Joy!

April 8, 2016 at 10:30 am

Well, it’s not really about the Spring season, but it does have the word “Spring” in it … works for me!

Happy Friday everyone! Here’s something to kick back to – Joy Spring was the nickname that Clifford Brown called his wife. But if we blissfully ignore that fact, bam, the piece is now about Springtime. Easy.

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Easy Winners

February 19, 2016 at 10:25 am

We really have it lucky nowadays. If I want to hear a piece of music – any piece of music – all I need to do is search for it on my phone, and less than 10 seconds later, I’m listening. 15 years ago, it would take a 5-minute download on a 56k modem. 25 years ago, it would be a 1-hour trip to the store. 150 years ago, if you wanted to hear music, you either had to make it yourself or listen to a live musician.

In this video, the audio is an actual recording of the one and only Scott Joplin playing his own composition, “The Easy Winners.” Joplin was, of course, known for his ragtime piano compositions, which are studied and played by pianists of all ages.

Note the slow, relaxed tempo.

Most performances today are nearly twice as fast. (If you MUST hear it fast, you can set the play speed to 2x – and hear it become inappropriately comedic.)

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The milk of Concierto de Aranjuez

January 26, 2016 at 9:30 am

I don’t particularly like Hemingway. I spit in the milk of his literature. I’ve read a few of his books. They just don’t resonate with me. Maybe I was too young when I read them. Maybe it’s because I prefer Dickens. I like long sentences, after all. I like details.

Today’s piece is rich in history. I learned a lot writing this. And I’ve only just scratched the surface.

Joaquín Rodrigo wrote Concierto de Aranjuez. Supposedly it celebrated the end of the Spanish Civil War. Supposedly it celebrated the victory of Francisco Franco. More likely, Rodrigo spit in the milk of Franco’s dictatorship. The Concierto was written for guitar and orchestra. Rodrigo didn’t play the guitar. He scorned the milk of the guitar. The guitar made it sound Spanish, though. Even though he wrote it in Paris. Hemingway reported on the Spanish Civil War. He also lived in Paris.

Miles Davis arranged the second movement for jazz orchestra.  It takes up most of the album Sketches of Spain. Some people complained that it wasn’t jazz. They sneered at the milk of Davis’ music. Davis said that he liked the music, though. He sneered back at the milk of their sneering.

Thanks to Al Pearson for the recommendation. Maybe it’s time to read Hemingway again.

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