an instrument very different from the usual guitar, with a rounded body and 12 strings, strung in double courses. There are two types of Portuguese guitar, as there are two types of fado - Lisboa and Coimbra, in both cases (I believe that's a Lisboa guitar Rodrigues is playing above).

As the guitars are shaped, tuned, and played in slightly different ways, likewise there are differences in the two types of fado. It is from Coimbra that fado gets its "academic" traditions, for Coimbra, in inland northwestern Portugal, has been a university town since the middle ages. Coimbra fado is usually performed only by men, who wear a particular kind of traditional black academic uniform, in a fairly formal setting. So, when you have a female singer of fado, like Amália Rodrigues, it's a pretty good bet you're listening to the Lisboa type! Also, in Coimbra fado, there is a peculiar way the audience has of expressing its approval - rather than applauding with the hands (which is what's done in Lisboa fado), they cough, or clear the throat. I'm all for this tradition being picked up by classical audiences, because it might cut down on all the coughing during the performances! And it is from Lisboa that fado gets its "marine" traditions, since Lisbon is of course on the coast, and has been an important port city since ancient times. The lyrics of fado traditionally deal with the life of the sea and sailors, and the life of the common poor people. But fado can have other kinds of lyrics, and it can also use many different kinds of instrumental accompaniment, such as a string quartet, or even a full orchestra.

Fado is a melancholy music. It is as hard to describe as it is to explain the Portuguese word with which it's most associated - saudade. Saudade is a word that can't be translated into any other language, at least not with a single word. It means the dreamlike feeling of longing one has for someone or something that has gone away, and left an emptiness that can't be filled by anyone or anything else. At the same time, it expresses the hope, often against all odds, that that for which one feels the saudades will return one day and make life whole again. Yet further, it expresses the fantasies about this fulfillment brought on by these hopeful feelings.

So you see, saudade is very hard to explain with the tongue, but very easy to understand with the heart. And it's the same with fado! So, let the beautiful music of Amália Rodrigues come into your ear and from there it will be transported to your heart, and you'll understand it all!

Be sure to follow the links in the list and read up on Nelson Riddle, one of the greatest arrangers in 20th-century music, who's most associated with the mid-career recordings of Frank Sinatra; and Igor Talkov, the Russian rock singer who took political risks in the Soviet era and became so beloved in his country; and Georgian composer Zakaria Paliashvili, who's considered to be the father of a truly national classical music in his home country.

Before I leave you, I'd like you to look at that page of 14th-century Italian black mensural notation that's on the right in the collage, and is in the spot where a photo of Ferdinando Liuzzi ought to be. Now, if you don't read music, that page might not be any more inscrutable than the page that's at the top left, from more than 300 years later, which is actually in modern notation, despite a few orthographic differences. If you do read music, the comparison will perhaps make you appreciate that reading music was a much more difficult task in the middle ages than it is today.

That page is from the Rossi Codex, once thought to be the earliest source of secular music from the Italian Trecento (that's the Italian term for the 14th century). When German scholars, such as Heinrich Besseler, first studied the Rossi in the 1920s, they assumed the manuscript was from Florence, like most of the surviving trecento sources. But a little later, Ferdinando Liuzzi, along with Ugo Sesini, and Ettore Li Gotti, having the advantage of being, you know, ITALIAN, noted that linguistic evidence in the texts points to the Veneto, in northern Italy, as its place of origin. Much later, in his publication of a facsimile of the Rossi Codex, Nino Pirrotta was to assert based on other evidence that the provenance of the manuscript could be narrowed down even further, to the city of Verona.

I did actually find a photo of Ferdinando Liuzzi. He's down there, along with ten other musicologists, at a conference in 1939, the year before he died of a heart attack. Liuzzi is the one standing just in front of the sconce (thanks, Mom!) on the right.

Standing L-R: Harold Spivacke, Otto Kinkeldey, Otto Gombosi, Knud Jeppesen, Fernando Liuzzi, Gustave Reese
Seated L-R: Edward J. Dent, Carleton Sprague Smith, Curt Sachs, Alfred Einstein, Dayton C. Miller

The names in the caption probably won't mean anything to you, unless you're someone like me who attempted a professional degree in historical musicology. To me, most of them are legendary figures. Well, anyway... this has been your music theory jock/musicology geek moment for the week...

