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There’s a lot of stuff on that there Internet …

March 12, 2016 at 10:30 am

When I began this blog, I vowed to do it for at least one full year. I’m doing it for myself, but let me say how much I appreciate you, the readers, for your feedback, responses, and your support.

I made a long list of pieces I wanted to present and write about. I’m slowly chipping away at that list. But every once in a while, I stumble across something new and fascinating – you know, like when you go past page 2 of your google search?

Seriously though, among the vast wasteland of trash, you can dig up some real gems. Here’s one I click on because, well, it had a cool picture. And it ended up being a really cool piece of music … and a very interesting story.

Before this post, I had never heard of Sir Eugene Aynsley Goossens. He is the third musician named Eugene Goossens, all from the same family, who lived in the same house, in London. Goossens conducted the British premiere of Stravinsky‘s Rite of Spring, and was the conductor of the Rochester (New York) Philharmonic and instructor at the prestigious Eastman School of Music. Sounds pretty normal, right?

So now it gets interesting. Goossens had an colorful affair with Australian Rosaleen Norton, an artist, occultist, and witch, at a time when Australia was socially conservative. He was stopped at the Sydney airport and searched; his bags had some curious photos, masks, incense, and other objects – enough to cause a huge scandal at the time, and ending Goossen’s musical career.

Here is Goossen’s 1913 “The Eternal Rhythm”, which I had never heard before; I quite like it. It sounds very much like the post-romantic works of the time, and smacks especially of Scriabin.

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It’s Friday! Time to Dance …

March 11, 2016 at 10:30 am

… And if you don’t know how, Anitra will be happy to teach you.

Anitra is a character in the Norwegian play Peer Gynt, written by Henrik Isben. The play is a satire of Norway and Norwegians, their peculiarities, their mythology, and their humor (if you can call it that.) Isben asked Norway’s composer poster-child, Edvard Grieg, to write music for the play. Later, Grieg created two suites using music he wrote for the play, which have become orchestral favorites the world around. Not too shabby for a country of fishermen, whose total population today is less than 6 million.

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Under the Sea

March 10, 2016 at 10:30 am

A few months ago, there was a story about a church in Mexico that reappeared after lying at the bottom of a reservoir for centuries. Similarly, there’s a church in Venezuela that is sometimes wet, sometimes dry. Pretty cool stuff!

French impressionistic composer Claude Debussy was dreaming of this stuff one hundred years before. His “Submerged Cathedral” is a staple of the piano repertoire. Large chords remind us of tall stone towers, dominating a murky landscape, portrayed by murmuring notes in the bass. The image in this video looks like the church where King Triton would take Ariel and his daughters. No doubt, Sebastian played a mean bubble-organ there.

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