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We Stand on Guard for Thee

News Alert, 13 April 2011:

Today a judge of the Superior Court of  the Province of Ontario has ruled that medicinal use of Marijuana will become legal in ninety days. This decision will allow patients to legally purchase marijuana and force Health Canada to establish dealerships.

Don’t everyone come at once. This great country,  besides having universal health care, beer, canoing, hockey, mounties, Hudson Bay blankets, snow shoes and Gay Marriage, now offers  Rocky Mountain highs where there are no mountains.

I have a chronic pain in my left hip.

 
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Posted by on April 13, 2011 in Articles, Commentaries & Critiques

 

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When I Wished Upon a Star –

Start here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EnqgROXTSFw

Soon after arriving in Toronto a friend of mine asked me to help him accompany a  modern dance recital. That was 40 years ago when all things were exciting and new. I said yes, and asked, “what do you want me to do?”

“I want you to sing When You Wish Upon a Star”, he answered.

I hadn’t sung a solo in public since my preteen days when I was a soprano in St. Mark’s Methodist Church on Liberty Heights Avenue in Baltimore, Maryland. But that didn’t put me off. I knew the tune well. I’d heard it sung in Pinocchio by Jiminy Cricket.  I could fake the tunes  difficulties and I still had it in my head. My goodness I could still hear Cliff Edwards’s yearningly beautiful falsetto, though I knew I’d never sing the last note. All of this is to say I said yes.

Once I had memorized the words the gig was a “no-brainer”. In fact , we didn’t even have a rehearsal with the dancer. I was told she wanted me to be surprised, but that I shouldn’t worry. Everything was going to be all right. We ran through the tune a couple of times so I could get my vocal cords warbling. My friend’s arrangement for Marimba twas right in the pocket. No sweat.

As with almost all dance modern or not, there was no budget. It was a freebie for everyone and the venue, as I recall, was in a converted warehouse. I remember the rectangular room had chairs for about 40 people. There was a  jerryrigged stage with a single curtain hanging from stage left which acted as a mask for the audience.

My friend began the introduction and I entered singing,

” When you wish upon a star, makes no difference who you are, Anything your heart desires will come to you.

If your heart is in your dreams, no request is too extreme, When you wish upon a star as dreamers do.

Fate is kind, she brings to those who love The sweet fulfillment of their secret longing”.

I thought I sounded great. Everything was going well and I was “groovin”.

When I began to sing, “Like a bolt out of the blue”, the dancer who had been perched on a ladder behind the curtain jumped into sight clutching a baby doll in one hand. She  began viciously beating the doll against the stage floor. One maniacal hammer stroke after another. Again and again. The baby doll began to disintegrate, pieces large and small flying off in all directions. Stunning blow after stunning blow as I sang, “fate steps in and sees you thru

I was okay. In fact, during this absurdly sadistic Pas de Deux, my singing became more passionate. Unperturbed, my lovely Jiminy cricket voice sang on  as more and more of the baby doll disappeared from its body.

When you wish upon a star, your dreams come true”.

Then the baby doll’s head flew off.

Exhausted, the dancer remained crouched with the stump of a leg in her hand.

On its foot, a cute pink bootie.

 
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Posted by on April 11, 2011 in Articles, Commentaries & Critiques

 

THE DIVINE PURCELL

This is the first article in a series devoted to aspects of  composers works and lives not generally known by average concert goers. Purcell’s genius, rated by some music critics as being superior to that of Bach, is known by only a mere fraction of his oeuvre. Yet once explored in depth, his music, most admirably his vocal music impresses upon the listener a world far removed from the more systematic works of Baroque and Classical composers. Perhaps these articles will encourage readers to dig further into the life and times of other composers.

My high school band director asked me to conduct Henry Purcell’s Trumpet Voluntary on one of our band concerts. I enjoyed the experience and later, whenever I heard the tune, I would recall my conducting debut. Years later I learned musicologists had attributed the voluntary to another British composer and contemporary of Purcell, Jeremiah Clarke who called the work Prince of Denmark March.

About 20 years ago I heard Barbara Hannigan sing Purcell’s The Blessed Virgin’s Expostulation.  I was taken by an incredible change in the song which after the concert I described to Barbara as madness. Barbara replied,“That’s exactly what happens to her. She is coming to terms with the fact that she is going to be the mother of Jesus Christ”.

I purchased a CD of Purcell’s vocal music  with a version of that incredible song. The singer, though very good, did not take the dramatic plunge into madness. Nevertheless those songs introduced me to a Henry Purcell I had never known. For sure he has a way with words, but his ear for melodic lines and inventive use of simple materials continue for me as an ever fresh bouquet of musical delights.

I then purchased one of the finest books on Purcell,titled simply Purcell, by J. A. Westrup. Though out-of-print, it is still available from rare and used book sellers. It was my reading of this book that led me to Purcell’s operas or as they were called in the 17th century, Masques or semi-operas. In these operas one can hear irresistibly fresh and young vocal writing alongside humor in goodly measure.

The first masque I listened to was King Arthur written in 1691 to a text by Dryden. King Arthur is one  of Purcell’s greatest works. In Arthur one can hear the hallmarks of Purcell’s orchestral and vocal prowess.

Purcell was born in either 1658 or 1659 in the city of Westminster, London.  During his later years he was referred to as Purcell the divine and he is buried next to the organ in Westminster Abbey. The music played at his funeral was the music he had  composed eleven months earlier for the funeral of Queen Mary, 1662-94.

One of the shortest works in the Music for Queen Mary’s Funeral is the March for brass and kettledrums. It is also profoundly moving music. I never tire of hearing it and am always touched by the mood it creates and Purcell’s genius.

The recorded performance below is by The Early Music Consort of London conducted by David Munrow, EMI Classics, 7243 5 69270 2 5. Munrow was a brilliant musician and linguist who created a public  interest in Early Music. He employed Christopher Hogwood among others. He recorded 50 albums of early music and in 1976 at the age of thirty-two, committed suicide by hanging.

https://robinengelman.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/05-march.mp3

 
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Posted by on March 29, 2011 in Articles, Composers

 

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