Showing posts with label George Szell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Szell. Show all posts

01-13a: Donny Hathaway : Everything Is Everything 1970 - Tchaikovsky 4 / Szell 1962 - Andre Kostelanetz : Lure of Paradise 1959 - Ferdinand Ries Septet & Octet / Linos-Ensemble 2005 - Henri Tomasi : Wind Quintet / Rampal et al 1952

Not shown: Leonhard Trautsch, François-Joseph Krafft & Valentín de Zubiaurre y Unionbarrenechea


1762 – Leonhard Trautsch (German composer)
1795 – François-Joseph Krafft (Belgian organist, conductor & composer)
1828 – Alexandre-Auguste Robineau (French abbot & composer)
1838 – Ferdinand Ries (German composer & pianist, friend & pupil of Beethoven)
1864 – Stephen Foster (American popular songwriter, "The Father of American Music")
1892 – Charles Albert White (American composer & co-founder of music publishing firm White, Smith & Company)
1893 – Melitta Otto-Alvsleben (German operatic soprano)
1894 – Nadezhda von Meck [Надежда фон Мекк] (Russian businesswoman & patroness of Tchaikovsky)
1901 – Carlo Angeloni (Italian composer, organist & teacher whose pupils included Puccini)
1914 – Valentín de Zubiaurre y Unionbarrenechea (Spanish composer)
1917 – Albert Niemann (German operatic tenor)
1954 – Roland Diggle (English organist & composer, active in the U.S.)
1971 – Robert Still (English composer, teacher, conductor & amateur tennis player)
1971 – Henri Tomasi (French composer, conductor & pianist of Corsican descent)
1974 – Raoul Jobin (Canadian operatic tenor)
1979 – Donny Hathaway (American soul singer, songwriter & keyboardist)
1979 – Marjorie Lawrence (Australian operatic soprano)
1980 – André Kostelanetz [Андрей Костеланец] (Russian-born American pop & easy listening conductor & arranger)


Tchaikovsky dedicated his Symphony No. 4 in F minor to his wealthy patroness, Nadezhda Filaretnova von Meck. Von Meck also financially supported other composers, including the young Claude Debussy. But the relationship between her and Tchaikovsky is one of the most intriguing stories in music history, one worth reading about. So do! 

Just before Tchaikovsky died, he was actually cursing Nadezhda von Meck's name. Tchaikovsky's death is usually thought of as a suicide, but there are a few lingering doubts. When he drank that unboiled water at the height of a cholera epidemic, was it mere carelessness, or did he wish to make it appear like carelessness so that he could kill himself honorably? Or is the truth even stranger, that what appeared to be carelessness was his possession by some sort of death wish that compelled him to engage in such risky behavior unconsciously? We'll never know.

Even more mystery surrounds the suicide death of Donny Hathaway. At his final recording session, he appeared to have had a psychotic break, saying that white people were out to kill him and steal his musical ideas via a machine they'd connected to his brain. Hathaway was later found to have fallen from the window of his 15th-floor hotel room. Since there were no signs of struggle in the room, and the glass of the window had been removed neatly, investigators ruled his death a suicide. So, was he paranoid, or were they really out to get him? I mean, if whitey can read your mind through a machine, how much trouble is it for him to remove signs of struggle?

Boy, did I pick the wrong week to get let out of the looney bin.


12-21: Albert King Montreux 1977 - Milstein : Tchaikovsky 1940 | Bruch 1942 | Mendelssohn 1945 - Gade : Symphonies 2 & 8 / Hogwood 2001 - Mozart Exsultate Jubilate : Raskin / Szell 1964

