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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Women and Music


Who was Marni Nixon, the ‘ghost singer’ behind Hollywood’s famous actresses?

By ClassicFM London
Marni Nixon dubbed the voices of Deborah Kerr in The King and I, Natalie Wood in West Side Story and Audrey Hepburn in My Fair Lady
Marni Nixon dubbed the voices of Deborah Kerr in The King and I, Natalie Wood in West Side Story and Audrey Hepburn in My Fair Lady. Picture: Rex Features
By Maddy Shaw Roberts
5K
Marni Nixon was Hollywood’s great unsung singer. She dubbed the voices of Audrey Hepburn in 'My Fair Lady', Deborah Kerr in 'The King and I' and Natalie Wood in 'West Side Story'. But for most of her career, no one knew who she was.
Classically trained American soprano Marni Nixon was one of the best-loved voices of the 1950s and 60s. But while Hollywood’s leading ladies took all the credit, it was Nixon who sang the songs.
Hollywood’s best-acclaimed ‘ghost’ singer, Marni Nixon was hired, often unbeknownst to the stars themselves, to do the singing for actresses including Deborah Kerr in The King and I, Natalie Wood in West Side Story and Audrey Hepburn in My Fair Lady – all Oscar-winning movie musicals.
In 1956, Deborah Kerr was nominated for an Academy Award for her role as Anna in The King and I. The film’s soundtrack album sold hundreds of thousands of copies.
And Nixon? She was paid just $420 for her singing work and her name was left out of the credits. Here's her story.

How did Marni Nixon become a ‘ghost’ singer?

In 1930, Margaret Nixon McEathron was born in Southern California, US. She sang in professional choirs as a child, before training to be a classical soprano in her late teens.
At this time, Nixon also worked as a messenger for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). They soon became aware of Nixon’s impressive singing voice (she had perfect pitch and a four-octave range, no less) and decided to hire her as a ‘ghost’.
It was common practice back then for Hollywood to cast established film stars over trained singers, when the film called for singing.
In Nixon’s first job, she dubbed the singing voice of child actor Margaret O’Brien in Frances Hodgson Burnett’s The Secret Garden (1949). Four years later, she sang the high notes Marilyn Monroe couldn’t quite reach in ‘Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend’ in the 1953 movie Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.

She was threatened into silence

Marni Nixon was hired to work alongside some of the greatest players in the film industry – but if she told anyone about it, she was told she’d never be hired again.
“You always had to sign a contract that nothing would be revealed,” she told the ABC News program Nightline in 2007. “Twentieth Century Fox, when I did The King and I, threatened me. They said, if anybody ever knows that you did any part of the dubbing for Deborah Kerr, we’ll see to it that you don’t work in town again.”
But sure enough, Nixon’s ghosting abilities soon became what The New York Timesdescribes as Hollywood’s ‘worst kept secret’.
Marni Nixon at TCM Classic film Festival on April 28, 2011
Marni Nixon at TCM Classic film Festival on April 28, 2011. Picture: Getty

Only it wasn’t Nixon who leaked her identity – it was actress Deborah Kerr

Kerr casually dropped Nixon’s name into an interview with The Mirror in 1956, the year she won the Oscar for The King and I.
“She’s a wonderful woman, this Marni Nixon,” Kerr said. “We split [the songs]. I would lead into them and in the middle of the song, when I couldn’t go any further, Marni would take over.”
Her working relationship with Kerr seemed professional and co-operative. Nixon would work beside the actress, imitating her movements in order to create the perfect illusion.
“She wanted to also look like she was really singing and wanted to be using the same muscles and the same stretches you do in expressions,” Nixon told The Washington Post.

‘The ghostess with the mostest’

By the 1960s, newspapers had caught wind of the extent of Nixon’s ‘ghost’ singing. A 1964 article in Time Magazine referred to her as ‘the ghostess with the mostest’ – a nickname which presumably grated on Nixon while film companies continued to leave her name off the credits.
She also appeared on To Tell the Truth and was the answer to several clues on Jeopardy!, Trivial Pursuit and at least one New York Times crossword puzzle.
So, by the time My Fair Lady with Audrey Hepburn came out in 1964, people were already aware of Marni Nixon and the process of ‘ghosting’. Nixon’s name even became a by-word for behind-the-scenes vocal dubbing.

