Site Meter
Feb 19th

Composers Corner: Vertigo - Herrmann's Symphony of Madness

By JulieHarris

Vertigo

by Alex Ross

New York Times, October 6, 1996

Note from Julie Harris:  Alex Ross is such a compelling writer, that I've included his entire article.  I added the pictures and video clips to illustrate his stunning descriptions

NEARLY FOUR DECADES after its commercially indifferent first run, ''Vertigo'' has become the most widely celebrated of Alfred Hitchcock's films. It is prized not simply for its razor-sharp suspense technique but also for its air of mystery, its tragic dimension, its literary layering of memory and obsession. Scholars have compared it to Proust, ''Tristan und Isolde'' and the Orpheus myth; critics have voted it Hitchcock's masterpiece. Robert Harris and James Katz, the film restorers who previously revived ''Lawrence of Arabia'' and ''Spartacus,'' have completed the canonization by releasing ''Vertigo'' in a 70-millimeter, digital-sound version, which opens today (with a video to follow early next year).

It would be heresy to suggest that the greatness of ''Vertigo'' is owed to anyone but Hitchcock, whose fingerprints cover every aspect of the production. But there is a second genius at work in ''Vertigo,'' and his voice will be heard more clearly in the restoration. Mr. Harris and Mr. Katz refurbished not just the images but also the sound, bringing digital technology to bear on the Bernard Herrmann score, whose original tape turned up in a vault nearly intact. Herrmann was an absolute master of the strange art of film scoring, and in a career that stretched from ''Citizen Kane'' to ''Taxi Driver,'' the 1958 ''Vertigo'' was probably his peak.

How much, indeed, of this film's famous atmosphere is owed to Herrmann? Close your eyes and think of one sequence, and you may well remember Kim Novak's somnambulistic tour of San Francisco, from a chapel to a graveyard to a picture gallery. It is the music as much as the lighting and the filters that gives those scenes their eerie shimmer. None of which is to detract from Hitchcock's glory; he knew the nature of the talent he had engaged, and he created extraordinary opportunities for Herrmann to make his mark. ''Vertigo'' is a symphony for film and orchestra.

Bernard Herrmann.jpg

Herrmann was born in New York in 1911; he made his name first as a composer at CBS radio. He arrived in Hollywood with the young genius of the airwaves Orson Welles. His first effort at film scoring was ''Citizen Kane.'' Like Welles, he was viewed with intense suspicion by the film community; his life in Hollywood was fraught with difficulties, many of his own making. He was a passionate, irascible, unpredictable character who often treated film people with contempt. He wished more than anything else to make his name as a composer of concert music and a conductor on the international circuit.

If Herrmann thought himself a failure at the end -- he died in 1975 on the night of the last recording session of ''Taxi Driver'' -- then he sadly undervalued his achievement. Over four decades, he revolutionized movie scoring by abandoning the illustrative musical techniques that dominated Hollywood in the 1930's and imposing his own peculiar harmonic and rhythmic vocabulary. In place of lush melodies, he wrote short, obsessively repeated figures, static collections of chords, parodies of past styles. The sound was original, even experimental, but also useful: it wonderfully matched Welles's electrifying fast style.

It took a while for Herrmann and Hitchcock to come together. The director tried many times to engage Herrmann before finally signing him for ''The Trouble With Harry,'' the first of nine collaborations. Hitchcock, too, had long been impatient with the busily illustrative type of score perfected by Central European emigres like Max Steiner and Erich Wolfgang Korngold. While making ''Lifeboat,'' he was heard to complain that the audience would wonder where the music was coming from, out there in the middle of the ocean. (''Ask Hitchcock where the cameras come from,'' the composer David Raksin famously replied.)