10-05: Revueltas Centennial Anthology - Evile Enter the Grave 2007 - Bert Jansch 1965 - Offenbach Romantique 2007




1564 – Pierre de Manchicourt (Franco-Flemish composer, active in Spain at the court of Philip II)
1707 – Daniel Speer (German composer & author)
1813 – Etienne Ozi (French bassoonist & composer)
1867 – Thomas Täglichsbeck (German violinist & composer)
1880 – Jacques Offenbach (German-born French composer, cellist & impresario)

1911 – Charles Théodore Malherbe (French musicologist & composer)
1915 – José María Usandizaga (Spanish composer & pianist, pupil of d'Indy in Paris)

1915 – Otto Malling (Danish composer, organist & teacher, pupil of Gade, director of Royal Danish Academy of Music)
1924 – Joseph Vézina (Canadian conductor, composer, organist & teacher)
1940 – Silvestre Revueltas (Mexican composer, violinist & conductor)
1943 – Leon Roppolo (American jazz clarinetist, saxophonist & guitarist, New Orleans Rhythm Kings)
1954 – Flor Alpaerts (Belgian conductor, teacher & composer, co-director of Royal Flemish Opera)
1965 – Gustaf Bengtsson (Swedish composer)
1981 – Jud Strunk (American country & pop singer, songwriter, banjoist & comedian, Laugh-In)
1992 – Eddie Kendricks (American R&B singer & songwriter, The Temptations)
1992 – Paul Acket (Dutch entrepreneur, founder of Musiek Express magazine & organizer of North Sea Jazz Festival)

1995 – Dick Jurgens (American jazz bandleader & trumpeter)
2009 – Mike Alexander (English thrash metal bass guitarist & songwriter, Evile)

2010 – Steve Lee (Swiss rock singer, songwriter, drummer & harmonica player, Gotthard)
2011 – Bert Jansch (Scottish folk singer, songwriter & guitarist)
2011 – Steve Jobs (American computer entrepreneur & innovator, co-founder & CEO of Apple Inc.)

Well, as you should know by now, this blog does occasionally feature folks who weren't necessarily musicians, but who played an important role in the world of music in one way or another. That's true of businessman Paul Acket, and boy, is it certainly true of the fellow who occupies the bottom row of the collage. Chances are, he's had more of an effect on the way you consume and listen to music than just about any other individual human being who's been alive in the past 10 years. And yes, I'm including Johnny Cash, Bob Hope, and Kevin Bacon in that.

See, now, that's all I have to say today. Nothing about how unique and influential Jacques Offenbach or Bert Jansch were. No inane remarks about how low-pitched instruments such as the cello, trombone, bassoon, and electric bass seem to be dominant within the October 5th cavalcade of poopery. I opined, and yet I was pithy, as my idol Bill O'Reilly might say. Yes, that was a joke. I hope you don't find my silence on these and the others to be too terribly revuelting...


10-04a: Schoenberg Erwartung | Pierrot Lunaire | Lied der Waldtaube / Boulez | Martin | Minton | Norman 1977-79

Arnold Schoenberg: Vision (Satire) - Oil on cardboard (undated).
As I promised earlier today, here's an extra post dedicated to the memory of Marie Gutheil-Schoder, the soprano who created the solitary role in the original production of Schoenberg's Erwartung in 1924. She was known in her day as not just a great opera singer, but as a great operatic actress. Gustav Mahler called her a musical genius. That's something that should certainly make you sit up and notice! Unfortunately, Gutheil-Schoder left behind only a very few recordings: a couple excerpts from Carmen, an aria from The Merry Wives of Windsor, and some duets from Tales of Hoffmann, all recorded in 1902. But her legacy did live on in the form of the great mezzo Risë Stevens, who was one of her students.

So, it's a Tuesday night/Wednesday morning. You're feeling a great emptiness in your life... a vast, gaping hole, one that only post-Romantic Expressionist atonality can fill. You've come to the right place! (Read more below...)

