Showing posts with label Alan Feinberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alan Feinberg. Show all posts

12-27: Delaney & Bonnie w/ Eric Clapton Fillmore West 1970 - Big Star #1 Record 1972 - Rach 3 / Cherkassky 1957 - Amy Beach Gaelic Symphony & Piano Concerto / Feinman | Schermerhorn 2003 - Lars-Erik Larsson : Förklädd Gud & Symphony 3 / Frykberg 1994

Not shown: Pietro Pontio & Walter Courvoisier


1595 – Pietro Pontio (Italian music theorist & composer)
1858 – Alexandre Pierre François Boëly (French composer)
1880 – Alessandro Nini (Italian composer)
1916 – Nikolay Solovyov [Николай Соловьёв] (Russian music critic, composer & teacher)
1919 – Achilles Alferaki [Αχιλλέας Αλφεράκης, Ахиллес Алфераки] (Russian composer, statesman & artist of Greek ancestry)
1931 – Peter Christian Lutkin (American organist, composer & teacher, namesake of Pi Kappa Lambda music honor society)
1931 – Walter Courvoisier (Swiss composer & teacher)
1944 – Amy [Mrs. H.H.A.] Beach (American composer & pianist)
1978 – Bob Luman (American country & rockabilly singer, songwriter & guitarist)
1978 – Chris Bell (American rock singer, songwriter & guitarist, Big Star)
1981 – Hoagy Carmichael (American popular songwriter, pianist, singer & actor)
1983 – Walter Scott (American rock singer, Bob Kuban and the In-Men)
1986 – Lars-Erik Larsson (Swedish composer & conductor)
1992 – Stephen Albert (American composer, pianist, trumpeter & hornist, winner of 1985 Pulitzer Prize)
1995 – Shura Cherkassky [Шура Черкасский] (Ukrainian-born American, later British, pianist)
2003 – Vestal Goodman (American gospel singer, "Queen of Southern Gospel")
2004 – Hank Garland (American country & jazz guitarist)
2008 – Delaney Bramlett (American blues, country & rock singer, songwriter, guitarist & producer)



Just barely enough room for all our labels today! Those Rachmaninoffs and Schermerhorns do take up a lot of space. Luckily I don't know the names of Delaney & Bonnie's other "friends" that appear on what's offered here, which is not the famous live album they made with Eric Clapton - that album was recorded on tour in England in 1969 - but rather a boot recorded in San Francisco the following year. No idea about the audio quality either, so freeloader beware...

Damn... Chris Bell. Talented guy... too bad, he really deserved to make it.

Well, I'd really love to tell you more about Amy Beach, and Hoagy Carmichael, and Shura Cherkassky, and Lars-Erik Larsson, and Vestal Goodman, but I'm just too busy with other things at the moment. Check out those links above, and keep reading...


09-03: Morton Feldman : Coptic Light / Tilson Thomas 1995 | Rothko Chapel / New Albion 1990 - Harry Partch : The Bewitched 1957 / CRI - Canned Heat : Living the Blues 1968 - Noah Howard : The Black Ark 1969 - Coleman Hawkins : The Hawk Flies High 1957



1708 – Christian Liebe (German composer & organist, teacher of Andreas Silbermann)
1714 – Pietro Antonio Fiocco (Italian composer & choirmaster)
1790 – Thomas Norris (English organist, composer & singer)
1811 – Ignaz Fränzl (German violinist & composer)
1871 – Václav Emanuel Horák (Czech composer, church musician & teacher)
1914 – Albéric Magnard (French composer)
1944 – František Drdla (Czech violinist & composer)
1946 – Paul Lincke (German composer & violinist, "Berliner Luft")
1946 – Moriz Rosenthal (Polish pianist, composer & wit)
1951 – Robert Hernried (Austrian composer, musicologist & music editor)
1960 – Joseph Lamb (American ragtime composer)
1963 – Frico Kafenda (Slovak composer, teacher, pianist & conductor)
1964 – Joseph Marx (Austrian composer, teacher & music critic)
1970 – Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson (American blues-rock singer, songwriter, guitarist & harmonica player, Canned Heat)
1974 – Harry Partch (American experimental composer, instrument inventor, music theorist & hobo)
1981 – Mafalda Favero (Italian operatic soprano)
1984 – Dora Labbette (English operatic & concert soprano, mistress of Sir Thomas Beecham)
1985 – Johnny Marks (American writer of many Christmas songs, e.g. "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer")
1985 – Papa Jo Jones (American jazz drummer)
1985 – John Herbert McDowell (American composer for dance, theater & film)
1987 – Morton Feldman (American experimental composer)
1994 – Major Lance (American R&B & soul singer)
2007 – Carter Albrecht (American rock keyboardist & guitarist, Edie Brickell & New Bohemians)
2010 – Noah Howard (American free jazz alto saxophonist)


Well, what a banner day for good, old-fashioned, solid American experimental composition... it's a tradition that started with Charles Ives and Henry Cowell, and continues up to this very day! We have Harry Partch and Morton Feldman, both pooping on September 3rd. Partch - gay, iconoclastic, and a man who spent much of the Great Depression as a train-hopping vagabond - stretches our ears with his unequal 43-note scale that maps closely onto an 11-limit just intonation (a tuning system which is derived from acoustically pure intervals through the first 11 partials of an overtone series, if that's any easier for you to understand), and the truly weird-looking and even weirder-sounding instruments he had to design and build himself so that one could play in this scale. A few of them are seen above in our little Partch mini-collage: the Cloud Chamber Bowls, the Chromelodeon, the Bamboo Marimba, the Adapted Viola, the Quadrangularis Reversum, and the Gourd Tree. Partch's collection of exotic instruments continues to be curated and used in performance by Dean Drummond and the ensemble Newband.

In contrast, Feldman (a member of the so-called "New York School," which also includes John Cage, Earle Brown, and Christian Wolff) stretches our musical perceptions in a very different way, requiring us to recalibrate our relationship to musical sonority and musical time. (Feldman has his own mini-collage up there. He was a curiously photogenic and charismatic individual - I love how even the Iranian teen next to the gong seems intrigued by the man. Go here to look at some rarely-seen vacation slides of Feldman.) He came to prefer softer sounds only, finding them more interesting than louder ones. This causes the sound of "silence" - really, the ambient sounds of the space, especially those of the performers themselves moving around, breathing, etc. - to be bumped up in Feldman's sound-world. In his mature style of the late 60s and thereafter, a Feldman work consists of dissonant yet delicate patterns and textures that evolve so slowly they almost create an effect of complete stasis. This is extended over longer and longer time-spans throughout the 70s, culminating in the String Quartet II of 1983, which takes several hours to perform. So both Partch and Feldman are composers who require some major adjustments to the ways we're accustomed to listening to and processing music. To some, maybe frightening... to you and me, full of the excitement of discovery... (Read more about both Partch and Feldman below)

There's so much more to say about so many others (like jazz drummer Jo Jones... no, not "Philly" Joe Jones, but "Papa" Jo Jones - people have been getting the two of them confused for 60 years, and the situation isn't helped by the fact that they died not just in the same year, but within four days of one another), but I'll just have to say "Remainder of write-up pending" for now...