Not shown: Philipp Hyacinth Lobkowitz, Caspar Ruetz & Charles-François Dumonchau


1734 – Philipp Hyacinth Lobkowitz (Czech nobleman, lutenist & patron of Arcangelo Corelli)
1755 – Caspar Ruetz (German cantor & composer)
1807 – John Newton (English sailor, minister & hymn writer)
1820 – Charles-François Dumonchau (French composer, pianist & cellist)
1843 – Edward Bunting (Irish folksong collector, author & organist)
1864 – William Henry Fry (American composer & music critic)
1890 – Niels Gade (Danish composer, conductor, violinist, organist & teacher)
1906 – Adalbert von Goldschmidt (Austrian composer)
1957 – Eric Coates (English composer, conductor & violist)
1964 – Thomas Nassi (Albanian composer, conductor, teacher & flutist, active also in the United States)
1965 – Claude Champagne (Canadian composer, teacher, violinist, pianist & organist)
1982 – Abu-Al-Asar Hafeez Jalandhari [
ابو الاثر حفیظ جالندھری] (Pakistani writer, poet & composer of Pakistan's National Anthem)
1984 – Judith Raskin (American lyric soprano)
1987 – John Spence (American alternative rock singer, No Doubt)
1989 – Ján Cikker (Slovak composer, conductor & organist)
1992 – Albert King (American blues guitarist, singer & songwriter)
1992 – Nathan Milstein (Ukrainian-born American violinist)
1997 – Amie Comeaux (American country singer)
1998 – Karl Denver (Scottish pop singer)


You might find the fellow in the upper-right corner, William Henry Fry, to be a bit familiar. That's because I mistakenly already included him on September 21st, when he actually belongs in December... another example of my often-faulty sources failing me. But I suppose Fry is worth remembering twice, since was one of the more important American composers of the 19th century. I even had a download for him in that previous post in which he appeared, but don't bother looking for it... it was another Megaupload! So, an all-around FAIL, any way you look at it... but anyway, it's going to be another big day around here tomorrow, so I'd better catch up on my beauty sleep...


11-05a: Art Tatum 1932-1934 | Tatum / Hampton / Rich Trio 1955 - Vladimir Horowitz : Brahms Concerto 2 Toscanini 1940 | Pictures at an Exhibition 1947 | Tchaikovsky Concerto 1 Szell 1952



1933 – Texas Guinan (American saloon keeper, actress & musician)
1942 – George M. Cohan (American entertainer, songwriter & author)
1956 – Art Tatum (American jazz pianist & composer)
1960 – Johnny Horton (American country singer & songwriter)
1964 – Buddy Cole (American jazz pianist & orchestra leader)
1977 – Guy Lombardo (Canadian jazz orchestra leader)
1986 – Bobby Nunn (American R&B singer, The Coasters)
1989 – Vladimir Horowitz [Владимир Горови] (Russian-born American pianist)

See, now... this is what we like to see here at Yestermonth. The greatest pianist in jazz history, and the greatest classical pianist of the 20th century, both pooping on the same day, 33 years apart. Yes, it's all Tatum & Horowitz today on YiDM, Pianists Pooping Properly edition.


10-11: Complete Atomic Basie 1957 - Aborto Elétrico : Ao vivo na Funarte 1981 - Edith Piaf Olympia 1955 - Bruckner 3 & 8 / Szell - Satie : Parade | Relâche etc.




1837 – Samuel Wesley (English organist, composer & violinist)
1896 – Anton Bruckner (Austrian composer & organist)
1897 – Léon Boëllmann (Alsatian organist, composer & pianist)
1942 – Leonid Nikolayev (Russian pianist, teacher & composer, piano teacher of Shostakovich)
1961 – Chico Marx (American comedian, actor & pianist)
1963 – Édith Piaf (French popular singer, songwriter & actress)
1963 – Jean Cocteau (French poet, playwright, artist, novelist, set designer & filmmaker)
1970 – Anis Fuleihan (Cypriot-born American composer, conductor & pianist of Lebanese heritage, composed Theremin Concerto for Clara Rockmore)

1985 – Tex Williams (American western swing singer, songwriter, guitarist & harmonica player, "Smoke! Smoke! Smoke! That Cigarette")
1996 – Johnny Costa (American jazz pianist & celesta player, Mr. Rogers' Neighborhood)

1993 – Jess Thomas (American Wagnerian tenor)
1996 – Renato Russo (Brazilian rock singer, songwriter, bass guitarist, guitarist & keyboardist, Aborto Elétrico, Legião Urbana)

2007 – Werner von Trapp (Austrian singer & farmer, Von Trapp Family Singers)
2008 – Neal Hefti (American jazz trumpeter & arranger & jazz, film & TV composer)

Well, despite the presence of only 14 poopers on the list, this edition will once again require TWO posts to complete, because A. it's full of notable folks you just have to hear and B. I couldn't possibly let it go without one of them being Jess Thomas, and you should be able to figure out what that means! Yes, it's another opera, and not just any opera, but one that's so long you're sure to doze off at some point during it. So, look for that second post a little bit later...