But not every actress was happy about it

When Nixon was brought in to sing for Natalie Wood as Maria in West Side Story, Wood thought she’d just be filling in a few high notes.
“In the case of Audrey Hepburn,” Nixon told The Washington Post, “She was very smart and could say, ‘I know this is not good enough, I want to keep trying myself,’ but she had to accept that it wasn’t quite what it should be.
“But I don’t think that Natalie Wood’s ego could take that. Frankly, I think they used to create that kind of attitude too much — allowing them to have the illusion when they knew all along that she wasn’t good enough.”
In fact, most of Wood’s original singing was thrown out, and Nixon’s was used in its place. She even dubbed some of Wood’s lines. It was then that Nixon started to push for official recognition.
“The anonymity didn’t bother me until I sang Natalie Wood’s songs in West Side Story,” Ms. Nixon told The Times in 1967. “Then I saw how important my singing was to the picture. I was giving my talent, and somebody else was taking the credit.”

In 1965, Nixon’s ghosting career ended

Finally a voice with a face, Nixon stopped working as a ghost singer and was hired to act and sing as one of the nuns in The Sound of Music (1965). She also appeared as the (credited) voice of Grandmother Fa in the 1998 Disney animated film Mulan.
Before and after Hollywood, Marni was an acclaimed concert singer, a specialist in contemporary music, a soloist with the New York Philharmonic, a recitalist at Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall and Town Hall in New York and a featured singer on one of Leonard Bernstein’s televised young people’s concerts.
She also taught singing at the California Institute of Arts and the Music Academy of the West, and published an autobiography called I Could Have Sung All Night (2006).
On 24 July 2016, Nixon died of breast cancer, aged 86.

How are blockbuster movie musicals cast today?

Today, movie musical directors tend to cast either actors who are also trained singers (like Meryl Streep in Mamma Mia!), actors with a lot of prior experience in singing (like Hugh Jackman in Les Misérables) or someone whose fame overrides their need to have a perfect singing voice (like Emma Watson in the recent live-action version of Beauty and the Beast).
Behind-the-scenes vocal stand-ins like Marni’s are far lesson common today, with directors preferring to use pitch correction software like autotune instead.
“But they still are used,” Nixon, 83, told The Washington Post. “They just have a cleverer way to do it.”

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Why do pianos have 88 keys?

Why do pianos have 88 keys?

16 May 2018, 15:15
Why do pianos have 88 keys?
Why do pianos have 88 keys? Picture: Getty
By Maddy Shaw Roberts
0
A standard piano has 88 keys: 52 white and 36 black. But who decided this number would be the norm, and why?
Before the piano was invented, composers wrote a lot of music for the harpsichord, which has just 60 keys. This meant that everything they wrote was limited to the harpsichord’s five-octave range.

Then, the first piano was invented.

Around the year 1700, Bartolomeo Cristofori, a musical instrument technician from Padua, Italy, decided it was time to update the harpsichord – and he came up with a new keyboard instrument with a hammer mechanism.
Cristofori was hired by the Florentine court of Grand Prince Ferdinando de’ Medici in 1688 to look after their harpsichords and, eventually, other instruments.
A 1700 inventory of Medici instruments mentions an ‘arpicimbalo’ (lit. an instrument resembling a harpsichord) invented by Cristofori. The instrument had a brand-new hammer and damper mechanism, two keyboards and a range of four octaves (49 keys).
Poet and journalist Scipione Maffei described it in 1711 as a ‘gravicembalo col piano, e forte’ (harpsichord with quiet and loud). It was here that the ‘pianoforte’ found its name.
Piano, made by Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655-1731)
Piano, made by Bartolomeo Cristofori (1655-1731). Picture: Getty

Composers got more ambitious

After Cristofori’s invention, composers started writing more and more music for the piano. But the instrument’s four-octave range was limiting.
So, piano manufacturers designed new pianos with more keys, so that composers like Haydn and Mozart could write more interesting material with a wider range.
By the time Romantic composers like Chopin and Liszt were writing music in the mid-1800s, pianos had up to seven octaves. This meant they could compose pieces with a crazy range, like this mad piece by Liszt:

Steinway created the 88-key piano

In the late 1880s, piano manufacturer Steinway created the 88-key piano. Other manufacturers followed suit, and Steinway’s model has been the standard ever since.
An 88-key piano has seven octaves plus three lower notes (B, B flat and A) below the bottom C.
It has 52 white keys and 36 black keys (sharps and flats), with each octave made up of seven white keys and five black keys.
Steinway & Sons piano
Steinway & Sons piano. Picture: Getty

Why did piano manufacturers stop at 88 keys?

Today’s composers usually write piano music that fits within the range of an 88-key model. Most piano makers also accept this as the limit, because anything outside is considered too high or low for the human ear.
But there are a few exceptions. For example, there’s a 102-key Stuart and Sons piano, which costs around £220,000.
Plus, Bösendorfer sells 92-key pianos, whose four extra keys are coloured black, so the pianist can distinguish them from the standard 88. The keys are rarely used, but the extra bass strings add harmonic resonance that contributes to the rich, overall sound of the instrument.
Here’s what they look like on the rather grand Bösendorfer semi-concert grand piano:
92-key Bösendorfer piano
92-key Bösendorfer piano. Picture: YouTube

Thursday, May 17, 2018

How do you actually play the incredible opening solo ...

