Showing posts with label trumpet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trumpet. Show all posts

Thursday, October 29, 2015

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2015

QUOTE:
"It's not what you are, but what you don't become that hurts."
AUTHOR: Oscar Levant
MEANING OF THE QUOTE:
"Not working up to and using your abilities to their fullest potential
  will stop you from feeling content with your progress."






COMPOSER 
COPLAND
Quiet City
Quiet City
London Symphony Orchestra
Some pictures of New York

Originally written as incidental music for
an experimental play written by Irwin Shaw
Irwin Shaw
in 1939, Quiet City was re-arranged by
Copland the following year into a one
movement, ten minute piece for solo
trumpet, solo English horn (cor anglais)
English Horn

with a string ensemble backing. This piece,
which premiered in New York City and
performed by conductor David Saidenberg
and his Saidenberg Little Symphony,
David Saidenberg

was about a young trumpet player who imagined
the nocturnal thoughts of various dwellers in a great city
and played the trumpet to express his feelings about them.
Copland's biographer, Vivian Perlis, has said that the music in this piece
"reflects the introspective Copland, who liked to compose during the late night
hours and enjoyed the idea of quiet streets before a city awakens for a new day."

Edward Hopper: Night Hawks


The music is also intended to reflect the sounds and feelings of "a city that never
sleeps." This is effectively achieved through the use of space and silence; the
texture is never particularly dense, but rather sparse and open as if reflecting upon
the vastness of the city landscape. There is also a distinct improvisatory feel to the
melodies in both the horn and trumpet, which adds to the idea of two people
interacting with one another.

Quiet City is decidedly melancholic and contemplative. It opens with broadly
spaced atmospheric chords from strings and English horn, evoking a transparent
-like night stillness. The trumpet soon enters with tentative, haunting notes (which
Copland marked as "nervous, mysterious") and gently emotional phrasings.

Copland viewed Quiet City as
"a rather unusual showpiece for the two soloists; unusual 

because one seldom hears trumpet and English horn in roles
as contrasting instruments in a soloistic yet quiet setting."

"The idea of contrasting trumpet with English horn was a travaille, a 'find,'
giving, I think, a certain freshness and variety of instrumental color,"

Continuing on, Copland said of his instrumentation choice:
"A practical reason for the English horn was to let the trumpeter
have a breathing space, so that he wasn’t made to play continuously…
There are not many quiet trumpet-solo works in the repertory, and I
doubt whether there are many English horn solo-pieces of any sort.
Quiet City is challenging music for the soloists, with a comparatively
straight forward orchestral accompaniment."
Georgia O'Keeffe:
 Radiator Building Night New York, 1927 

Quiet City
Wynton Marsalis, trumpet
Phillip Koch, English horn
Conducted by Donald Hunsberger
Eastman Wind Ensemble



Quiet City, based on material Copland had
previously written for a stage production, was
a play which focused on two main characters,
whose personalities, as well as their emotions
and angst, were portrayed through music.
The Irwin Shaw play, commissioned by
Harold Clurman,
Harold Clurman
founding member of the Group Theatre in
New York City, and directed by Elia Kazan,
Elia Kazan

was, as Copland described it,
"…a realistic fantasy concerning the night thoughts
of many different kinds of people in a great city."

The music aimed at expressing
"the emotions of the characters, the nostalgia and inner
distress of a society profoundly aware of its own insecurity."

The story tells of two Jewish brothers, one of whom abandons his Jewish
ancestry to pursue a life of material success; changes his name, marries a
rich socialite, and rises to become the president of a department store, and
the other a jazz trumpeter who, content with being an artist, embraces a more
unconventional, isolated lifestyle, expressing his loneliness through his music.
Not succeeding in making the break with his past, the materialistic brother is
continually recalled to his conscience by the haunting sound of the trumpet
his brother is playing. Copland said, in reference to the dichotomy of the two
characters, that it
"helped to arouse the conscience of his fellow players and the audience."

Though the play closed after only the two trial Sunday evening performances in
April, 1939, the music was not to blame. The play's producer later even stated that
"all that remained of our hard work was a lovely score by Aaron Copland."

Copland was convinced by friends to rework the score as a small orchestra
piece and in the summer of 1940 he fashioned Quiet City into a concert suite,
changing the original instrumentation from trumpet, clarinet, saxophone and
piano to trumpet, English horn and string orchestra. In this form Quiet City
was played for the first time on January 28, 1941 in New York and has proved
to be one of Copland’s most effective short works.

In reference to how he reworked the original music Copland stated:
"There wasn't much continuous music with the play, just short
sections, so that the orchestral piece bears little resemblance
to the incidental music, which I never published."

Even though the music was written to accompany a play, he was able to
recreate the musical sections into a piece that stands alone nicely:
"Quiet City seems to have become a musical entity,
superseding the original reasons for its composition."

This music has survived as a popular piece
long after the play has been forgotten.
The composer and saxophonist, Christopher Brellochs, recently
unearthed the original manuscript for trumpet, saxophone,
clarinets and piano had never been published and recorded the
world premiere of Quiet City in its original form.