Hitchcock was not deaf to music; he simply wanted to make its use more pointed. He always enjoyed experimenting with ''live'' sources for music on film. In ''Rope,'' for example, Farley Granger's guilt-ridden character nervously plays Poulenc at the piano. In ''Rear Window,'' a cocktail-piano sound streams in from an adjacent apartment. In Herrmann, Hitchcock found a composer whose music would blend into the action with the same uncanny directness, but now on a different level. Herrmann would address the unconscious regions, summon atmosphere and dread. Music would play its own starring role; at times, it would take over the action.

''VERTIGO'' fired Herrmann's imagination because its byzantine plot perfectly matched his Gothic sensibilities. A retired police detective afflicted by vertigo is hired to follow and protect a woman named Madeleine who seems to be suicidally possessed by a spirit from the 19th century. Although he discovers that she has been playacting as part of an elaborate murder plot, his intensifying obsession causes history to repeat itself in terrifying cycles. The scenario has resonances with any number of doom-drenched Romantic and Symbolist dramas. It also closely resembles an operatic model: ironically, Korngold's youthful masterpiece, ''Die Tote Stadt.'' (In that opera, too, a man tries to make over a woman in the image of his dead beloved.)

Right from the famous title sequence of ''Vertigo,'' we are in the presence of something marvelous. Saul Bass created a hypnotic design of spirals rotating in space, overlaid with a few uncanny shots of Kim Novak's eyes. The music rotates in tandem: endless circles of thirds, major and minor, interspersed with shuddering dissonances. Herrmann did not invent this off-center tonality; it was used often by Rimsky-Korsakov, Debussy and Ravel. But the relentlessness is all Herrmann's. The music literally induces vertigo: it finds no acceptable tonal resolution and spirals back on itself. Herrmann has told us what the movie is about.

It cannot be said that Herrmann always understood perfectly what Hitchcock was getting at. In commenting later that Jimmy Stewart was too easygoing an actor to pull off the lead role of Scottie, he sorely misjudged both Mr. Stewart's skill and Hitchcock's master conception of the ordinary collapsing into madness. And in any case, it was Herrmann's job to help summon the extraordinary emotions of an ordinary man. He supplied Desire and Doom; he kept away from the early, extended stretches of dialogue in which Scottie's affable exterior is established, his mind not yet invaded by the icy, ghostly figure of Madeleine.

Indeed, Hitchcock significantly inserts ''live-on-camera'' music into two of the Herrmann-free scenes. As the film-music scholar Royal S. Brown points out in his invaluable book ''Overtones and Undertones,'' Scottie's bright, sensible ex-fiancee, played by Barbara Bel Geddes, is twice accompanied by background gramophone music: first an overture by J. C. Bach, then Mozart's Symphony No. 34. She tries to use Mozart as a therapeutic device, drawing Scottie back to the rational world. She also tries to win back his love. But he does not respond: Herrmann's music, which exclusively represents his deeper emotions, remains silent.

Compare these witty but emotionally static scenes with the long, 15-minute sequence in which Scottie trails the woman alleged to be Madeleine. The images are beautifully shrouded in a strange, foggy light, but they say relatively little by themselves. You see Scottie driving through the streets of San Francisco; Madeleine buying flowers; more driving; Madeleine walking through a chapel and a cemetery; driving again; Madeleine looking at a painting, and so forth. There are a couple of brief bits of dialogue as Scottie gathers information about the places he is visiting, but essentially ''Vertigo'' becomes a silent film.

Except, of course, for the music, which plays almost without a break and gives the whole sequence its air of ineffable mystery. What is going on is difficult to describe: Herrmann shifts fluidly but uneasily among a few simple, cryptic chords, augmentations of familiar triads. Wistful hints of melody circle back on themselves instead of building into thematic phrases. The orchestration is dominated by high or low instruments (notably, violins and bass clarinets). The sequence is profoundly eerie but also very beautiful: it is neither tonal nor dissonant.