10-04: Gorgoroth Under the Sign of Hell 1997 - Glenn Gould : Beethoven Symphony 5 / Liszt | Bach Goldberg Variations 1955 & 1981 Remaster - Art Farmer & Benny Golson Meet the Jazztet 1960 - Janis Joplin Live 1967 - Mercedes Sosa 30 Años



1713 – Valentin Molitor (Swiss composer, organist, priest & music director, St. Gall Abbey)
1838 – Sophia Maria Westenholz (German composer, pianist, singer & teacher)
1848 – Louis Massonneau (German violinist, composer & conductor of French ancestry)
1907 – Alfredo Keil (Portuguese composer, painter & poet, Portuguese national anthem "A Portuguesa")

1935 – Marie Gutheil-Schoder (German operatic soprano, premiered Schoenberg's Erwartung)
1949 – Edmund Eysler (Austrian operetta composer & pianist)
1969 – Natalino Otto (Italian jazz singer & actor)

1970 – Janis Joplin (American rock singer, songwriter, painter, dancer & music arranger)
1970 – George Frederick McKay (American composer, author & teacher)
1975 – Alexander Gray (American pop singer, actor & television host, This is Music)
1979 – Christina Spierenburg (Dutch singer)
1982 – Glenn Gould (Canadian pianist, composer, radio broadcaster, writer, conductor & singer)

1990 – Alyn Ainsworth (English pop singer, guitarist, dance band leader & television host)
1991 – J. Frank Wilson (American rock & R&B singer, The Cavaliers)
1992 – Laurie Anders (American pop singer & actress)
1994 – Bill Challis (American jazz arranger & pianist)
1994 – Danny Gatton (American blues, rock & country guitarist)

1999 – Grim [Erik Brødreskift] (Norwegian black metal drummer, Immortal, Borknagar & Gorgoroth)
1999 – Art Farmer (American jazz trumpeter, flugelhornist & flumpeter)

2009 – Mercedes Sosa (Argentine folk singer, drummer & leftist political activist)
2010 – Sir Norman Wisdom (English comedian, singer-songwriter & actor)

Write-up and SUPPLEMENTAL POST (how could I forget about Erwartung?) in several more hours...

Oh, and...

Përshëndetje, Shqipëri!
  
[5 hours later]

Okay, I'm back now. That last thing I wrote there was "Greetings, Albania!" in Albanian. I noticed we had our first reader from that lovely Balkan paradise just as I was signing off. Several other new countries have been added to our readership in the past couple of weeks, including Thailand, Italy, and South Korea. Welcome and greetings to you all, in your respective languages! I KNOW YOU CAN'T UNDERSTAND ME, BUT IF I SHOUT, WILL IT HELP?

Okay, look... I've made a decision. I'm going to have to scale way back on the write-ups. There are already several posts out there that are as yet write-upless, and I still need to go back and do something with those. But I'm sensing the main thing you folks are here for is the "Read more..." bit anyway, and of course to look at the pretty pictures (I don't know if any of you appreciate how much time I spend putting those collages together; just finding all the images I need is time-consuming in and of itself). So, I'm going to be doing like I've been doing a lot recently, which is to put a lot of links in the list, so you can do your own research about any of the musicians who really interest you. That's not to say I won't be writing anything at all any more about some of them, just that I'll only be doing so when I really feel compelled to - when I really feel like there's something I need to say about one or more of them.

Today, there's only one musician I feel like I really need to say something about, and I'm sorry if all you hippies out there are disappointed it's not Janis Joplin, and if all you black metal fiends out there are sorry it's not Grim. If it makes you evil little bastards feel any better, I did put the Gorgoroth album he played on at the head of the post title, and in doing so have probably succeeded in frightening off what little readership this blog had to begin with. Ah, well... it's all for you, Damian, it's all for you...


No, the one I'm going to talk about is Glenn Gould. Glenn Gould is one of those musicians who's totally indispensable, and totally controversial, somebody you can't help but love, or hate, or love-hate. And those are the best kind. (Come to think, Janis Joplin is sort of in that category as well, isn't she? Okay, so I said something about her now. Are you hippies satisfied?) For in the arts - or really, in any field that puts one in the public eye - it is wonderful to be loved, but it is still okay to be hated! The only true curse and horror is to be not cared about at all.

