Part A (Approximately one hour) Part B (Approximately a gnother ghour.)
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Introduction
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This week, my plan was to do a little cleaning up, by which
I mean, play you some left-over tracks I could not squeeze into earlier
programs, and play you some additional tunes that you might be wondering
about.
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2
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Bach: Organ fugue in A minor, BWV 543
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This is the tune that I use as a theme for the start of
the show. It is an organ fugue by
Johann Sebastian Bach, or J. S. Bach to people in the classical music racket,
to distinguish him from a couple of other Bachs,
whom very few people know about.
Around the nineteenth century, people began cataloging the
works of composers, for reasons of copyright, mostly, I believe. Anyway, a neat fellow called Schmeider, that’s like Schneider, except with an M, was
the one who took up Bach’s catalog, and he called it the Bach’s Werke Verzeichnis, which is
abbreviated to BWV. So this piece is
BWV 543, or sometimes just S 543, for Schmeider. Here is the fugue, played by Edward Power
Biggs, an organist from Britain, who came to the US just about the same time
as Virgil Fox, another famous organist.
Believe it or not, Biggs has the lightest registration of most Bach
performers, that is, he uses the lightest-sounding selection of pipes. This is in a slow 6-8 time, but it comes
across as triple time, like a minuet, or waltz. Just a really great piece.
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3
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Bach: Jesu bleibet
meine Freude
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This chorale, from BWV 147, cantata 147, is very often the
first piece that young people latch onto.
I love it dearly, and when I played a MIDI version of it on the air,
my wife was very indignant, and she said, why not play the real thing? So here is the real thing.
The basic chorale is was not composed for this cantata; it
was an existing hymn. This is how it
sounds as it was sung in churches in Bach’s area.
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4
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Pachelbel: Canon in D
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Pachelbel’s Kanon, which was
played a couple of weeks ago by a string quartet, is for three violins and
cello. Because violins usually sound
so alike, and when you have an entire string orchestra playing together, the
first violins sound pretty much like the second violins. So, I wrote it out in MIDI, so that it
could be played by four entirely
different instruments! I chose a
viola, a flute, a bassoon, and the Cello.
The bassoon plays an octave lower, which makes it sound really weird.
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5
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Beethoven: Symphony No 5 in C minor
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We had a little bit of the famous Beethoven 5th
Symphony. Here’s the whole thing.
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7
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Mystery Haydnesque
Tune
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Some of you might have wondered about that little tune
that I use during the station break, and at the end. It is a tune that I heard somewhere
when I was a kid, and I always thought it was by Haydn, Joseph Haydn, who
wrote lots of tunes like that. He was
in fact credited with writing a lot of short tunes that he did not write.
I first made a video of this basic tune, and put it up on
YouTube a few years ago, and called for any information on its composer, but
nobody responded. I first played the tune as
it was put up, once repeated.
Earlier this year (2014) I took this tune, and made a little
fantasia out of it, that is, an extended version around the basic tune.
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8
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Mozart: Symphony No 40 in G minor
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For Mozart, also, someone cataloged his works after he
died. The cataloger’s name begins with
the letter K, so we give the catalog, or opus, numbers, as K whatever. Here is the first movement from Mozart’s
opus K 550, which is the famous G minor symphony No 40, from which we played
a minuet a few weeks ago.
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9
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Sock!Fight : Green Cats and Blue Licorice
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Uma, a long-time resident of Williamsport, who went to
Lycoming, and whose band Episodes
is no longer together, has a new band, Sock!Fight, and this is one of
their songs:
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10
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New Broad River Band: Blue Bedbugs Bite
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The National Anthem of EU
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One of the most wonderful national anthems that I had
ready to play was the Anthem of the European Community. You know it well!
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12
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Brahms: Symphony No. 1, Finale
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Here is the last movement of Johannes Brahms’s Symphony
number 1. Anyone who has attended
Lycoming College will know why this one is interesting!
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Sousa: Liberty Bell march
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This is Sousa’s Liberty Bell March. How amazing that anyone can write so many
highly memorable marches! If you
listen closely, there is a bell ringing in the second part.
The march is in binary form: AABB. This is played by the Philip Jones Brass
Ensemble.