This music of expectation, which also somehow communicates a visitation from the past, returns with ever-darkening effect several times later in the film. Herrmann moves into even more obscure territory in a scene where Scottie and Madeleine together visit a grove of giant sequoias. Here Herrmann writes ''cluster'' chords: piled-up collections of tones that would be shockingly dissonant if they were not shiveringly low and soft. It is a measure of Herrmann's venturesomeness that more than a few measures in this sequence could have been composed by the solitary American experimentalist Morton Feldman.

When Scottie declares his love for Madeleine (or Judy, as she comes to be known), Herrmann faces a very different challenge, which is to write love music circumscribed by destructive obsession. In the stretch of music entitled ''Scene d'amour,'' he turns to Wagner's ''Tristan und Isolde'' as an example. One hears citations not only of the sweeping phrases of the ''Liebestod'' (''Love-Death'') but also of the savage leitmotif of daylight, the black-as-night Prelude to Act III and the delirious ecstasy of the central love scene.

Film composers are often accused of derivativeness. Their borrowings are sometimes shameless, although the time constraints of the Hollywood production schedule make certain shortcuts understandable. Herrmann's use of Wagner, however, is a matter of deliberation and subtlety. The main melodic contour is his own; the harmony is still his idiosyncratic construction. He is jogging the memory of those who know ''Tristan'' and the subconscious of those who don't. His veiled citations indicate in their own way the unstoppable recurrence of the past. Once again, the score is not an illustration of the film but a metaphor for it.

Herrmann's ''Scene d'amour'' also steers clear of sentimentality. Even at its most ecstatically upward-rushing, it is troubled by passing dissonances, undercut by harmonic rootlessness. All of it is the music of Scottie's mind, and this character is, in the last analysis, completely mad. Mr. Stewart delays that realization with all his practiced reasonableness; the final tableau atop the San Juan Bautista Mission tower is all the more stunning in its finality. Herrmann, steeped in Victorian melodrama, gets to write a fanfare for the triumph of Fate. With all dialogue finally out of the way, the whole orchestra rises to its feet to proclaim, ''This man is lost.''

THE ''VERTIGO'' SCORE vastly enriches the images it accompanies, but it has also found a life outside the film. As an excellent complete recording on the Varese Sarabande label testifies, it can be heard on its own terms -- if not quite as a coherent narrative, then as a mesmerizing succession of fragments. Herrmann is a puzzling paradox: most of his ''serious'' compositions don't quite come off, yet his film scores can be taken seriously as concert music. Esa-Pekka Salonen, the rigorously European-trained conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, proves as much with a new Herrmann anthology on the Sony Classical label.

Alas, the original 1958 recording suffered from less than ideal conditions. Herrmann could not conduct it himself because of a musicians' strike; most of it was recorded in London, the rest in Vienna. The playing sometimes sounds ragged and murky, at least on current copies.

The restoration may tell a different story: Mr. Harris and Mr. Katz have discovered a clear original tape, partly in true stereo, and revamped the whole soundtrack in digital sound. Royal treatment indeed for a mere movie score -- but there is none greater than ''Vertigo.''

Hermann Hitchcock.jpg

Thanks to the great Alex Ross, author of The Rest is Noise, for the text of this article.

-- Julie Harris

Feb 14th

The Listening Room: Valentine's Day 2012

By JulieHarris

ValentinesDayMusic.jpg

There are thousands of “love songs” I could have listened to today in my daily Listening Time.  After all, it’s Valentine’s Day, and there is Rachmaninoff and Schubert and Liszt and Wagner and Puccini and Mahler  and Grieg and Elgar and …  the list goes on and on!     I found myself drawn not to these great operatic or Romantic composers, but instead to a piece and a performance that represents a different kind of love song.   This performance of Bartok’s Third Piano Concerto, performed by Martha Argerich and the Toho Gakuen Orchestra  conducted by Yuri Bashmet,  seems to be the perfect depiction of love on many levels.