And you may have a similarly sleepy reaction during one of Anton Bruckner's massive symphonies, but this is a composer you must learn to love. It is verboten for you not to! For they are magnificent works, full of a primordial energy - from the roar of the sea, to the eruption of volcanoes, to the painfully slow drift of enormous glaciers. And they all, in a way, take Beethoven's Ninth as their starting place. No, none of them has a choral finale (although Bruckner did compose a good deal of choral music - his superb masses, motets and Te Deum are another part of his output which call out for exploration), but from his 3rd symphony onward, you have very long four-movement works (save for the incomplete three-movement 9th) which contain seemingly endless adagios, often have a Scherzo placed as the second movement, and, perhaps most notably, begin the first movement with that same sort of hushed, mysterious quality you find at the start of Beethoven's, and end it with that same thundering timpani you find at its climax. Of course, all the Austro-Germanic symphonists who followed the Bee (that's what Charles Bukowski calls Beethoven sometimes - I like that) felt like they were living in his shadow, but no others were so explicit and single-minded in paying homage to that greatest symphony of them all.

The problem with Bruckner, though, is the problem with Bruckner, and if you're a Brucknerite, you know exactly the problem I mean. And that is, which edition or revision of a particular symphony is "the best," or even whether there can be such a thing. You see, if you take Bruckner's nine symphonies, and count all the different versions of them, there are actually around 60 different symphonies! Why? Well, some versions were heavily abridged, sometimes by Bruckner himself, at the urging of well-meaning friends who thought his original creations were too long, sometimes by other well-meaning people. Let's not forget that everyone meant well in this matter!

And so there are some self-styled Bruckner "purists" who will claim that Bruckner's symphonies in their very longest form (which is generally their earliest edition) are the true and correct Bruckner symphonies. But think about this, now. For any other composer, we take that composer's final thoughts on a work, his last revision of it, as the gospel truth. But for Bruckner, we do just the opposite, and say his first thoughts were the "correct" ones? It doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Me, I'm a pluralist in the matter; I think all those versions can have a certain validity, although some perhaps more than others. I don't want to get in a fight about it! Listen to them all, if you have the time! And then figure out which recording, by which conductor, you like the best! I'm not going to shit you, folks. Being a Brucknerite is pretty much a full-time job in itself. It's kind of like running this blog, but with louder timpani!

Well... can't say something about everybody else, but there are a couple others I wouldn't want to pass over. Legião Urbana, with singer Renato Russo, were (and still are, even though they called it quits after Russo's death 15 years ago) one of the most famous and best-selling rock bands from Brazil. Russo's first band, the punk rock group (well, really post-punk: more Joy Division than Sex Pistols) Aborto Elétrico, is also still a cult favorite in Brazil. Maybe they can be a cult favorite in your mp3 player as well!

And hey, it's another small landmark here at YiDM: I've succeeded in finding, for the first time, an image which contains two people on our list who actually died on the very same day (of completely unrelated causes), and which I was able to therefore use, because doing so would not harm the strict chronological order I follow in putting together the collage. And that, of course, is the photo, just above the painting of Jean Cocteau, of Cocteau and Édith Piaf together. The two were friends (both of them had a lot of friends in the various arts), and Cocteau wrote his theater piece Le Bel Indifférent (1940) for her. So, you see, you actually have an image of both Piaf and Cocteau separately up there, plus one of them together! That wasn't an opportunity I could pass up. But that photo of them together is awfully small, isn't it? One of the unfortunate effects of having to be strictly chronological is that images often end up being much too large or small than they really should be, as to not disturb the overall form of the collage. I do my best, but sometimes my best isn't good enough. Well, here is a bigger version of that photo for you:
 

Much better, non? And now, what to say about the two of them? Well, Édith Piaf is universally considered France's greatest singer of popular song. She's adored, revered, practically considered to be a saint in France. There's not much one can add to that, is there? Oh, there is one other thing. If you slow down Édith Piaf, you get Jim Nabors. Or was it, if you speed up Jim Nabors you get Édith Piaf? Seems to me it should work either way! Anyway, it was my friend Clay Allison who demonstrated that to me on his turntable many years ago. Very humorous man, that Clay Allison. And as he would probably say to that, "Yes, I'm full of blood, and bile, and I've got some melon in my Collie, too! Oh, and I almost forgot all about my phlegm! You didn't know I was Phlegmish, did you?"