I'm one of those you can put in the love-hate category as far as Glenn Gould goes. For I could listen to his piano-playing all day long. The problem is that recordings of JUST his piano-playing do not exist. The only recordings he left for us are those of his singing and humming, with the sounds of his pianoforte mixed faintly into the background. And honestly, Glenn Gould was a terrible singer. I mean, sometimes whatever note his voice was on wasn't even part of the harmony, much less the melody, that the composer was on at a given moment. Worse yet, Gould's bad habit (which it was, honestly, notwithstanding his own repeated claims that it was an essential part of how he made music) has rubbed off on later pianists, who've taken it as carte blanche to vocalize as loudly as they please throughout the entire classical repertoire. Emanuel Ax comes to mind. Among the younger generation of virtuosi, Fazil Say is particularly bad about it. Just listen to the samples of his Haydn on Amazon, and you'll see what I mean. Mind you, his Haydn (that's to say, the Haydn as produced by his fingers depressing keys, and his feet depressing pedals) is spectacular.

There were other somewhat rather maddening things about Gould. I once heard a radio interview with him from the late 60s in which he claimed that Petula Clark was superior to the Beatles. Something to do with her connection to tradition, or some horseshit like that. I think Gould enjoyed being a contrarian, someone whom you could expect to give you the unexpected, or at least something you couldn't quite get from anybody else. That philosophy was most apparent in some of his interpretive choices, especially as concerns tempo. There are many examples of pieces he took either much faster or much slower than anybody else did. And there are pieces he recorded more than once where his tempo is much faster or slower on the later recording than on the first.

But above all with Gould, of course, is that touch. That articulation, that phrasing, the smallest details of a piece, along with its grand sweep. I heard the great pianist Leon Fleisher in an interview talking about how piano teachers almost always teach their students to approach the keyboard with curved fingers, so that one plays on the fingertips. But he noted that if you look at the two greatest piano virtuosi of the mid-20th century - Glenn Gould and Vladimir Horowitz - both of them played with flat fingers, with the fat of the finger touching the keys. And they were able to get remarkable, almost superhuman results out of it.

But with Gould, it seems almost like there's something else there. It's not just a matter of flat fingers, or anything to do purely with the technical mechanism of it. There was some kind of connection between his brain, and his spinal column, and his arms, and his hands, and his fingers, and the piano's keys, and its action, and its hammers, and its strings. And then when those strings vibrated, it made some kind of crazy biofeedback loop that went through his ears and back into his brain again. Certainly it's what happens with all musicians, with all performing artists, but with him it was somehow more on the surface than usual, you could almost see and hear the cogwheels of his mind turning and churning in their madness. And those beatific expressions he would get on his face, while it all was happening, like he'd been transported to some time and place completely apart of ordinary existence...

... and then that bloody singing would chime in and ruin it all. (Read more below...)

10-03: Skip James 1930 Complete - 2Pac All Eyez On Me 2004 Remaster - Nielsen 4 + 5 : Ole Schmidt 1974 - Woody Guthrie Asch Recordings 4 CDs - Seán Ó Riada : Pléaráca an Riadaigh - Beethoven Concerto 2 + 3 : Schnabel / Sargent - Bax Tintagel etc / Boult









Oh, no... don't think you're getting off that easy. There's also:




1646 – Virgilio Mazzocchi (Italian composer of sacred works for papal chapels)
1685 – Fidel Molitor (German church composer & music director)
1750 – Georg Matthias Monn (Austrian composer, organist & teacher)
1820 – Ludwig Wenzel Lachnith (Bohemian hornist, composer & infamous adaptor of Mozart operas, active in France)
1828 – Josephus Andreas Fodor (Dutch violinist & composer)
1853 – Georges Onslow (Anglo-French composer & pianist)
1889 – Karel Miry (Belgian composer of operas & the national anthem of Flanders, "De Vlaamse Leeuw")

