Composers Datebook for January 9, 2010

Composers Datebook
SPONSOR
Produced in association with the American Composers Forum

Saturday, January 9

Play today's show | How to listen

Bartók's "Contrasts"

In January of 1939, the famous jazz clarinetist Benny Goodman was playing each night at New York's Paramount Theater. On today's date, however, he also appeared on the stage of Carnegie Hall.

The occasion was the American premiere of a new chamber trio by the Hungarian composer Béla Bartók, commissioned by Goodman at the suggestion of Bartok's compatriot, violinist Joseph Sizgeti. The work was billed as a two-movement "Rhapsody" for clarinet, violin and piano.

Now, in 1939 Goodman was at the peak of his popularity with the swing-crazed youth of America, and the stodgy New York Times music critic felt the need to mention: "There is no indication that Bartók wrote the clarinet part for Benny's clarinet, so jitterbugs reading this review have been simply wasting their time. The work is as Hungarian as goulash, and Mr. Goodman was artist enough to restrain himself from any insinuation of swing. Indeed, considering that he had probably left the stage of the Paramount Theatre some minutes before he appeared on that of Carnegie Hall, the purity of his style and the bright neatness of his technique were particularly admirable."

As for the music, The Times was impressed by the "earthy and boisterous tunes of the composer's native peasantry," but opined that Bartók "spared neither the fingers nor ears nor lips of the performers."

The following year, Goodman and Szigeti recorded the trio with Bartók himself at the piano. For that occasion, Bartók added a third movement, and the resulting work was re-titled "Contrasts."

Music Played on Today's Program:

Béla Bartók (1881 - 1945):
Contrasts
Benny Goodman, clarinet;
Joseph Szigeti, violin;
Béla Bartók, piano
CBS/SONY 42227

Additional Information:

On Bartók
On Goodman

About the Program
Composers Datebook is a daily program about composers of the past and present, hosted by John Zech.

Support Composers Datebook
Purchase music from Composers Datebook from Amazon. Or shop Public Radio Market. Your purchases help support the American Composers Forum and public radio.

Your support makes our online services possible. Contribute Now.


Fostering artistic and professional development



You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2010 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

The Writer's Almanac for January 9, 2010

View this message on the Web

Saturday

Jan. 9, 2010

The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keillor

 LISTEN

Owls

by W.D. Snodgrass

for Camille

           Wait; the great horned owls
Calling from the wood's edge; listen.
           There: the dark male, low
And booming, tremoring the whole valley.
           There: the female, resolving, answering
High and clear, restoring silence.
           The chilly woods draw in
Their breath, slow, waiting, and now both
           Sound out together, close to harmony.

           These are the year's worst nights.
Ice glazed on the top boughs,
           Old snow deep on the ground,
Snow in the red-tailed hawks'
           Nests they take for their own.
Nothing crosses the crusted ground.
           No squirrels, no rabbits, the mice gone,
No crow has young yet they can steal.
           These nights the iron air clangs
Like the gates of a cell block, blank
           And black as the inside of your chest.

           Now, the great owls take
The air, the male's calls take
           Depth on and resonance, they take
A rough nest, take their mate
           And, opening out long wings, take
Flight, unguided and apart, to caliper
           The blind synapse their voices cross
Over the dead white fields,
           The dead black woods, where they take
Soundings on nothing fast, take
           Soundings on each other, each alone.

"Owls" by W.D. Snodgrass, from Selected Poems: 1957-1987. © Soho Press, 1987. Reprinted with permission. (buy now)

Today, Ireland's greatest living playwright turns 81 years old. Brian Friel, (books by this author) born in Omagh, County Tyrone (1929), went to seminary to become a Catholic priest, decided it conflicted with his pagan ideas, dropped out, and instead followed his father's steps into schoolteaching. In his spare time, he wrote short stories, and the year he turned 30 one of his stories appeared overseas, in The New Yorker magazine. He was so encouraged that he quit his teaching job to write full time.

He wrote some short plays for radio, and he began to write plays for the stage as well. Tyrone Guthrie, a famous theater director in Ireland, had read one of Friel's stories in The New Yorker and was so impressed that he wrote him a fan letter. The two met up, became friends, and when the Guthrie Theater had its grand opening in Minneapolis in 1963, Guthrie invited Brian Friel to come along to America, to Minneapolis, and hang out at the theater observing the rehearsal and production process of Hamlet.

Within a year, Friel had written his first stage play for production, Philadelphia, Here I Come!, which brought him international renown. He'd broken from the stale mold of Irish peasant plays and instead written a play about exile. Philadelphia, Here I Come! is about an young man named Gareth O'Donnell who is leaving his small village in County Donegal and heading for America, and the whole play takes place the night before and morning of his departure. The play had its premiere in Dublin in 1964, then moved to London and to Broadway, where it was very popular.

He wrote several more plays in the '70s, adapted a Chekhov story for stage, and then, in the mid 1980s, he had a terrible spell of writer's block. He went to see the London opening of his Chekhov adaptation, and afterward, late at night, he went for a walk along the banks of the River Thames with a friend of his. They saw several different homeless people huddled up in the cold sleeping along the river banks, and they started to wonder about the lives of these men and women and what had led them to be homeless in London. Friel mentioned to his friend that two of his spinster aunts had left the Glenties of Ireland to go to London and had ended up alone and homeless. His friend encouraged him to write about his aunts.