And Jean Cocteau. No, he wasn't a musician himself, but he isn't here because the Cocteau Twins used his name. Cocteau worked with many different artists in different disciplines, and musicians were no exception. He, along with Erik Satie, inspired the group of Parisian-based composers known as Les Six. He also wrote some ballet scenarios, most notably for Satie's Parade (1917), which also had choreography and dancing by Léonide Massine, set design by Pablo Picasso, and a program note written by Guillaume Apollinaire, wherein he in fact coined the term "surrealism." Yes, just a bunch of two-bit hacks involved in that production! The audience was not quite so pleased with it, however. Cocteau later wrote, "If it had not been for Apollinaire in uniform, with his skull shaved, the scar on his temple and the bandage around his head, women would have gouged our eyes out with hairpins." Well, now isn't that totally not-a-coincidence? For Cocteau also contributed the libretto (which he wrote first in French, then translated into Latin) to Igor Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex (1927). That's exactly what poor Oedipus does to himself with Jocasta's hairpins near the end of that feel-good Sophocles drama, isn't it?
 
 
Cocteau drawings: L - Satie (1910); R - Stravinsky performing his Concerto for Piano & Winds (1924)
Well, that's more than enough from me. Big-ass Wagner opera coming up in just a little while...

08-15: Marin Marais Gamba - Brahms Szigeti Ormandy Schnabel Szell - Big Bill Broonzy One Beer One Blues - Dusty Springfield in Memphis

Ordered chronologically. Trouble identifying them? Click here for a tagged image.
1576 – Bálint Bakfark (Hungarian composer & lutenist)
1728 – Marin Marais (French composer & gambist)
1798 – Felice Alessandri (Italian composer & harpsichordist)
1848 – Timothy Olmstead (American composer, psalmodist & Revolutionary War fifer)
1853 – Giovanni Battista Polledro (Italian violinist & composer)
1907 – Joseph Joachim (Austro-Hungarian violinist, conductor & composer)
1918 – Peter Gast (German writer & composer, friend & colleague of Nietzsche)
1935 – Gerard von Brucken Fock (Dutch composer & painter)
1936 – Stanisław Niewiadomski (Polish composer, conductor & music critic)
1951 – Artur Schnabel (Austrian pianist & composer)
1958 – Big Bill Broonzy (American blues singer, songwriter & guitarist)
1968 – Edward Kilenyi, Sr. (Hungarian-born American film composer & violinist, teacher of Gershwin)
1972 – Alf Thorbald Hurum (Norwegian composer)
1978 – Harrison Kerr (American composer & music editor, co-founder of American Music Center)
1985 – Richard Yardumian (American composer)
1995 – Erbie Bowser (American blues pianist)
1995 – Jesse "Babyface" Thomas (American blues guitarist & singer)
2003 – Gösta Sundqvist (Finnish rock singer, songwriter & guitarist & radio personality)
2004 – Semiha Berksoy (Turkish soprano & painter, early Turkish opera singer)
2007 – Richard Bradshaw (English opera conductor, active in Canada)
2008 – Jerry Wexler (American studio producer & journalist, coined term "rhythm and blues")


Gerard von Brucken Fock and Bálint Bakfark. Gerard von Brucken Fock and Bálint Bakfark. I have nothing to say about these guys, I just think saying their names is fun.

Well, it was a blue day (not a Blue Monday, though - it was a Tuesday) in Texas on August 15th, 1995 when Dallas guitarist Jesse "Babyface" Thomas and Austin pianist Erbie Bowser passed away within hours of one another. Hm, maybe I got that wrong. They were bluesmen, right? So if they died, maybe Texas got less blue that day. The complementary color of blue is orange. Maybe that day was really an orange day in Texas. That's it. It was an Orange Tuesday in Texas. Hook 'em Horns, or whatever. However, August 15th is really a lot more orange than that, because Babyface & Erbie in fact passed away on the 37th anniversary of the day one of the true all-time legends of blues pooped. That was Big Bill Broonzy. But that didn't happen on a Tuesday. August 15th fell on a Friday in 1958, so I guess that day was an Orange Friday in Chicago. I think Babyface & Ernie would both have been pleased to know they went to the Lord on the same day Big Bill did. Unfortunately, they didn't live to see it. More about Big Bill after the jump across the open grave...