1903 – Benedetto Junck (Alsatian-Italian composer)
1907 – Alfred Reisenauer (German pianist, composer & teacher)
1912 – Guido Papini (Italian violinist, teacher & composer)

1919 – Daniel Brink Towner (American hymn composer)
1931 – Carl Nielsen (Danish composer, conductor & violinist)
1941 – Wilhelm Kienzl (Austria composer, conductor, pianist & violinist)
1953 – Sir Arnold Bax (English composer, pianist & poet ["Dermot O’Byrne"])
1967 – Walter Müller von Kulm (Swiss composer, conductor & teacher)
1967 – Sir Malcolm Sargent (English conductor, organist & composer)
1967 – Woody Guthrie (American folk singer, songwriter, guitarist, mandolinist, harmonic player, fiddler & writer)
1969 – Skip James (American blues singer, guitarist, pianist, songwriter & preacher)
1971 – Seán Ó Riada (Irish composer & folk musician, Ceoltóirí Chualann)

1990 – Eleanor Steber (American operatic soprano)
2000 – Benjamin Orr (American rock bass guitarist & singer, The Cars)
2008 – Johnny "J" (Mexican-born American hip hop & R&B record producer & songwriter)


Well, I lied. I'm feeling a little too overwhelmed to say anything of substance about Carl Nielsen, Arnold Bax, Malcolm Sargent, Woody Guthrie, Skip James, Seán Ó Riada, Eleanor Steber, Ben Orr, or Johnny "J". Maybe you're better off wondering what I would have said about them. Like: "Would he have drawn attention to both Woody Guthrie and Skip James as major icons of American 'roots' music?" Or: "Would he have used Arnold Bax's affinity for both Celtic and Nordic themes to segue into Seán Ó Riada's pivotal role in the revival of ancient Irish performance practice, and Carl Nielsen's status as the greatest composer the nation of Denmark has yet produced?" Or yet again: "Who's gonna drive you home tonight?" Good questions, all. I guess you'll never know for sure what the answers would have been...

10-02: Hazel Scott / Charles Mingus / Max Roach 1955 - Bola de Nieve 1950 - Violin Concertos Mendelssohn | Bruch 1 + Scottish Fantasy / Chung 1972 - Gene Autry 16 Country Classics


1559 – Jacquet de Mantua (French composer & cathedral music director, active in Italy)
1629 – Antonio Cifra (Italian composer & church music director)
1823 – Daniel Steibelt (German pianist & composer, active in France, England & Russia)
1842 – José Mariano Elízaga (Mexican composer, court music director, music theorist, pianist, organist, teacher & music publisher)
1915 – Russell Alexander (American composer, vaudeville entertainer & circus band euphonium soloist)
1920 – Max Bruch (German composer & conductor)
1943 – Robert Nathaniel Dett (Canadian composer, pianist, organist & choir director, active also in the United States)
1960 – Jaroslav Doubrava (Czech composer, painter & teacher)

1970 – Bo Linde (Swedish composer & conductor)
1971 – Bola de Nieve [Ignacio Jacinto Villa] (Cuban cabaret singer, pianist & songwriter)
1981 – Hazel Scott (Trinidadian-born jazz & classical pianist, singer & actress)

1983 – Gerald Strang (Canadian composer, teacher & author)
1996 – Frida Knight (English musicologist, author, pianist, violinist & socialist activist)

1998 – Gene Autry (American country singer, guitarist, actor, & entrepreneur)
2001 – Franz Biebl (German composer, "Ave Maria")
2007 – Tawn Mastrey (American hard rock disc jockey & music video producer, Hair Nation, Absolutely Live High Voltage)

2008 – Rob Guest (English-born New Zealander/Australian musical theater performer & television host)

October 2 saw the passing of two particularly famous musical notables: Gene Autry, everyone's favorite singing cowboy, both on the phonograph and on the Silver Screen; and Max Bruch, who with his three violin concertos and Scottish Fantasia was one of the 19th century's most prolific contributors to the standard repertoire of concerted works for the violin. Another one of Bruch's most famous works is his Kol Nidrei for cello and orchestra, based on Hebrew themes. When the Nazis came to power and started banning public performances of works by Jewish composers, Bruch was one of the composers they targeted. Just one little problem: Bruch wasn't Jewish! In fact, there's no evidence of him having had any ancestors who were Jewish either. The Nazis merely assumed he was because of his Hebrew-themed and Hebrew-titled work. Clearly they were living by their usual maxim, "When in doubt, err on the side of extreme ignorance and stupidity."

