Sunday, April 29, 2018

Wedding Music - a step by step guide

Friday, April 13, 2018

Did you know Bernstein borrowed a tune ...

...from Beethoven for West Side Story?


Beethoven - 5th Piano Concerto 'Emperor' (Zimerman, Bernstein, Wiener Philharmoniker)
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By Maddy Shaw Roberts
Here’s the proof that 'Somewhere', one of the most beautiful tunes in this Bernstein musical was very much inspired by Beethoven…
West Side Story is the 1957 Broadway musical that broke all our hearts – and at least a smattering of our Leonard Bernstein-shaped tears can be attributed to its poignant ballad, ‘Somewhere (There’s a Place for Us)’.
But did you know that its main tune (‘there’s a place for us’) was taken from the second movement (Adagio un poco moto) of Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ Piano Concerto No. 5?
That's this bit, in the Beethoven: 
West Side Story theme
In Beethoven’s version, the ‘us’ sinks back down to the F sharp, returning to the note on which the phrase began. But in Bernstein’s composition, the ‘us’ is slightly higher – like this:
there's a place for us
'Somewhere' appears in West Side Story at a moment when Tony has just stabbed Maria’s brother Bernardo to death at the rumble. Maria realises she still loves him and the problem is not them, but what is around them.
Considering the subject matter, perhaps Bernstein’s choice to move the ‘us’ a little higher is a moment of hope in amongst the painful longing of the song.
There’s also the minor seventh between ‘there’s’ and ‘a’ – an interval Bernstein took directly from Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ Concerto. It isn’t quite an octave, and the fact that it just falls short of that neat, satisfying interval means the melody captures a feeling of despair. The ‘place for us’ is a utopia Maria and Tony long for, but it’s just out of arm’s reach. [cries forever]
It’s perhaps less noticeable, but ‘Somewhere’ also takes a longer phrase from the main theme of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake.
Here’s the tune to Swan Lake:
swan lake
And here’s the third line of ‘Somewhere’:
somewhere west side story
Despite the difference in rhythm, the ascending line moving up to the dotted quaver (a dotted crotchet in the original) is a clear nod to the heart-breaking theme of the Russian composer’s ballet.
Bernstein knew what he was doing with his nods to this great works for Romantic music. And they are a small but important part of the emotional impact of his famous musical. 
Want to know more about the pure brilliance of West Side StoryHere’s how it bridged the gap between opera and musical theatre.

Why are pop songs 3 minutes long?

Classical music can vary in length from under a minute to 15 hours (looking at you, Wagner). So why are all pop songs roughly three minutes?

By Victoria Longdon
It turns out the reason most pop songs have wound up at just over three minutes in length is a) really interesting, and b) reveals some important facts about the history of recorded music.

How did this 3 minute length come about?

Around the 1920s shellac records replaced the phonograph cylinder as the technology of choice for recorded music. These 10 inch ‘singles’ stored just over three minutes of music. It wasn’t rocket science – exactly how much music they could store depended on how closely you spaced the grooves on the record. Closer together and you could store more music, but too close together and the sound quality would begin to suffer.
If you were an artist in the 60s or 70s and you wanted your song played on the radio or a jukebox, that song had to be on a single. It was that simple. If it couldn’t fit, it wouldn’t be played, and you’d lose out on your chance for it to become a hit.

But there were a few exceptions

But some crafty producers managed to cheat the system. The legendary hitmaker Phil Spector catapulted the The Righteous Bros’ 1964 hit ‘You’ve Lost That Lovin Feeling’ to stardom by stamping 03:05 on the cover of the single - even though the real running time was 03:45! Many radio presenters played it by accident, and it became the most played song on American radio and television in the 20th century.

New Tech, New Times?

The 80s saw the introduction of the CD, with a vastly improved storage size of 74 minutes (find out why Beethoven is the driving force behind the length of the CD here). You’d think that with all this extra legroom artists could spread out and write what they really wanted to write. Right?
Interestingly, this didn’t happen. What had originally started out as an engineering limitation had now become a commercial advantage. Radio stations were happy to prioritise three minute songs because they meant they could play more advertisements per hour.
Similarly, record producers were equally supportive of the concept of multiple royalties from shorter songs, since most stations paid the artists after three minutes of aired track time.
The artists and the fans didn’t necessarily agree with this, so they started releasing both album length tracks and ‘Radio Edits’ which conformed to the expected length for the airwaves.
The average length of a ‘pop’ song has stayed set at between three and four minutes for the last fifty years or so, but could it all be about to change?

So what now?

Historically three minutes was the minimum amount of time a song played before they paid an artist. Now we’re moving into the streaming age, the average platform will pay artists at around thirty seconds. We can only speculate the effect that this commercial change will have on the pop music of the future, but the era of the three-minute pop song might be spinning to a close.

Thursday, April 5, 2018

The greatest piano classic works ever written


The 14 best pieces EVER written for piano

By Classic FM London
Best piano works
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The piano is such a versatile instrument, that naturally everyone wants to write for it. But today we’re getting down to the exceptional stuff: this is a list of the best pieces ever written for piano (no questions asked).

Beethoven – ‘Moonlight’ Sonata

The heart-stoppingly beautiful first movement of Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight’ Sonata is the most famous from his work, and was described by composer Hector Berlioz as a ‘lamentation’. But it couldn’t be more different from the third movement, an epic technical work-out for the fingers...

