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Month: November, 2012

Saturday, 11/10/12

Last Sunday I had one of the great musical afternoons—one of the great afternoons, period—of my life, listening, at Chicago’s Symphony Center (across from the Art Institute), to pianist Andras Schiff play Bach’s Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II, in its entirety (and entirely from memory), a performance that lasted nearly three hours and could’ve kept going, as far as I was concerned, for three days.

Johann Sebastian Bach, The Well-Tempered Clavier (1722 [Book I], 1742 [Book II])

Book II, Prelude and Fugue No. 16 in G minor, BMV 885
Sheng Cai (piano), live, Boston, 2010

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Books I and II, Sviatoslav Richter (piano), recording, 1970s

(For better sound quality on this and other YouTube clips, go to the “Settings” icon [lower right] and select the highest available [here 1080p].)

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lagniappe

musical thoughts

If there is anyone who owes everything to Bach, it is God. Without Bach, God would be a third-rate character.

Emil Cioran

Friday, 11/9/12

only rock ’n’ roll

The Dirtbombs, live, Hamtramck, Mich. (outside Detroit), 2012

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Thursday, 11/8/12

passings 

Elliott Carter, composer, December 11, 1908-November 5, 2012

He was an artist of plenitude. His music is so full of sonic detail it often seems about to burst. What if we gave our daily lives, moment by moment, the sort of full-force attention his music demands—and rewards?

Cello Concerto (2001), dress rehearsal, 2008, New York
Julliard Orchestra (James Levine, cond.) with Dane Johansen, cello

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lagniappe

musical thoughts

As a young man, I harbored the populist idea of writing for the public. I learned that the public didn’t care. So I decided to write for myself. Since then, people have gotten interested.

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I just can’t bring myself to do something that someone else has done before. Each piece is a kind of crisis in my life.

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I like to sound spontaneous and fresh, but my first sketches often sound mechanical. I have to write them over until they sound spontaneous.

Elliott Carter

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I have loved Elliott Carter’s music for many years. Last month, I recorded his cello concerto, and I was speaking to him only last Saturday. For me, he was the most important American composer of his time. His music was not complicated, but it was complex. I think its outstanding quality was that it always seemed to be in good humour. If Haydn had lived in the 21st century, he would have probably have composed like this.

When you get to be 103, modernism is a very wide concept. In some aspects he was ahead of his times, but then some of his music doesn’t sound like music of the future – but it is unmistakable and I simply love it. The problem with listening to music today is that there’s so much of it everywhere. We’ve got used to hearing music without actually listening to it. Carter’s is to be listened to.

Daniel Barenboim, conductor, pianist

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I met him on an incredibly hot day in New York last summer. He was affable and kind, and was using a giant magnifying glass to look at a score. When I asked if I could play a passage of his cello concerto, he said: “Of course, but I don’t hear so well.” He lasted about seven seconds before he stopped me with incredibly detailed observations about my playing. He told me things about the work I’d never heard before, saying he’d wanted to make use of the cello’s incredible expressive possibilities. “I wanted it to sing,” he said.

In the fourth movement, he wanted my playing to be more expressive, which is something I’m rarely told. Usually people tell me to calm down! He composed every day, too. Even on that day, when it was over 40 degrees [Celsius], he’d got up that morning to write.

Alisa Wellerstein, cellist

Wednesday, 11/7/12

post-election special

Weary of words?

John Luther Adams, The Light That Fills the World (chamber version, revised 2001), excerpt

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lagniappe

art beat: Saturday at the Art Institute of Chicago

Paul Strand, The Court, New York (1924)
Film and Photo in New York (through 11/25/12)

Tuesday, 11/6/12

A reader writes:

Have you seen these films?

Furry Lewis, guitar
William Eggleston, Stranded in Canton (1973-74)

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More?

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reading table

“Election Day”
By William Carlos Williams (1940)

Warm sun, quiet air
an old man sits

in the doorway of
a broken house—

boards for windows
plaster falling

from between the stones
and strokes the head

of a spotted dog

Monday, 11/5/12

The body knows things the mind will never understand.

D’Angelo (with Jesse Johnson, guitar; Pino Palladino, bass; Chris “Daddy” Dave, drums, et al.), “Chicken Grease,” live, Switzerland (Zurich), 2012

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art beat: Saturday at the Art Institute of Chicago

Morris Engel, Harlem Merchant (1936)
Film and Photo in New York (through 11/25/12)

Sunday, 11/4/12

three takes

“Move On Up A Little Higher” (W. Herbert Brewster)

Mahalia Jackson, radio broadcast, early 1950s

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Brother Joe May, live, early 1950s

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Rev. Timothy Flemming Sr., live, Atlanta, 1976

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art beat: yesterday at the Art Institute of Chicago (with my son Alex)

Helen Levitt, Janice Loeb, James Agee, In the Street (1948), featured in the exhibit Film and Photo in New York (through 11/25/12)

(For better quality go to the “Settings” icon [lower right] and select 480p.)

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random thoughts

Sixty years ago today Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected the thirty-fourth President of the United States and, closer to home, my parents’ second son was born. What’s it like turning sixty? Surprising. But no more surprising, I suppose, than finding oneself entwined, in perpetuity, with Ike.

Saturday, 11/3/12

It must have been a comfort, when she was dying, to be able to say to her son, whose trumpet she’d heard since he was a little boy, these are the songs I want you to play at my memorial service.

Dave Douglas  Quintet* with guest Aoife O’Donovan (vocal), “Be Still My Soul” (words by Ka­tha­ri­na A. von Schle­gel, adapted by Aoife O’Donovan, music by Jean Si­bel­ius, arranged by Dave Douglas), recording session (Be Still, 2012)

*DD, trumpet; Jon Irabagon, saxophone; Matt Mitchell, piano; Linda Oh, bass; Rudy Royston, drums.

Friday, 11/2/12

three takes

This old world may never change . . .

“The Dolphins” (F. Neil)

Terry Callier & Beth Orton, TV show (Later with Jools Holland, BBC), 1998

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Tim Buckley, TV show (The Old Grey Whistle Test, BBC), 1974

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Fred Neil, recording, 1966

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lagniappe

random thoughts

What was it like—your last breath, the one before that, the one before?

Thursday, 11/1/12

Forget harps—my heaven’s full of string quartets.

Franz Schubert, String Quartet No. 14 in D minor (“Death and the Maiden,” 1824), excerpt (mvt. 2), Takacs Quartet, live, Scotland (outside Edinburgh), 1998