Archive for the ‘Music’ Category.

Tri-Institutional Noon Recital – Dudana Mazmanishvili

Dear Roger:
You missed another fabulous piano performance … at the June 15th, 2007, Tri-Institutional Noon Recital at the Caspary Auditorium, The Rockefeller University … Ms. Dudana Mazmanishvili played:

  • BACH : English Suite Nr. 6 in D Minor, BWV 811

  • CHOPIN : Barcarolle in E-flat Major, Op. 60
  • BEETHOVEN : Sonata quasi una fantasia in E-flat Major, Op. 27, Nr. 1
  • SCHUMANN : Carnaval, Op. 9
  • and an encore…

“If playing the piano were an Olympic discipline, then the performance of the young Georgian Dudi Mazmanishvili certainly would have secured her a place on the winners’ podium” Westphalenpost….

You would have been mightily impressed with her performance which was all played from memory with such strength and gusto.
Afterwards, one can enjoy a fabulous buffet lunch for $15 … in the Mid-20th Century Modern sleek dining room with a fabulous view of the gardens.
The $15 all-you-can-eat buffet lunch is at the dining room of the Rockefeller University. Open to all comers with proper attire. Soups, salads, cold chicken platters, warm beef, salmon, and other meat platters, cakes, coffee, tea or soda … all inclusive. Mid-20th Century Modern decor with a lovely view of the leafy campus. On a nice day, there are tables outside. The entrance is on York Avenue and 66th Street. The lunch is prepared by Restaurant Associates so I must say that it is not haute cuisine, simply plain and healthy.
I hope to see you there for the last two performances of the season … the last will be on June 29th, 2007 … just after my birthday.
Your friend,
Peter
Dudana Mazmanishvili, web site
Tri-Institutional Noon Recitals, Caspary Auditorium, The Rockefeller University, 66th Street and York Avenue (#2 on this campus map – pdf), Recitals Hotline: 212-327-7007, ext. 1

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Another lovely Friday noon Classical concert at Rockefeller University

Roger:
You missed another lovely Friday noon Classical concert at Rockefeller University (the Tri-Institutional Noon concert).
Mr. Inon Barnatan, piano, Mr Arnaud Sussmann, violin and Ms Priscilla Lee, cello. The program comprised:-

  • Brahms: Sonata for violin and piano, #2 in A major, Op 100.

  • Britten/Stevenson: Fantasy on Peter Grimes, for piano solo.
  • Beethoven: Piano Trio in E-flat Major, Op 70, #2.

I sat in the first row, eye-level with the players about 10 feet away. It was such a lovely performance. So much talent at such a very young age, all in their early twenties. I must say that New York is the centre of the universe for the Fine Arts. The very best in this world congregate in New York and I get the opportunity to enjoy and listen to their fine artistry talents.
One very good reason that I have discarded my TV and found so much better inspirations. Seek and you shall find. You must do the same.
Peter
Tri-Institutional Noon Recitals, Caspary Auditorium, The Rockefeller University, 66th Street and York Avenue (#2 on this campus map – pdf), Recitals Hotline: 212-327-7007, ext. 1

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Manhattan School of Music Musical Theatre Ensemble – NOT to be missed, May 17-19, 2007

A great annual event at the Manhattan School of Music … May 17, 18 and 19, 2007… Musical Theatre … music of Stephen Sondheim … not to be missed, free and no tickets required
Manhattan School of Music Musical Theatre Ensemble, 601 West 122nd Street, northwest corner of Broadway and 122nd Street, John C. Borden Auditorium, 7:30 pm, May 17, 18, and 19, 2007, Concert Office: 917-493-4428. Directions

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Context matters II

Earlier this month, Gene Weingarten had a column in the Washington Post about what happened when Joshua Bell played his violin at the L’Enfant Plaza Metrorail station (see “Context Matters…”). The next time Mr. Bell should go busking with Old Crow Medicine Show….

The two years before Nashville were spent hoboing quixotically across Canada and back, then living in self-imposed squalor in the mountains of North Carolina. They brought music nobody really played anymore to towns where no other touring performer would stop to use the bathroom, and people embraced them, fed them, sheltered them.

Hardcore Troubadours,” by Matt Dellinger, The Oxford American, March/April 2003


Wagon Wheel — Old Crow Medicine Show

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Pop musicians are fakes?!?! Say it aint so!

Consider the case of Mississippi John Hurt, the subject of the book’s longest and most powerful essay. First, there’s his name: Mississippi was an add-on from the record company. Then there’s his reputation as a patriarch of the Delta blues: Hurt wasn’t from the Mississippi Delta and he insisted he wasn’t a blues musician. And then there is the problem of his blackness, thought by the white fans who rediscovered him in the 1960s to be pure and profound (“Uncle Remus come to life,” write the authors). When Hurt was “discovered” the first time, he was performing for black and white audiences backed by a white fiddler and a white guitar player who also happened to be the local sheriff. He recorded blues because the record company insisted he do so. Meanwhile, Jimmie Rodgers, a white musician who happened to be a bluesman, recorded what came to be known as “country” music because the blues were reserved by the market for black men. One more twist: when Harry Smith included two of Hurt’s songs on his great Smithsonian Folk Anthology, most listeners mistook the black musician for a white hillbilly.