Friel did write about his aunts from the Glenties, and he wrote quickly and brilliantly. Dancing at Lughnasa — about five sisters from the Glenties of Donegal, all of them spinsters — was the most commercially successful play of his life. It had its premiere at the Abbey Theatre 20 years ago, in 1990; and after it came to Broadway, it won a 1992 Tony Award for Best Play. In 1998, it was made into a film starring Meryl Streep.

Brian Friel almost never gives interviews and he carefully guards his biographical information, but he once said: "I am married, have five children, live in the country, smoke too much, fish a bit, read a lot, worry a lot, get involved in sporadic causes and invariably regret the involvement, and hope that between now and my death I will have acquired a religion, a philosophy, a sense of life that will make the end less frightening than it appears to me at this moment."

Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.®

sponsor
The Poetry Foundation
National broadcasts of The Writer's Almanac are supported by The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine for over 90 years.

sponsor
Sponsor Link: The Poetry Foundation
Make a Contribution

Contribute $75 or more today and we'll thank you with the official Writer's Almanac mug.

English Majors
with Garrison Keillor

English Majors

Order your copy today.

 Visit The Writer's Almanac Bookshelf

Read highlighted interviews of poets heard on the show.

Visit the bookshelf now

Be Well, Do Good Work, and Keep in Touch


You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2010 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

MENAFN Summary- Daily Business News

   
Middle East North Africa - Financial Network
 

Study: Salary increases in Gulf drop sharply
Average salary increases in the Gulf dropped sharply to 6.2 percent from an average of 11.4 percent last year. More ...

Dh35.4b Dubai budget approved
His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of ...

Emaar to realise Burj Khalifa revenues in 2010
The Middle East's largest listed developer Emaar Properties said on Thursday that it will realise revenues from ...

Jumpers take record leap off Dubai tower
No Abstract

Ten money-making investment ideas for 2010
Knowing that there can be too much of a good thing, many investors are wary about how stock and bond markets this ...

Saudi Labor Ministry reports 25% reduction in work visas last year
The Ministry of Labor found jobs for 37,494 Saudis in the private sector over the first 10 months of 2009, according ...

UAE- Aabar eyes majority stakes in Arabtec
Abu Dhabi-listed Aabar Investments Company said on Friday that it has decided to acquire a 70 per cent stake in ...

WHO: Some 13,000 dead worldwide from H1N1
No Abstract

The online-retail trend is not what you think
The online retailer is just a modern version of an old idea: the catalog and direct-mail business that has been a ...

Rising cost of sugar affecting Saudi food industry
The rising cost of sugar has adversely affected some in the food industry, but so far no one in the business has ...

UAE- Shapeyourcountry.com launched
Noor Investment Group has announced the launch of an interactive online forum in a bid to create a new model for ...

French firm to demarcate Qatari-Saudi border
A French company has been appointed to demarcate the land and marine borders of Qatar and Saudi Arabia in the Khor ...

Qatar Telecom, not individuals, owns WPT stake
Qatar Telecom has clarified that it owns stakes in the Wataniya ...

Send your Press Release to MENAFN   Join our newsletters   Check out the latest events   Add News from MENAFN

If you like this newsletter, help us fix your information: click here

To unsubscribe click here, for help or feedback send to Admin

Is this email going to your junk/bulk folder?
Add noreply@menafn.com to your address book and *@menafn.com  to your safe list.

 

Articles in this newsletter are different than the ones in MENAFN's Arabic Daily Newsletter.
 

Marketplace Money Newsletter for Weekend of January 9-10, 2010


Marketplace Money weekly update
January 9-10, 2010
This Week

IRS gets tough on tax preparers
Soon "unenrolled" tax preparers will be subject to higher standards. Rico Gagliano reports on the federal guidelines rolling out in the next two to three years, which are intended to help keep taxpayers safe.


GFEs help clarify mortgage terms
A new form released by the Department of Housing and Urban Development -- the Good Faith Estimate -- is intended to make mortgage terms a little easier to understand. Bankrate.com's Holden Lewis explains.


Escaping the mortgage battlefront
How can homeowners stop the carnage associated with mortgage loan modifications? Harriet Brackey, a columnist for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, offers some advice.


2010 money goals from our listeners
Three Marketplace Money listeners share their goals for the new year: Learning their credit score, teaching the kids about family finances, and improving their budgeting.


Will Dodd act with time left in office?
Although Sen. Christopher Dodd has announced he will not seek reelection, Tess Vigeland reports that as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee he still has time to push for credit card reform.


Accident inspires budgeting strategy
Alicia Wood talks with Tess Vigeland about how an accident taught her to think about money in a new way.


Money lessons from The Simpsons
Chris Turner, author of "Planet Simpson," talks with Tess Vigeland about money lessons learned from America's favorite animated family.


ALL MARKETPLACE MONEY STORIES

 
 
Money Clip

Spenders and savers frequently marry each other. That's the news from a recent academic study. Chris Farrell has some ideas about how to turn financial discord into marital harmony.

Getting Personal
Tess Vigeland and Nic Retsinas, director of Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies,answer listeners' housing questions.
Close quote
Submit your financial questions to GETTING PERSONAL.

SPONSOR



You received this free e-mail newsletter because you previously subscribed or because it was sent to you by a friend. This e-mail was sent to the following address: mybloghaytham@gmail.com

Unsubscribe | Contact Us | Forward to a friend

� 2010 American Public Media
480 Cedar Street, Saint Paul, MN USA 55101

 

©2009 Misc | by TNB