Bartok.jpg

First, there are all the levels of love expressed by the great composer himself.  In 1945, Bela Bartok  was living in exile in New York City, far from home and from the life of the countryside he had once loved and explored.  His life had been ravaged by war, by separation and loss, by obscurity in a country which did not yet recognize him, by financial difficulties and now by incurable leukemia.   In 1945, in fact, Bartok was dying.    

His third piano concerto was intended to be a surprise birthday gift to his wife, Ditta Pasztory,  who was also an accomplished concert pianist.   He knew he was dying, and this gift would possibly give her a source of income and concertizing after his death.   He did not live to finish the concerto.  His pupil Tibor Serly completed the last 17 measures from notes left by the composer.   This double labor of love is a joyful celebration of life – a gift not only to his wife, but to all the generations to come.   The 1st and 3rd movements are filled with passion, excitement and a spirited dance of life.  The 2nd movement, marked Adagio Religioso, gives us a deep reverence, followed by trills of birdsong, the first blooms of spring, the rushing waterfalls, the symphony of insects that so deeply reflect Bartok’s love of nature.  

SpringFlowers.jpg

This performance combines the passion and talent of a Hungarian composer, a world-renowned pianist from Argentina, a brilliant young orchestra from Japan, and a great Russian conductor.  Music, and the love of music, cross all barriers to speak a universal language, as this highly-acclaimed performance demonstrates.

The orchestra in this performance is the result of still another labor of love.  Toho Gakuen was founded in 1948 in Kudan (Tokyo) as a music school for children, and two years later opened the Toho High School of Music, to provide quality musical education to teenage girls. The College of Music was a pioneer in offering university-level degrees in music in Japan. In 1995 the Toho Orchestra Academy was established in Toyama and in 1999 opened the Toho Gakuen Graduate School, which offers postgraduate degrees.  

It’s a joy to watch and hear these youthful performers, most of whom are young women.  I don’t think I’ve ever heard such thundering applause after a performance – the seemingly endless ocean of cheers, stomping of feet, clapping of hands is still another expression of love – for the music, the performers, the conductor, and the life force which Bartok expressed with such intensity and beauty.  

TohoGakuenPercussionist.jpg

Happy Valentine’s Day – hope you enjoy this heart-felt gift of music!

  1. Allegretto
  2. Adagio religioso  (begins around 8:00)
  3. Allegro vivace (begins around 18:46)

 

Jan 30th

Violinist Copies Nokia Cell Phone Interruption

By Emma A-C
This is an entertaining video I found on Youtube...I encourage you to watch it to the end! The performer,  violinist Lucas Kmit handled the performance interruption with remarkable ease. It happened at the Jewish Orthodox synagogue in Prseov,  Slovakia.

Ah, the sense of humor that music offers us all!

Here it is

Enjoy!
Emma


Jan 29th

Oldies Hit "My Girl" Performed by Youth in Classical Style

By Emma A-C
My brother Denis, whom I just this month welcomed into the tumultuous world of teenager-hood, performed in a school strings concert this weekend.

 I was shocked and delighted to hear "My Girl", an upbeat hit released by The Temptations in the 1960s, as the first number. What a treat to hear it performed in a classical rendition by a group of young  adolescents.
 
Oh, the joy that this masterpeice still brings to our ears! I am comforted that these 13 and 15 year olds, in age groups that are now days so often preocupied with computer games and other menaces, dedicated to music. And they enjoy music as much as we all do, here on V.A!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Gvy_GRRUAI
Jan 18th

Some Astounding New Compositions!

By JulieHarris
Kudos to Michael for discovering two really cool piano compositions - one that will make you laugh and another that may inspire you pianists and composers!

The first, called Experiment Piece I is somewhat reminiscent of our famous Scariest Sixty Seconds compostion contest.   Michael thought Gabe would particularly enjoy this one, and also Noah.   Hang on to your hat, as you learn what a "piano" in the hands of a computer explorer can really do!   Don't try playing this one at home. 



