What Are You Listening To?

IMG_5314.jpeg


Haydn and Handel are perhaps the most underrated composers outside of those who dig deep into Classical Music.
 
IMG_5340.png


Eleanor Steber was one of the first sopranos trained and based in the U.S. to gain success and recognition. She was a regular on The Voice of Firestone & The Bell Telephone Hour. The selections of this disc are all from live recordings dating from 1953-1970.
 
Not music as such, but music-related: the time Beethoven got thrown into a prison cell. It's both funny and a bit tragic...

 
IMG_1338.jpeg


My wife is on the phone with the younger daughter again… she calls her every other day. The girl spends most of the time spouting crazy conspiracy theories that she gets from the extremist podcasts she listens to all the time. This seemed like the perfect music to drown out their conversation. 😂

 
IMG_5643.jpeg


Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater is not only a beautiful work but also a fascinating creation historically… one of those “what if?” moments. At the height of the Baroque Pergolesi’s work points toward the greater simplicity and clarity of the Classical Era well before Haydn and Mozart. The Stabat Mater was composed in the final weeks of Pergolesi’s tragically short life (died at age 26). Many have pondered what Pergolesi might have achieved had he lived longer. Might he have become one of the major composers of Classical Era along with Mozart and Haydn?
 
IMG_5795.jpeg


Honestly, Schumann… and Mendelssohn were never among my favorites. I prefer the earlier Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert… and later composers such as Wagner, Mahler, and Richard Strauss. Nevertheless, I quite like this disc.
 
IMG_6110.jpeg


Listening to Mahler’s 2nd Symphony “The Resurrection”. I must say this album cover strikes me as a bit arrogant… placing the name of the conductor as more prominent than of the composer.
 
IMG_3068.jpeg


Arguably the finest jazz album ever. ❤️ Nearly everyone who played on this album was a major artist in their own right: Cannonball Adderly, Bill Evans, John Coltrane, etc…

 
Last edited:
View attachment 53766

Arguably the finest jazz album ever. ❤️ Nearly everyone who played on this album was a major artist in their own right: Cannonball Adderly, Bill Evans, John Coltrane, etc…

I know I am probably missing much by practically never listening to jazz. Rather than the raw, original works, I am only able to appreciate jazz second hand, filtered through the ears of composers like Gershwin, Copland, Bernstein, or Ravel. The only jazz I have ever really enjoyed has been from my few exposures to Thelonious Monk.
 
Last edited:
I know I am probably missing much by practically never listening to jazz. Rather than the raw, original works, I am only able to appreciate jazz second hand, filtered through the ears of composers like Gershwin, Copland, Bernstein, or Ravel. The only jazz I have ever really enjoyed has been from my few exposures to Thelonious Monk.

Jazz is arguably the American “classical music”. The roots of the music are multi-faceted. It really starts in New Orleans with Cajun music as well as various African influences. New Orleans… prior to the Civil War… had a population of free blacks and developed their own classically-trained orchestras. This was wiped out by the Civil War and post-Civil War. Many of the classically-trained black musicians who remained survived by working in nightclubs, cabarets, and brothels. One theory of the term “jazz” was that it came from the jasmine perfume worn by the prostitutes and performers/dancers/strippers. The musicians improvised and expanded on popular tunes preferred by the girls and their audience. If this is true it would seem that Jazz was a merger of popular and classical music from the very start.

I began listening to Jazz while I was still in high school. I remember beginning with a series of box sets of the key artists (Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Benny Goodman, Miles Davis, Count Basie, John Coletrane, Thelonius Monk, etc… There are a number of performers and/or recordings that truly straddle the line between jazz/popular music and classical/composed music: Miles Davis’ Sketches of Spain, Louis Armstrong’s and Miles Davis’ Porgy & Bess, Keith Jarrett’s improvised recordings… especially The Köln Concert, Paris Concert, Vienna Concert, Bill Evans, etc…
 
IMG_6586.jpeg


I have long admired Samson François’ recordings of Ravel and Debussy but just came upon this one of Liszt. I am slowly building my playlists of classical music on Spotify… composer by composer.
 
Back
Top