Nena’s Room

nena-room

A neo-Gothic church almost touches the back of the Schweitzerhof Hotel here in Lucerne, Switzerland. The Matheus Church is where Richard Wagner and Cosima von Bülow were married on August 25, 1870. They had to convert to Protestantism to marry there, as their divorces were … Read more

Friday Performance Pick – 39

vivaldi

Vivaldi: The Four Seasons It’s summer in Texas. Beneath the blazing sun’s relentless heat, men and flocks are sweltering, pines are scorched. No, that’s not actually my prose. It’s taken from the Sonnet that accompanies Vivaldi’s Concerto “Summer” from The Four Seasons. It’s presumed that … Read more

Big Bands and Memory

dance

Did you really hear that? When I was in high school, I was a pianist for a swing band. A real dance band filled with terrific adult musicians that played at country clubs and grown-up parties. This is where I learned my Cole Porter, Jerome … Read more

Music History and . . . Rap?

EES

The year: 2093. The place: a classroom (or whatever the cyber-equivalent will be). The topic: Pop Music at the Dawn of the 21st Century. Whatever else is taught, there will be no way to avoid discussing rap music. A phenomenon that many thought would fade … Read more

Friday Performance Pick – 37

liszt

Liszt: Grandes études de Paganini (No. 6) Why not? We talked last week about Paganini’s Caprice No. 24 that had inspired other composers, so we might as well see how that works. Franz Liszt had been inspired by Paganini’s successful virtuosity on the violin to do much … Read more

Friday Performance Pick – 36

paganini-kersting

Paganini: Caprice No. 24 in A minor Few names are associated more strongly with virtuosity than Niccolò Paganini (1782-1840). He was one of the first performers to rise to fame in the wave of fascination with virtuosity that seized audiences in the early 19th century. … Read more

The Abbey of Cluny

Cluny. A name on a music history test. A place in Burgundy, at the Eastern edge of France, where something or other important happened about a monastery and Abbey in the early Medieval period. That much I remembered—couldn’t forget it if I tried, really, since … Read more