Crazy, huh?    Totally nuts, right?   And yet ... it really is a composition.  Notice how it builds up through the first few measures by progressively adding layers to the texture, then climaxing on the held notes.  Then the wildness starts again, but it's far from random.  It has repeated themes, "counterpoint", contrast ...  How would you critique it, if you were the composition judge and this were an entry?   The old labels of melody, harmony, rhythm hardly apply here, and yet there is a method to the madness.   Can you see it?   Hear it?

And now for the more serious side of Michael's recent musical discoveries.   This is a piece by Marc-Andre Hamelin.   Until Michael sent me this link, I didn't know that Hamelin composed.  I've known him as a superb pianist, and now I'm learning about another side of this great musician.   This piece is called Prelude and Fugue, a deceptively simple and traditional title.   Again, hang onto your hat as another wild journey unfolds.  This one, you could try at home - that is, if you are a virtuoso pianist. 



Thank you Michael, for these great discoveries!!!

-- Julie Harris

Jan 16th

New Ears for Foreign Music

By Emma A-C

I recently traveled and lived in the Tamil speaking part of southern India, right at the bottom tip of the country. It was great. Music was everywhere. My favorite venue was the back of a bumpy rickshaw, our friendly driver forging ahead haphazardly through city traffic, as I and my fellow passengers bobbed our heads to the latest Tamil pop songs. The most popular music came from recent film soundtracks. The sound of this music, I found almost conflicting. Yes, to my western ear, the tones conflicted. Those who are familiar with western music can often predict, to some degree, what comes next. This is certainly not always the case, but we can usually at least assign a given song some genre or category. In contrast, this new Tamil music was so incredibly foreign that I listened to it with new ears, untouched by previous knowledge or conceptions. My only option was to absorb the new sounds. Music this foreign completely bypassed my brain and went straight to my soul.

Do you want to hear it? Here are some tracks from a popular film Engeyum Kadhal that was released just before I arrived in India last September. The title means Love is Everywhere (like music!). These youtube clips show some of the many dancing scenes which were undoubtedly the best parts of the movie.

Nejil Nenjil:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=revCZCjQ48Q  

Thee Leil:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dB1-LSM6xXE&feature=fvsr

Dhimu Dhimu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnrdPddRvNU

Nangaai:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRxr82iqgEs

Simbu Na:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYMQrc3X5hQ

Enjoy! 

Jan 9th

A Guide for Classical Radio Announcers - and whoever else is interested

By JulieHarris
I stumbled across this website while I was looking for something else.   What a find!  

http://www.pronunciationguide.info/thebiglist.html   

A classical radio announcer has compiled an audio list of foreign names frequently used in classical music that might be challenging to pronounce correctly.   For example "Bayreuth".  You can't talk about Wagner without mentioning Bayreuth, but in some conversations I've overheard, it sounded like his operas were performed in Beirut!   

Among other things, I'm finally learning how to pronounce the name of one of my favorite composers:  Per Nørgård.   I don't know much about Danish, so I've been saying "pear nor-guard" all these years.   How embarassing, but also illuminating, to find that his name is pronounced:   pehr nör-gor.   I have to practice over and over, listening and repeating, listening and repeating,  until I get it just right.  In my Southernese it sounds like:  pear nur-gore.   But at least I'm closer!

This might become a favorite reference tool for those of us who talk a lot about classical music.   When in doubt, I'll just go listen to the pronunciation!

http://www.pronunciationguide.info/thebiglist.html

You can find this link under MyHome/eLearning/Dictionaries.

--Julie Harris


Jan 1st

Composers Corner: Check list for Notation

By JulieHarris
MusicNotation.jpg

Just when you think your new piece is finished, that's the time when editing begins!   This checklist will help you ensure a professional quality score.  The more you incorporate these items into your pieces as you go, the less editing you'll have to do when the piece is "finished".