Keeping it unreal: We consider the ‘primitive’ music of blues singers such as Leadbelly to be more authentic than that of the Monkees. But all pop musicians are fakes.” by Jeff Sharlet, New Statesman, April 16, 2007

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Johnny Cash



“God’s Gonna Cut You Down” – Johnny Cash

Complete lyrics from Metrolyrics

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Thelonious Monk


Blue Monk

Thelonious Monk: Blue Monk (recorded in 1958). Thelonious Monk – piano. According to comments: Ahmed Abdul-Malik – bass. Osie Johnson – drums.
Hat tip: Orin Kerr

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“A Strange Story” – Joyce Hatto, fakes, and “expertise”

Joyce Hatto, a pianist who died in 2006, was celebrated by many allegedly knowledgable music critics in the last few years of her life for “a discography that in quantity, musical range and consistent quality has been equalled by few pianists in history.”
A preliminary investigation now reveals that many of Hatto’s recordings were copies, some slightly altered, of other pianists’ recordings. SeeJoyce Hatto – The Ultimate Recording Hoax – Part 1,” Pristine Classical, which concludes: “We have yet to investigate a Hatto recording that has not proved to be a hoax.”

Andrew Rose, who runs the remastering firm Pristine Audio and who analysed the Hatto recordings, said: “There are a lot of critics and publications with egg on their faces.”

Pianist’s virtuosity is called into question,” by Martin Beckford, Telegraph.co.uk, February 18, 2007

It was already one of the strangest stories the classical music world had witnessed. But the discovery of the late English pianist Joyce Hatto as the greatest instrumentalist almost nobody had heard of, appears to have taken a bizarre, even potentially sinister turn.
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But at the same time as the cult of Hatto was burgeoning, there were persistent rumours on the internet as to the true origins of the recordings. How, wondered the doubters, could one woman — especially one who had battled cancer for many years — have mastered a range of repertoire and recorded a catalogue that arguably makes her more prolific than even the Richters and the Ashkenazys.

However, Gramophone critic Jeremy Nicholas published a letter in the magazine asking anyone who had any evidence of any wrong-doing to come forth. Nobody did, and the matter rested. Until now.

Masterpieces Or Fakes? The Joyce Hatto Scandal,” Gramaphone, February 15, 2007

Joyce Hatto, who has died aged 77, was one of the greatest pianists Britain has ever produced. Before the appearance of press and internet articles earlier this year, it was widely assumed that she had left us some years ago. In a sense she had: from the early 1970s she suffered from a cancer that not only made her the longest surviving patient treated by Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge, but also prevented her from appearing in public for the past 30 years.

Her legacy is a discography that in quantity, musical range and consistent quality has been equalled by few pianists in history.

Obituary: Joyce Hatto: Brilliant pianist whose career was cut short by cancer which struck in the 1970s, by Jeremy Nicholas, The Guardian, July 10, 2006

Yet some things remain totally obscure in this story. Even the recourse to irony does not explain convincingly why Joyce Hatto and her husband decided to issue these recordings. Another strange thing is the pattern, if any, of the altered recordings. Among the recordings that have been altered, there are two by widely known soloists and orchestras, the Rachmaninov concerto under Esa-Pekka Salonen and Yefim Bronfman (on a Sony Classical CD), and the Brahms concerto under Haitink and Ashkenazy (on a Decca CD). However, three other recordings that have been identified are by lesser-known soloists for smaller labels, such as Laszlo Simon for BIS, Carlo Grante for Altarus or Eugen Indjic for Claves. More interesting that discovering what motivated the entire enterprise would be perhaps to understand why the “producer” and the “performer” in Concert Artist’s recordings used specifically these recordings. A reason perhaps is that, in the randomness of these choices, Hatto and her husband thought their mischief would be less perceptible.

However, it is possible that the couple also wanted to disclose, albeit in a rather subtle way, their hoax. All of Hatto’s recordings with an orchestra, except for a few from her early years (and I suppose these were actually made by her), were made with a certain “National Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra” under the baton of “René Köhler.” It should be evident that such a name for an orchestra is just a concoction of the terms that are more commonly used when naming ensembles: “national,” “symphony,” “philharmonic.” But “Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra” is almost a redundancy (one might claim that “philharmonic” and “symphony” are synonims, but there is a subtle difference between the terms). Furthermore, Maestro Köhler hasn’t recorded anything else, at least not classical music. René Köhler (yes, with the same diacritics, by the way) even has a website, but he seems to be a singer and songwriter from somewhere in Scandinavia. We can’t help wishing him the best of luck in his new musical ventures.

A Strange Story,” by Hipermnésia Hipnagógica, February 16, 2007

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Sonny Rollins on the road – with Bret Primack

Bret Primac has a fantastic channel on YouTube – JazzVideoLand. We love this video of Sonny Rollins, but check out the entire channel: JazzVideoLand.
Sonny Rollins is such a beautiful artist, and this video really brings that out….

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Noon music at Rockefeller University

The Rockefeller University hosts a recital series called the Tri-Institutional Noon Recitals. Held on Fridays at noon from September through June, this series brings outstanding musical talent to NYC.
For example, on December 15, 2006, pianist Soyeon Lee gave a great perfomance. She played with much expression and enthusiasm. What a joy!

Soyeon Lee

Tri-Institutional Noon Recitals, Caspary Auditorium, The Rockefeller University, 66th Street and York Avenue (#2 on this campus map – pdf), Recitals Hotline: 212-327-7007, ext. 1
Post by Peter

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