Quiet City
(Original Chamber Version)
Donald Batchelder, trumpet
Mitchell Kriegler, clarinet
Allison Brewster Franzetti, piano


LINKS

Quiet City
for English horn, trumpet & strings
(from the incidental music)
With William Harrod and Philip Collins
Conducted by Erich Kunze
Cincinnati Pops Orchestra
Photos of Los Angeles

Friday, June 12, 2015

FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015

QUOTE:
"The '60s was one of the first times the power of music
  was used by a generation to bind them together."

AUTHOR: 
Neil Young

MEANING OF THE QUOTE:
"Serious messages are often communicated to
  a population through the music they listen to."
COMPOSER
картинки | анимационные картинки | картинки на телефон
SLEIGH RIDE
Sleigh Ride by Currier and Ives
"The Road Winter"--shows Nathaniel Currier and his wife.
It was a Christmas gift to Currier from his employees--

Nathaniel, ever the capitalist, had copies made and sold them to the public.
http://www.green-wood.com/2012/printmakers-currier-and-ives/
SLEIGH RIDE
John Williams, Conductor
Boston Pops Orchestra
SLEIGH RIDE
Brian Setzer, Performer
"Sleigh Ride" is a popular light orchestral
piece, composed by Leroy Anderson
and according to the composer's
widow Eleanor Anderson,

"Leroy didn't set out to write a Christmas
piece when he wrote 'Sleigh Ride.'  His
intentions were to convey the entire winter
season through the imagery of a sleigh ride,
much in the way that Mozart did with
his piece of the same name."
MOZART SLEIGH RIDE
(from German Dance No. 3)
Leopold Stokowski, Conductor
http://www.answers.com/topic/three-german-dances
Composer's intentions aside, this winter
composition quickly became associated
with the holiday. Eleanor Anderson
remembers hearing Sleigh Ride in New
York City department stores right after
the first recording was released in 1949.
Norman Rockwell
The music incorporates the sounds of
sleigh bells and horse whips throughout
the piece, ending with the horse whinny
(played by a trumpet) followed by
one last crack of the whip
(played by a slap stick).
https://hdwallpapers.cat/sleigh_ride_forest_trees_horses_colorful_hd-wallpaper-1642779/
In a 1951 radio interview,
Leroy Anderson
explained the background
of the finale of the work:
"The story about the horse whinny goes
back to my student days in Boston. I knew
a trumpet player there who was very skillful
in producing unorthodox, as well as orthodox,
sounds on his instrument. The most striking
of these was a horse whinny, which he made
by pressing the three trumpet valves halfway
down and then giving a sudden blast through
he mouthpiece while shaking the trumpet rapidly.
I was especially impressed by this because I was
studying orchestration at the time, and this sort
of thing wasn’t in the textbooks. I then forgot all
about it until years later, when I was scoring
the final measures of Sleigh Ride."
HOW TO DO
A HORSE WHINNY
ON A TRUMPET
INFORMATION FROM:
By Celesta Letchworth,
eHow Contributor
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Press all three valves halfway down with your right hand.
Hold the trumpet firmly around the valve casing with your left hand.
Insert the pinky of your right hand into the pinky ring/hook for stability.

2. Play a high note, preferably the G, which
sits on top of the treble clef or higher.

3. Play a slowly descending glissando
while shaking the trumpet slightly away from and back toward your lips.
The shaking is a rapid forward/backward motion, not side to side.
Your "horse" will sound better with a faster and stronger shake.


Doug Kreuger: A Christmas Sleigh Ride
The composer had the original idea for
the piece during a heat wave in July, 1946
http://daily-dose-of-art.com/2014/12/25/a-christmas-song-is-born-4/comment-page-1/
but finished the work in February, 1948 and
was first recorded in 1946 by Arthur Fiedler
(Left to right) Leroy Anderson and Arthur Fiedler
and the Boston Pops Orchestra with
lyrics added later, in 1950, by
Mitchell Parish.
According to author Steve Metcalf
in the book Leroy Anderson:
A Bio-Bibliography
[Praeger 2004],
"Sleigh Ride"... has been performed
and recorded by a wider array of
musical artists than any other piece
in the history of Western music."
the American Society of Composers, 
Authors and Publishers named
Sleigh Ride the most popular piece of
Christmas music in the USA in 2009,
2010, 2011 and again in 2012 tracked by
airplay monitoring service, Media guide,
from over 2,500 radio stations tracked
nationwide all this is in spite of the fact
that the word "Christmas" is never
mentioned in the lyrics.
The slapstick (often called a whip) is a
simple non-pitched auxiliary percussion
instrument used solely for rhythmic
reinforcement and effect that consists of
two flat pieces of wood boards, joined
by a hinge at one end, which, when struck
together rapidly produce a sharp crack, slap
or whipping sound that can be performed loud
or soft. The size of the slapstick (and strength
and composition of material to some degree)
provides the quality of the sound. A larger
instrument can produce a louder and
slightly lower pitched crack.
There are two types of whips. The first has two
planks of wood connected together by a hinge, with
a handle on each. The percussionist holds the
instrument by the handles and hits the two pieces
of wood together, creating a loud whip noise.
The other type also has two planks of
wood, one longer than the other, with one handle,
connected with a spring hinge so it can be played
with just one hand, though it cannot produce
sounds as loud as a whip requiring both hands.
This second type of whip is technically a
separate instrument called a slapstick.