Debussy – Clair de Lune

Curiously, ‘Clair de Lune’ also means ‘Moonlight’ – but there’s a stark contrast between Beethoven’s Romantic classicism and Debussy’s Impressionism. Don’t be fooled by the initial simplicity of ‘Clair de Lune’: it took Debussy 15 years to write the third movement of the Suite Bergamasque, and the result is a work that sounds simple, but demands the very best from its performers. Get it right, and it allows the most accomplished pianists to shine.

Chopin – Nocturne in E-flat Major (Op. 9, No. 2)

Chopin composed his most well-known nocturne at the tender age of 20, which perhaps accounts for its youthful passion. The build-up from the main theme and waltz-like accompaniment to the dramatic trill-filled finale makes the Nocturne in E-flat Major a strong contender for the most beautiful piano work ever written.

Schumann – Scenes from Childhood

Schumann’s Kinderszenen are a bittersweet collection of piano miniatures covering themes like games of chase, night-time terrors, bedtime stories and sleep. The most famous, ‘Traumerei’ paints a peaceful musical picture of a child’s dreams. It’s tender and beautifully nostalgic.

J.S. Bach – The Well-Tempered Clavier

The Well-Tempered Clavier was completely innovative for its day, and it paved the way for composers writing for keyboard instruments for the next few hundred years. Bach wrote the first of the two books that make up his work in 1722, making this one of the earliest pieces on our list. Each of the two books contain 24 Preludes and Fugues (the whole work is sometimes known as ‘The 48’), in each key of the Western scale – and each book opens with a prelude in C major, closing with a fugue in B minor.

J.S. Bach – Goldberg Variations

Bach’s 30 variations on a theme were originally written to help a Russian count overcome his insomnia – and they are named after a keyboard player called Johann Gottlieb Goldberg, who may have been the very musician who played the Variations to help the count drift off to sleep. The work opens with a simple statement of the theme (the ‘aria’) and the 30 variations get more and more intricate, straying further and further from the original theme. The Canadian pianist Glenn Gould recorded what has become the most famous version of the monumental work.

Beethoven – Piano Concerto No.5 'Emperor'

The last of Beethoven’s great piano concertos, the ‘Emperor’ has a strong claim to be the greatest piece ever written for the instrument. The nickname wasn’t given to the piece by the composer himself but apparently by one of Napoleon’s officers who declared it was ‘an emperor of a concerto’. After the colossal first movement, the second movement flows directly into the finale, which with a crash and a bang, ends one of the true warhorses of the piano repertoire. Every pianist worth their salt has recorded the work – but Leif Ove Andsnes’s is a great recording.

Gershwin – Rhapsody in Blue

'Rhapsody in Blue’ wasn’t entirely positively received by 1920s critics, yet its melange of classical and jazz style grounded Gershwin’s reputation as a serious composer – and its jazz influences are what gives the landmark piece its sultry and indulgent character.

Liszt – Piano sonata in B minor 

By 1854, Liszt had put the finishing touches to his monumental Piano Sonata in B minor, and took the music to perform at a private soirée. Among the guests was another composer, Johannes Brahms. Liszt took his seat at the piano and began to play. When he reached a section of the piece of which he was particularly proud, so the story goes, he glanced over at Brahms to see what he thought… only to find his fellow composer snoozing. 
Despite its unfortunate first outing, this sonata has become one of the best-loved and most performed piano works. Traditionally, sonatas have four movements – but Liszt was never one to play by the rules. The Sonata in B minor is one unbroken stretch of music, built around a handful of motifs which re-appear in various guises throughout.

Mozart – Piano Concerto No. 20

The first time this was performed, Mozart took up the role of soloist – because who could possibly play it better than young Wolfgang himself? The concerto’s final movement is legendary for its shift from a dark and restless mood to an utterly jubilant D Major finale. The young Beethoven is said to have adored this concerto, and kept it in his core piano repertoire.

Beethoven – Sonata Pathétique

If you’re feeling sombre and brooding, the Sonata Pathétique is the perfect accompaniment. Timeless and joyously recognisable for the unique motif line Beethoven uses throughout, it’s no surprise this sonata remains one of the composer’s most celebrated compositions.

Liszt – La Campanella

Literally meaning ‘little bell’ in Italian, La Campanella borrows its melody from the final movement of Paganini’s Violin Concerto No.2, in which the tune is accompanied with a handbell. This is the third of Liszt’s six Grandes Etudes de Paganini and it has an ethereal beauty in its tinkling, bell-like notes.

Mozart – Piano Sonata No.11 (including 'Rondo alla Turca')

The sonata’s third movement Rondo alla Turca is so popular, it is often played as its own musical entity. The movement imitates the sound of Turkish military bands, which was in vogue with European composers at the time.

Rachmaninov – Piano Concerto No.2 in C minor

Rachmaninov’s Second Piano Concerto has claimed our Classic FM Hall of Fame top spot eight times since the chart began in 1996… but what makes this unassailably epic work of geniusso special? Is it the first movement’s contrast between solo piano passages and storming orchestral themes? Is it the emotionally syrupy second movement, which gave Brief Encounter its unforgettable soundtrack? Or is it the third movement’s epic virtuosic finale, under which the finest of pianists can crack? 
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