... in ‘Rhapsody in Blue’?


How do you play the opening solo in 'Rhapsody in Blue'?
Credit: YouTube/Earspasm Music
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A trill, a scale and one filthy glissando – which according to this clarinet genius, is technically called a ‘smear’. Here’s how it’s done.
First, here’s what the opening solo looks like:
Rhapsody in Blue clarinet glissando
Rhapsody in Blue clarinet glissando. Picture: Acoustics
Even if you don’t read music, you can see that’s a heck of a lot of notes.
So, you need to start with a lot of breath. Playing a long glissando like Gershwin’s makes your instrument work harder and less efficiently, says clarinettist Michael Lowerstern (Earspasm on YouTube).
Second, Michael says, start to slowly pull your finger on and off the opening note to create a trill.
Click Here
Click Here
Once you’ve made it to the top of the trill, slowly pull your fingers off all three top keys together to create the aforementioned ‘smear’.
And bam, you’ve nailed the Rhapsody in Blue!

Vienna Clarinet Connection plays 'Rhapsody in Blue'


Why do orchestras tune to an 'A'?

By Classic FM London

14 May 2018, 09:51
Oboists - oboe section
By Maddy Shaw Roberts
0
At an orchestral concert, you’ll hear an A from the oboe before you hear anything else because it’s the note that the rest of the musicians tune to. But where did this tradition come from and why is it still around?

Why do orchestras tune to an ‘A’?

Orchestras always tune to concert pitch (usually A=440 Hertz, 440 vibrations per second).
Conveniently, every string instrument has an A string. So it makes sense for string orchestras to tune to the open A string of the first violinist. And as other families of instruments have joined the orchestra over the years, they followed suit. 
Even if an orchestra tunes to the ‘A’ of a keyboard instrument, the oboe (or first violin) will still pick up the note and play it for the rest of the orchestra, to make sure everyone can hear it.
Contrastingly, most band instruments are pitched in B flat – so if you’ve ever played in a concert band, you will have noticed that you always tune to a B flat rather than an ‘A’.
Click Here

When did orchestras start tuning to the oboe?

Listen to the sound of these lovely oboes:
Lady Gaga medley for 5 oboes and English horn
Arranged by Ryan Walsh. Performed by The Mannes Oboe Studio: Cat Cantrell, Cory Snoddy, Phil Rashkin, Scott Wollett, Devin Hinzo and Ron Cohen Mann. Songs include: "Just Dance", "Poker Face", "Telephone", "Judas" and "Applause".
Despite their distinctive sound, the oboe hasn’t always been in the orchestral spotlight.
When the first orchestras emerged in the late 17th century, they were mainly formed of string players. While the focus was on string instruments, oboists were sometimes used to strengthen the sound of the first and second violin section.
But then, composers started to realise that the oboe’s bright, singing tone could be put to better use. They began writing separate parts for the instrument, and even creating concertos for the instrument (for example, Albinoni’s Oboe Concerto in D minor).

So why do today’s orchestras tune to the oboe?

The penetrating sound of the oboe stands out from the orchestra, so it’s easy for all the musicians to hear. 
Its pitch is also steadier than strings, so it’s a more reliable tuning source. This was especially true when all violin strings were made from gut (now they’re more often made from steel).
Longevity also has a lot to do with it: over time flutes, bassoons, French horns and clarinets drifted in and out of the orchestra; but oboes were nearly always written into orchestral scores. So they became the standard instrument for tuning.
Yamaha has another theory: “The only way of altering the pitch of an oboe is to adjust the breadth or length of the reeds; it is nearly impossible to make any sudden changes on the day of a performance. It is difficult to adjust the pitch of an oboe,” they argue. “Therefore the other instruments in a performance must be made to match, and that is why the oboe is the standard for tuning.”

Don’t oboes go flat too?

Like any other instrument, oboes can be tuned sharp or flat. But most oboists use an electronic tuner to make sure their ‘A’ is on point. 
In theory, the whole orchestra could use the electronic tuner to tune. It probably produces a more consistently accurate note than an oboe, as well.
But we think it would be a shame to lose this tradition. It’s surprisingly hard to imagine a concert without that reassuring initial sound of an oboe rising above the chitter-chatter, just as you’re settling into your seat and setting your phone to silent, before the full magnificent orchestra chimes in at pitch…