Sunday, June 24, 2018

'In modo di canzone': If it's singing we aim to talk about, how come we're listening to 'Le Tombeau de Couperin'? (Part 1)

Hints: It has to do with: (1) a birthday-gift concert of the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and (2) the 2013 Carnegie Hall master class of master oboist Albrecht Mayer

Note: Updated with some expansions and Sunday Classics links,
notably in the section on the Brahms First Symphony



What is it?
The oboe is a woodwind instrument in the double reed family. It has a conical bore and a flaring bell, which gives it a clear, penetrating voice compared to other woodwind instruments. A person who plays the oboe is an oboist.
by Ken

And not just Ravel's Tombeau de Couperin, which I can reveal was included (in an unexpected form) in the above-hinted-at Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center concert, which set off this whole line of inquiry. No, for reasons that will eventually become clear (though perhaps only clearish this week), we've also got music by Tchaikovsky, Brahms, and Rossini, none of it with any singing -- and never mind (maybe?) that all four of these are composers for whom vocal music was a prime concern.

At least there's no singing in the literal vocal sense. Consider this, however:

TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36:
ii. Andantino in modo di canzone



London Symphony Orchestra, George Szell, cond. Decca, recorded September 1962

RIAS Symphony Orchestra (Berlin), Ferenc Fricsay, cond. DG, recorded Sept. 9-10, 1952

Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra, Andrew Litton, cond. Virgin Classics, recorded 1988-91


AT THIS MOMENT, THIS IS MY FAVORITE MUSICAL
DIRECTION: "ANDANTINO IN MODO DI CANZONE"


Sunday, June 17, 2018

Something sort of like a post, in which you might say we 'say hello [again!] with a little good-bye in it'


Detective Chief Inspector Morse (John Thaw)
at home -- though not from this episode
"Morse often relaxes at home to opera. It is a way to throw off the pressures of the day. He is listening to this [we'll get to "this" in a bit, promise: for now, patience -- Ed.] when he is disturbed by reporters attempting a new 'angle' on a murder story."
-- from the booklet for the Virgin Records CD
The Essential Inspector Morse Collection
by Ken

It's been so long that, in the interest of getting a post up (finally!), any sort of post, or even a non-post like this, I decided to go with the bare bones of a number of possible-posts-in-progress that have been piling up on my bloghost's dashboard page. While a great deal has happened during my silent time, and a fair amount of it is stuff I'd like to write about (I think), the idea here was to (re)open with a musical "hello."


THE ONLY PROBLEM: WAY MORE "GOOD-BYE"
THAN "HELLO" MUSICS POPPED INTO MIND