We also remember two great Caribbean pianist-vocalists: Trinidadian jazz musician and actress Hazel Scott - like Mary Lou Williams, one of those all-too-rare lights in the "man's world" of instrumental jazz - and Cuban cabaret entertainer Ignacio Jacinto Villa, who went by the nickname of Bola de Nieve ("Snowball") because of his round head, and who was one of the gay men lucky enough to escape persecution under the Castro regime, thanks only to the great respect his pure talent afforded him.

Two musicians who are less well-known than they once were, but who have interesting stories to tell. Canadian-born composer, keyboardist & choirmaster Robert Nathaniel Dett was, in the 1920s, the first black student ever to complete the five-year course of study at Oberlin Conservatory. In 1929, he traveled to Paris to study with... guess who? That's right... like Virgil Thomson and Roy Harris, from the past two days' posts, Dett was also a pupil of Nadia Boulanger at Fontainebleu. Then in 1932, he received his Masters degree from Eastman. Dett went on to have some considerable critical and public successes, most notably with the premiere in 1937 of his oratorio The Ordering of Moses by the Cincinnati Symphony under Eugene Goosens, at a festival where the chorus numbered 350. His last duties took him to Europe, contributing to the war effort as a choral advisor to the USO. He died of a heart attack there in 1943.

The German Daniel Steibelt was also a composer and pianist. His reputation hasn't held up quite as well as Dett's, however. His studies began with Johann Kirnberger, who himself had been a pupil of J. S. Bach. After Steibelt's father forced him to join the Prussian army, he soon deserted and became an itinerant musician, finally dividing most of his time between Paris and London, where his abilities as both a pianist and a composer gained recognition. In 1799, Steibelt embarked on a tour of German and Austria. It was when he arrived in Vienna in May 1800 that Steibelt made the unfortunate mistake of challenging Ludwig van Beethoven, 5 years his junior at the age of 29, to a trial of improvisational skill at the home of Count van Fries. Beethoven prevailed handily in the duel, delivering his coup de grâce with a lengthy improvisation on a theme from one of Steibelt's own works - which he read after turning the sheet music upside down on the music rack!

Steibelt cancelled the remainder of his tour after this public humiliation, but he went on to enjoy further success in his musical career, finally ending up comfortably in St. Petersburg, in the service of Tsar Alexander I as director of Russia's Royal Opera. Steibelt's last public success as piano soloist came in 1820, with the premiere of his own Concerto No. 8, which is remarkable as the first piano concerto ever written to feature a choral finale, and which predates Beethoven's Ninth Symphony - the first symphony to feature a choral finale - by four years (although with the composition of his concerto, Steibelt was quite likely influenced by Beethoven's one-movement Choral Fantasy for piano, orchestra, and chorus, which had appeared 12 years earlier). Later piano concerti to feature choral parts include the rarely-heard Concerto No. 6 (1858) by Henri Hertz, and the Piano Concerto of Ferrucio Busoni (1904).

Well, you have to give Daniel Steibelt some credit for trying, don't you? By 1800, Beethoven's reputation had certainly preceded him. But, it's like the late Jim Croce used to sing: "You don't tug on Superman's cape, you don't spit into the wind, you don't pull the mask off the old Lone Ranger, and for God's sake, you don't challenge the most famous composer and pianist in history to a cutting contest!" I'm pretty sure that's how that song goes.