The slapstick has been used extensively to add extra
comic effect for sight gags in theatre, vaudeville, and
in cartoons. It is seen occasionally in classical music,
such as the 6th Symphony of Gustav Mahler and is
used as the sound of whips in a number of light
classical and more contemporary compositions
like Anderson's "Sleigh Ride."
mounted on a piece of wood or on a harness.
They can either be played as a percussion
instrument with rhythm or as a shaking
instrument with a continuous sound.
HOW TO PLAY
SLEIGH BELLS
SLEIGH RIDE
Performed by Ella Fitzgerald

SLEIGH RIDE LYRICS
Lyrics Added in 1950

Just hear those sleigh bells jingling, ring ting tingling, too,
Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you,
Outside the snow is falling and friends are calling "Yoo Hoo,"
Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you.

Giddy-yap, giddy-yap,giddy-yap, let's go,
Let's look at the show,
We're riding in a wonderland of snow.
Giddy-yap, giddy-yap, giddy-yap, it's grand,
Just holding your hand,
We're gliding along with a song of a wintry fairyland,

Our cheeks are nice and rosy, and comfy cozy are we,
We're snuggled up together like two birds of a feather would be.
Let's take that road before us and sing a chorus or two,
Come on, it's lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you.
INTERLUDE
There's a birthday party at the home of Farmer Gray,
It'll be the perfect ending of a perfect day,

We'll be singing the songs we love to sing without a single stop,
At the fireplace while we watch the chestnuts pop.

There's a happy feeling nothing in the world can buy,
When they pass around the coffee and the pumpkin pie,
It'll nearly be like a picture print by Currier and Ives,
These wonderful things are the things we remember all thru our lives!

Jane Wooster Scott: Holiday Sleigh Ride
SLEIGH RIDE
MUSICAL FORM
https://sites.google.com/a/blanquerna.url.edu/calaix-de-music/toquem/percussio

SLEIGH RIDE
BODY PERCUSSION VISUAL
https://sites.google.com/a/blanquerna.url.edu/calaix-de-music/toquem/percussio
SLEIGH RIDE

Body Percussion Moves
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cMCDXbRfDHg

SLEIGH RIDE
ANALYSIS
INFORMATION FROM:
http://tonaldiversions.com/2012/12/19/sleigh-ride-anderson/
The introducton starts the piece off with a bit of a lilt in
the rhythm due to its 7/8 meter (1-2-3-4-5-6-7 rhythm:
three long pulses then one short pulse). This sequence
happens four times (four measures' worth) before the
melody commences throwing the listener immediately
into a winter wonderland, with the jingling sleigh bells
and bouncy trumpet call, followed by flute snowflakes.

With the music sounding like a horse trotting through the
snow, the main melody is happy and light with a smooth,
longer line in the mid-range instruments which may be
depicting the road the sleigh is traveling over. After the
first statement of the theme (0:20) a reply is heard
in the trombones and bass voices. 

The next section adds some temple blocks for the "horse
hoof" effect along with a nice little countermelody section.
Following, there is a asforzando-piano chord at 0:42 (a
dynamic that is suddenly accented then immediately gets
softer) in the horns, which grows louder (crescendos)
as the xylophone gives us a transition back
into the main theme.

This time, the theme is played by the trumpets as the
high woodwinds and strings recreate the sound of snow
flurries by playing a short trills.  A syncopated transition
is heard next with the ensemble getting softer.

After a buildup in volume from the rest of the ensemble,
there is one beat where no one else plays; that is where
the whip crack sound is added. The music is brought
back down to piano (soft) in order to crescendo again
as a lead in for another whip crack. With the distraction
of the whip and the liveliness of the melody, it’s easy to
miss some neat chord changes that are happening during
this bit after the second whip crack (1:13).

The next transition harkens back to the beginning of the
piece, but adds some echoes and uses shorter segments
of that trumpet theme (1:33) before restating the "flute
snowflake" theme (1:40) which Anderson modifies by
jazzing the whole thing up. Again the trumpets perform
their jazzed up theme followed by the trombones' more
bombastic reply (1:47). Then, everyone gets to join in.

After the excitement of the jazz section, the ensemble
settles back down for the rest of the ride. We hear familiar
themes and accompaniments as the pieces winds down.
Anderson doesn’t let us get completely comfortable, 
though, as he interjects a brief call-and-answer between
the instruments (2:30). This begins the lead-up to the
most famous part of the piece: the horse whinny, courtesy
of a solo trumpet player. We then hear a quick salute to
the clip-clop of the horse hooves and one more whip crack
before the entire orchestra announces the end.
SLEIGH RIDE
CROSS WORD PUZZLE

Arlene Wright-Correl: Sleigh Ride
SLEIGH RIDE
SHEET MUSIC
Currier and Ives