music clip of the day

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Tag: music clip of the day

Tuesday, October 8th

alone

György Kurtág (1926-),  Perpetuum Mobile (from Játékok [Games])


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lagniappe

reading table

‘There is no God and Mary is His Mother.’

—Robert Lowell (1917-1977), “For George Santayana” (excerpt)

Sunday, October 6th

two takes

Bobby McFerrin, “Joshua,” live (studio performances), 2013

WNYC-FM, New York


*****

WFUV-FM, New York


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lagniappe

reading table

Novelist Philip Roth on death, getting older, etc.:

‘You think, That’s the end of it when your parents die. After that, you’re done. Nobody’s supposed to die anymore, right?’

—Claudia Roth Pierpont, “The Book of Laughter: Philip Roth and His Friends,” New Yorker, 10/7/13

*****

‘Seventy-five; how sudden.’

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‘Time runs out at a terrifying speed. It seems that it was just 1943.’

—Patricia Cohen, “Philip Roth, Provacateur, Is Celebrated at 75,” New York Times, 4/12/08

Saturday, October 5th

alone

Arthur Russell (1951-1992), “Soon-To-Be Innocent Fun,” 1985

Friday, October 4th

then & now

Bobby Womack, 1944-

The Valentinos (formerly The Womack Brothers)

“Lookin’ for a Love,” 1962


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“It’s All Over Now,” 1963


*****

Live (studio session with Damon Albarn, piano; Richard Russell, drum machine, et al., ), 2012

“The Bravest Man in the Universe”


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“Please Forgive My Heart”


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“Whatever Happened to the Times”


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“Jubilee (Don’t Let Nobody Turn You Around)”

Thursday, October 3rd

basement jukebox

Big Maybelle, “That’s A Pretty Good Love,” 1956


*****

Eddie Bo, “Our Love (Will Never Falter),” 1965


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The Falcons, “Let’s Kiss And Make Up,” 1963

Wednesday, October 2nd

love it or hate it

Anthony Braxton 12+1tet, Composition 355, live, Italy (Venice), 2012


*****

Anthony, a MacArthur “genius” award winner (1994) and professor at Wesleyan University, talks about this and that:


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lagniappe

musical thoughts

Music can take us places we’ve never been before, if we’re willing to listen to sounds we’ve never heard before.

Tuesday, October 1st

Here, following Saturday’s post, is another guy who recently won a MacArthur “genius” grant (a no-strings-attached stipend of $625,000).

Jeremy Denk (1970-), pianist, writer

Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827), Piano Sonata No. 32 in C minor, live, New York, 2012

*****

Two summers ago, I was playing concerts in Santa Fe, some five hours’ drive from where I grew up. Travel is more difficult for my parents than it used to be, but they made the trek to hear me. They brought along a strange gift—a black notebook with my name on the front, written in my best prepubescent cursive. It had been excavated from a closet and smelled faintly of mothballs. I’d forgotten it existed but recognized it instantly: my piano-lesson journal. Starting in 1981, when I was eleven, it sat on my music rack, so that I could consult, or pretend to consult, my teacher’s comments. Week after week, he wrote down what I’d played and how it went, and outlined the next week’s goals.

I paged through nostalgically, reflecting on how far I’d come. But a few days later I was onstage, performing, and a voice made itself heard in my head: “Better not play faster than you can think.” It was the notebook talking. I was indeed playing faster than I could think—sometimes your fingers have plans of their own. The notebook voice went on. “Keep back straight,” it said. “Beware of concentration lapses.” Through several subsequent concerts, it lodged complaints and probed weaknesses, delivering opinions worse than any reviewer’s. It took me weeks to silence the voice and play normally again.

In popular culture, music lessons are often linked with psychological torment. People apparently love stories about performing-arts teachers who drive students mad, breaking their spirits with pitiless exactitude. There’s David Helfgott in “Shine,” Isabelle Huppert’s sadomasochistic turn in “The Piano Teacher,” the sneering Juilliard judges for whom Julia Stiles auditions to redeem her mother’s death in “Save the Last Dance.” (I can testify that the behavior of the judges at my real-life Juilliard audition was even meaner and funnier.) I’ve often rolled my eyes at the music-lesson clichés of movies: the mind games and power plays, the teacher with the quaint European accent who says, “You will never make it, you are not a real musician,” in order to get you to work even harder. But as the notebook recalled memories of lessons I’d had—both as a child and later, once the piano became my life—I wondered if my story was all that different.

—”Every Good Boy Does Fine: A Life in Piano Lessons,” New Yorker, 4/8/13

Monday, September 30th

never enough

Thelonious Monk Quartet (TM, piano, compositions; Charlie Rouse, tenor saxophone; Larry Gales, bass; Ben Riley, drums), “Epistrophy,” “Straight, No Chaser,” “Hackensack,” “Rhythm-a-Ning,” “Epistrophy,” live (TV show, Jazz 625 [BBC]), England, mid-’60s

Sunday, September 29th

back to church

Rev. Al Green, “The Lord Will Make A Way Somehow,” live, Memphis (Full Gospel Tabernacle Church), 1984


*****

A big birthday shout-out to my son Alex: where would I be without my guys?

Saturday, September 28th

good news, bad news

24 Recipients of MacArthur ‘Genius’ Grant Named

New York Times, 9/24/13

First the bad news: MCOTD was passed over, again. The good news? This guy, often featured here, wasn’t.

Vijay Iyer (1971-), pianist, composer, soon-to-be Harvard professor

“Imagine” (J. Lennon), live, Germany (Leverkusen), 2011

*****

“Actions Speak” (V. Iyer), live (Stephan Crump, bass; Marcus Gilmore, drums), New York, 2012

*****

“Somewhere” (L. Bernstein), recording (Stephan Crump, bass; Marcus Gilmore, drums), Historicity, 2009

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lagniappe

musical thoughts

the stillness of the valley
is itself a kind of music

—Du Fu (AKA Tu Fu; 712-770; “Visting the Fengxian Monastery” [excerpt]; translated from Chinese by David Young)