10-01: Buffalo Springfield Huntington Beach 1967 - John Blow Venus & Adonis Jacobs 1999 - Booker T & the MG's Greatist Hits 1970 - Roy Harris Symphony 3 : Koussevitsky 1939 | Hanson 1955 + Hanson Symphony 4


1602 – Hernando de Cabezón (Spanish organist & composer)
1609 – Giammatteo [Gian Matteo] Asola (Italian composer, priest & music director)
1708 – John Blow (English composer, organist & choirmaster
1770 – Louis-Gabriel Guillemain (French composer & violinist)
1876 – Henri Jérôme Bertini (English-born French composer & pianist)
1912 – Mary Frances Allitsen (English composer)
1920 – Vladimir Rebikov [Влади́мир Ре́биков] (Russian composer & pianist)
1927 – Wilhelm Harteveld (Swedish composer & musicologist)
1964 – Ernst Toch (Austrian concert & film composer & author, active in France, England & the United States)

1970 – Petar Konjović [Петар Коњовић] (Serbian composer & conductor)
1970 – Hans Poser (German composer, pianist & teacher)
1975 – Al Jackson, Jr. (American R&B & funk drummer, producer & songwriter, Booker T. & the MG's)
1979 – Roy Harris (American composer)
1994 – Scott Dunbar (American blues singer & guitarist)

1996 – Joonas Kokkonen (Finnish composer)
1998 – Pauline Julien (Canadian pop singer, songwriter, actress, feminist activist & Quebec sovereigntist)
1999 – Lena Zavaroni (Scottish singer, child star & television host)
2000 – Robert Allen (American pop pianist & songwriter)
2004 – Bruce Palmer (Canadian rock bass guitarist, Buffalo Springfield)
2007 – Ronnie Hazlehurst (English television theme-song composer & conductor)
2008 – Nick Reynolds (American folk singer, tenor guitarist, drummer & songwriter, The Kingston Trio)


Well... I was wondering if I would ever get through the month of September. But here we are, finally, at October... now that November is just around the corner! I wonder if any of you out there truly appreciate what a burden I've imposed on myself with this montrosity of a weblog. But, it's a labor of love... so I can't complain... (he says while complaining...)

There are two quite-obscure musicians by the name of Scott Dunbar. One of them, pictured below, is still alive. He's a 20-something (or perhaps 30-something - it's not so easy to tell with that layer of dirt covering him) busker from Canada, who lives and works on the streets of Montreal. Yes, a busker... a street musician.


He bills himself as a "one-man band," but he isn't quite the elaborately instrument-encumbered, perambulating specimen that term generally evokes.


However, he does sing and play some pretty mean accordion, guitar, broiler pan, and suitcase kick-drum.

The other Scott Dunbar was a fisherman, tour guide, and country blues singer and guitarist, who was born in Mississippi in 1904. That's him in the collage, between Roy Harris and Joonas Kokkonen. I just want to be sure you Quebecers out there realize that "one-man-band" Scott Dunbar is still alive and still out there, waiting for your loonies and toonies... so give generously... give 'til it hurts! So, maybe this guy can get a hot meal... and maybe even a bar of soap. Et tandis que j'ai l'attention de vous Québécoises, mes condoléances au sujet de Pauline Julien aussi bien.

There are just too many of these musicians to talk about today. Some fascinating Brits... John Blow, who wrote what's considered the first opera in English (although he called it a "masque"), Venus & Adonis... a fine 19th- and early 20th-century composer by the name of Mary Frances Allitsen... Scottish child star Lena Zavaroni, whose life was cut short by the terrible affliction of anorexia nervosa... and Ronnie Hazlehurst, who wrote the theme and incidental music for such television comedies as Are You Being Served?, The Last of the Summer Wine, The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, To The Manor Born, and Yes Minister. I'd never seen a photo of Ronnie Hazlehurst before, and somehow he looks exactly like his music made me imagine he would.

I've already mentioned Joonas Kokkonen and Roy Harris. Kokkonen is certainly one of the very most important Finnish composers after Jean Sibelius. Interestingly enough, Sibelius is a meaningful point of departure for Harris, as well. This is because Harris's most famous work, his 3rd Symphony (1939), is in a single continuous multi-sectional movement, just as Sibelius's 7th and final symphony (1924) had been.

The 1st Symphony (1936) of another great American composer, Samuel Barber, had similarly taken the one-movement plan of the Sibelius 7th as its formal model. But with his 3rd, Harris hit upon something so potent and powerful, many people soon began referring to it as "The Great American Symphony" (just as the world of literature had its contenders for "The Great American Novel.")

