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April 2008

My Dentist Again! Launches me on a Spohr Search Spohr

My Dentist Again! Launches me on a Spohr Search.

Whilst sitting back having a root canal – my Dentist,  who turned me on to Hummel (see Hummel under composers) – was playing one of those ‘compilations’. Something like “For meditation and relaxation.”
A piece came up and we both perked up our ears. “This is different … nice – wonder who this is.?”
A break in the spit vacuum and drilling comes and he reports, “It’s Spohr”
Neither of us had heard of him.

I had guessed Mendelssohn or Schumann and my dentist thought it was much later than that. Well I was closer to right! Louis (born Ludwig) Spohr was there when Beethoven was a baby and Mozart was a teenager! Mendelssohn and Schumann were not quite twinkles in the eye yet. But it wasn’t “Later” stuff. Earlier actually.

Here are some snippets from his biography:

Spohr was a noted violinist, and invented the violin chinrest, about 1820. He was also a significant conductor, being one of the first to use a baton and also inventing rehearsal letters, which are placed periodically throughout a piece of sheet music so that a conductor may save time by asking the orchestra or singers to start playing “from letter C”, for example). Spohr’s best works are his wistful, elegiac minor-mode first movements, hailed by many of his contemporaries as quintessentially Romantic and inherited by Mendelssohn; his deft scherzos whose influence was felt as late as Brahms; his expressive slow movements with their chromatic alterations which, on occasion, become cloyingly sentimental; and his light-hearted finales which are able to avoid the trap of trivial thematic material.[3]

The ‘wistful, elegiac, and cloyingly sentimental’ bits get me … because sometimes cloyingly sentimental, elegiac and wistful … can come across as just plain moving! Like in this piece.

Here’s the piece that perked up our ears.

Spohr violin concerto no. 7 / Adagio

violin-concerto-no-7-adagio


Schubert

Schubert was missing but not anymore!

Thanks to a comment by Jess (see “Almost Perfect Music” on the right and look in comments) We now have some Schubert! It was quite an oversight on my part since I’ve plenty of his works; and the fact that Liszt said he was ‘the most poetic of them all’ (that’s how I remember the quote of Liszt’s on Schubert)

Passionate, poetic and emotionally stimulating me says!

Schubert’s Impromptu D 899 no. 3 Andante

 

from a famous series of songs, played here on guitar

Schwanengesang, D 957 no. 4 Standchen

 

Schubert’s piano sonata b-flat-major-d960 second movement


Tchaikovsky The Melody Man

The Melody Man

Come on. Let’s face it. Tchaikovsky IS the “Melody Man”

Who else wrote melodies like this? It’s as though they had existed for thousands of years and somebody just pulled them out of a hat!

(*To see more Melodies that existed – before they existed!: Go to Tchaikovsky/Perfect Music)

Tchaikovsky Sleeping Beauty Waltz

 

swan-lake-act-1-finale


Bassoon Cutest Musical Squeak Hummel Hummel Hunt!

My Hummel Hunt – I didn’t even know him!

I didn’t know anything about Johann Nepomuk Hummel until my Dentist mentioned him the other day. My dentist is a Classical Music buff and I’d given him a 2 volume CD Set titled: In the Dentist Chair:

(It was all the music I thought folks might like to hear midst the trauma of drilling and vacuuming spit!)

As a result I’ve been on a Hummel Hunt.

At first it was like listening to a student of Mozart (as he was!) – but the more I listened and researched, the more I realised he was an accomplished and important composer in his own right. He’s one of those who went out of fashion shortly after they died, and are making a “Comeback” as I type.

The Great composers he actually ‘hung out’ with, and/or influenced by teaching them is amazing. Then if you add the composers who taught or influenced him … you come up with a Who’s Who of the “Classical to Romantic Bridge Period.”

Beethoven, Mozart, Mendelssohn, Haydn, Czerny, Liszt, Schumann, Schubert and the list goes on.

Here’s to a Hummel comeback! Next time you hear of a Hummel concert in your area – GO!

Later – P.S. – just found this on a music site: Historians tell us that pianist and composer Johann Nepomuk Hummel was spoken of in the same breath as Mozart and Beethoven in 1820 — but not for long…

Hummel piano-concerto-no-2-allegro-moderato

 

Theme and variations introduction Allegro

 

Bassoon-concerto-romanza-andantino-e-cantbile


Cherubini Composers - Ignored and Almost forgotten! Opera/Vocal

Cherubini

ANOTHER “Underdog” Luigi Cherubini (1760-1842) Italian composer who spent most of his working life in France.

Talk about being cheated out of fame and posthumous recognition!!! Just read what was said about him … by “Them” – back then! And then listen to a movement from that vocal piece “They” raved about.

Posterity has a habit of elevating the obscure and neglecting the famous. Thus it is that Cherubini, hailed by Beethoven as ‘the greatest living composer’, is today often forgotten; ‘If I were to write a Requiem, Cherubini’s would be my only model’, Beethoven continued and the work was performed at his funeral in 1827. Schumann’s opinion was that it was ‘without equal in the world’. Berlioz considered that ‘the decrescendo in the Agnus Dei surpasses everything that has ever been written of the kind’.

Cherubini requiem-no-1-in-c-minor-agnus-dei


Shostakovich Synchronicity

Shostakovich Synchronicity

After spending a few weeks thinking about and intending to do a Shostakovich entry: The thrust of which was to be; a comparison of what I felt was “Bombastic and Frantic” – stuff that I don’t like – and his “Sweet Stuff” that I do like. I finally bit the bullet today and spent about three hours composing the blog. When I thought it was almost finished I went in to have lunch and turned the TV on. There was a Documentary on Shostakovich!

I almost fell off my chair. Instead I watched the whole thing! … and decided I wasn’t worthy to compose a “music commentary blog” on him.

Imagine living in Soviet Russia during the harshest repressive years under Stalin. Having Joseph Stalin watching your every move and trying to decide whether to kill you or persecute your family or ban your music. A desperately unhappy man constantly tormented by fear – that’s the music he mostly composed. He expressed in music what would have led to an instant firing squad if it were written or spoken. (*Stalin – being no dummy could hear the collective despair of the Russian people in the music and he didn’t like it*) Hearing the ‘heavy stuff’ now – knowing the background of his life – it all sounds different.

If you want to hear what led to Stalin’s ban – Go here

http://jimsclassicalmusic.com/2008/02/05/i-dont-like-this-music/


Mozart

Mozart for Linni Binni

Or should it be Linnie Binnie? Anyway dear sister-in-law - since you didn’t specify which movement of a Mozart Piano Concerto in D Minor; I’m going to assume it’s this one! Correct me (backchannel) if it’s not the one you long to hear, and I’ll find and post the correct movement. Regards to Robert.

Mozart Piano Concerto 20 in D Monor Kv466 / Romanze