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14
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Harry Belafonte: Hold ‘Im
Joe
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This song, by Harry Belafonte, is about a donkey: Hold ‘em Joe.
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16
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Wagner: Overture to Die Meistersinger
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Here is the first part of the Overture to Die
Meistersinger. I’ve already played the
last part for you. I fade it out when
he starts noodling in the middle, before it goes into the big ending.
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17
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Dvorak/Kreisler: Hungarian Dance No 2
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This one was left over from the episode where I played a
lot of Kreisler miniatures. The
original tune was by Dvorak, and this arrangement is largely by
Kreisler. Here it’s played by Itzhak Perlman and Samuel Sanders.
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18
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Haydn: Benedictus from Nelson Mass
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This movement from the Nelson Mass, for all four soloists
and chorus, is based on the line from the communion service that goes: “Blessed
is he that cometh in the name of the Lord ...”
One of the loveliest moments in the number is about
halfway through, when the alto starts off with Benedictus, and soon afterwards,
the Bass enters a note higher, then the Tenor soloist a note higher, and
finally the Soprano soloist a note yet higher. Very effective.
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Kreisler: Liebesfreud
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Liebesfreud
means Love’s Joy. This is one of Kreisler’s best-known
compositions, and a frequently requested concert piece.
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21
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Dvorak: Songs my mother taught me
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Perlman plays Dvorak’s well-known song: Songs my Mother
Taught Me, probably based on a folk tune.
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22
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Boris Fomin: Those were
the days
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Mary Hopkin was one of the earliest singers on the Apple
label, and Those were the Days was her first big hit with the label.
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Saint-Saens: Pianists, from Carnival of the Animals
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Saint-Saens pokes fun at pianists. Narrated by Leonard Bernstein.
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25
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Flanders and Swann:
Mopy Dick, the Whale
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Flanders and Swann describe the troubles of a whale with
the Flu.
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Bach: Contrapunctus
1 from Art of Fugue
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This next piece is one of the loveliest pieces of music
ever written, but it was, correctly, regarded as an exhibition piece, an
intellectual exercise. One of the last
pieces Bach published, and it was posthumous, is a collection called The Art
of Fugue, and this one is the first one in the collection, and introduces the
main musical theme of the entire collection.
Every piece in it has this theme somewhere buried inside it, so you
can see what sort of exercise this was.
Contrary to popular belief, scholars are now certain that Bach started
work on this collection twenty years earlier, but I don’t think anyone is
absolutely certain. Here’s Contrapunctus 1.
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27
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The New Broad River Band:
Seven Generations |
This song, recorded in the studio by the New Broad River
Band, sung by David Pinelli, deplores the fact that
fracking is overrunning a lot of the Susquehanna Valley. Sometimes a landowner has little choice,
because if your neighbor deals with the gas drilling companies, they can siphon
out the gas under your own property.
Gas is a fluid, remember, and could flow along the shale layer. So your neighbor can get rich by selling
the gas that’s under your property.
Anyway, on the one hand, drilling for gas, while it ruins the
infrastructure of a region during the drilling phase, once the wells begin to
produce, it simply postpones the development of energy sources other than
fossil-fuels. But gas, as a fuel,
quite apart from the pollution of the wells, pollutes the air a lot less than
coal. Billtown
buses are now many of them powered by gas, and that’s a good thing, at least
temporarily. A lot less diesel fumes
around the city.
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28
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Beethoven: Pastoral Symphony, Movt 2 – At the Brook
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Beethoven was a nature lover, did you know? The Pastoral Symphony, No 6 in F major, is
all about the countryside, and his perception of the rural folk, doing their
rural, rustic, bucolic thing, quite unlike our own rural folk, who are very
hip. This is a long movement, about hanging out near the creek, and I’m only
going to play a few minutes for you.
Remember, this is the favorite movement of a lot of people of your
grandparents’ generation. At the
Brook.
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29
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Free born man
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Just in case I left you with the impression that The New
Broad River Band did not play any fun songs, here’s one, in which the banjo
player, called Judo Aaron Allison takes the lead. The other members of the band are: Clyde
Canton, alias David Pinelli (vocals and guitar),
Miss Monique Pinelli, (Vocals and string bass), and
Julian Pinelli on Fiddle. A Free Born Man.
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