Some explanation is in order. In the first two decades of the 20th century, American composers (with the exception of a few isolated geniuses, most notably Charles Ives) were still basically mimicking their European counterparts. Many of them were writing good, solid music, but most of it didn't sound particularly "American," and in fact most people weren't exactly sure what "sounding American" would or should mean. Then, after the Great War ended, things began to change. A new generation of American composers was coming of age, and its members would be the first to truly put homegrown American concert music on the map, to answer the question of what "American" sounded like, and to inform the world that America too had great, original composers who were the equal of the best that Europe had to offer.

Ironically, it was through studying in Europe that many of these young Americans began to make their mark. A major catalyst in the movement was Nadia Boulanger, who was appointed in 1921 to the faculty of the Conservatoire Américain, a summer school at Fontainebleau Palace in Paris. Beginning with Aaron Copland, a long string of American composers went to Paris to study counterpoint, harmony, and composition with Boulanger. The many other Americans who studied with Boulanger at Fontainebleu over the years included Walter Piston, Louise Talma, Quincy Jones, Donald Byrd, Joe Raposo, Ned Rorem, David Diamond, Marc Blitzstein, Leonard Bernstein, Philip Glass, Elliott Carter, Donald Grantham, Virgil Thomson (whom we remembered only just yesterday), and yes, Roy Harris. Thomson once quipped that every town in America had a five-and-dime and a Boulanger pupil.


Under Boulanger, an emphasis was placed on the study of Renaissance and Baroque music, while at the same time the various rhythmic and harmonic innovations of Igor Stravinsky, in particular, were presented as examples of the best that new music had to offer. Boulanger also encouraged her American students to find inspiration in the emerging jazz and blues of their own country. Composers, above all, were encouraged to discover and explore their own personal artistic voice.

Where I'm headed with this is that the writing, in particular, of symphonies by American composers was a phenomenon peculiar to the 1930s and 40s, one that was associated largely with Boulanger's students, and their students. In the Europe of the time, the writing of symphonies had fallen somewhat out of fashion: Europeans had been writing symphonies for almost 200 years, and after the mammoth and definitive statements by Bruckner and Mahler, many composers considered it to be somewhat of a worn-out genre. But for Americans, it was on the contrary quite natural that through the writing of the symphony - which had been associated since at least as early as 1800 with the very most serious and weighty statements a composer could make using the orchestra as medium - that they would announce that they were here, and that they had finally come into their own on the world stage.

And so finally that brings us to Roy Harris's Symphony No. 3, composed in 1938 and '39. When it appeared, critics recognized it almost immediately as one of the definitive statements in the genre yet by an American, one that packed an extraordinary emotional punch and rigourous heft into its 20-minute duration. More than anything else, this was music that sounded quintessentially American... one could not possibly mistake it for the work of a composer from any other nation. Harris's very personal and frankly virile style (a style whose influence can be clearly heard in the music of his student, William Schuman) encapsulated perfectly the so-called "rugged individualism" of American life, and the hardship and wide-open spaces of the prairie. Moreover, it did so while avoiding almost all of the jejune jazziness and cornball cowboyisms to which Copland's music of this same period is sometimes prone. Instead, what one found were lushly textured harmonies, long, rough-hewn melodic lines, powerful orchestration, and an arresting sense of the dramatic.

And so, why the Sibelius 7th? Why did that particular work inspire not only the Harris 3rd, but the Barber 1st as well, during this period when American composers were asserting their relevance? Well, in the context of what I've already told you, that should be plain. With his 7th and last symphony, Sibelius officially brought the great Romantic symphonic tradition to a close - that symphony, really and truly, is where it ends. By taking it as their formal starting place, Barber and Harris were saying, "WE now claim this tradition. WE pick up where it left off. The European symphonic tradition - now a global symphonic tradition - continues."

Roy Harris's Symphony No. 3 is in five continuous sections, marked Tragic, Lyrical, Pastoral, Fugue - Dramatic, and Dramatic-Tragic. The symphony was premiered in 1939 by Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, who made its premier recording for Victor that same year.