  1. Courtesy accidentals
  2. Enharmonic spellings
  3. Dynamics aligned under notes
  4. Crescendos and diminuendos preceded and followed by dynamics
  5. Extend < and/or > to exact notes for beginning and ending
  6. Subito after dynamic, not before
  7. Align dynamic and tempo markings horizontally
  8. Dynamic changes are either < or > or subito - gradual or sudden*
  9. Allow enough room between staves for all markings
  10. Fill all measures with rests (be careful of inner voices)
  11. Notate all phrasing, articulation
  12. 8ths and 16ths, etc barred correctly
  13. Vertical alignment
  14. Include expression and tempo markings at least at the beginning
  15. Check breathing for all wind instruments and voices
  16. Edit for page turns and number of pages
  17. Check time signatures - try conducting to verify correct time signatures
  18. Notate date completed and performance time
* Item no. 8 was required by one of my previous composition teachers, but I find it a bit excessive.  Use your own judgment.

I will elaborate on some of the above items in later articles.  This is a checklist I keep beside me for all compositions, and that all my students use before sending pieces to performers or competitions.   Please feel free to suggest additions or modifications to the list!

-- Julie Harris

Dec 10th

Michael Jon Bennett: The Divine Recollection - A Masterpiece in Slow Motion

By JulieHarris

It takes an exceptional amount of compositional courage to write a piece that moves extremely slowly, if at all; a piece that never arrives anywhere, in fact does not even have a destination.   In our fast-paced world, we want our music, like our conversations, to “get to the point”.   We are goal oriented, constantly in motion, and we want a clear sense of arrival.

In the midst of these quickly moving  musical journeys, a few pieces come along  that ask us to take a different approach to listening, one in which time does not push ahead, and in fact barely seems to exist. 

In Charles Ives’s Unanswered Question, the first chord continues, unmoving, for over 20 seconds.  If this doesn’t seem very long, realize that several of Chopin’s Preludes, Op. 28, are brilliant gems of arch and form, melody and motion, lasting between 25 and 40 seconds in their entirety.   Ives gives us a single chord which is almost as long as an entire Prelude!

Chopin Preludes - Op. 28, no. 1 - played by Martha Argerich

Charles Ives:  The Unanswered Question - 1906

 

 The first movement of Górecki’s Symphony of Sorrowful Songs begins with an 8 part canon which moves gradually up through the string sections, leading to the soprano entrance.  This entire canon, with one unchanging theme,  unfolds through different modes for over 13 minutes, melts into the vocal section, then resumes again on its timeless path.  The entire first movement is 27 minutes long, and seems both endless and much too short. 

Henryk Górecki - Symphony Nº3 (Symphony of Sorrowful Songs). First Movement.

A few weeks before his 13th birthday, composer Michael Jon Bennett entered this rare world of timelessness to write The Divine Recollection.   He begins with a low G in the double basses, which we cannot hear at first.  His dynamic marking is n, which gradually crescendos to ppp.   The dynamic marking “n” means niente or nothing.   Michael’s piece, therefore, begins with a long silence.  A single note slowly emerges from the double basses, and  lasts several minutes before the cellos join in on another G at the octave.  The duration of this one note is equal to several Chopin Preludes!  By now we, as listeners, understand that something unusual is taking place.  This piece requires a different kind of listening.

Take time from your busy day, and treat yourself to an immersion in this slow-paced masterpiece, which is posted at Michael's VirtualArtists member page.  To really hear this piece, you should set aside fifteen minutes of uninterrupted time, relax and get comfortable, start the piece, then close your eyes.   Listen to The Divine Recollection as you would watch a beautiful sunset – the gorgeous colors sometimes remain stationary, sometimes change slowly and gradually, sometimes disappear, sometimes  return.   We are not trying to arrive anywhere, there is nothing to analyze.  We are simply being still in a place out of time, and remembering ….

Dec 1st

Interview with George Crumb

By Gabe
Here is an interview with George Crumb that I found on YouTube. Hope you all enjoy it!