Thursday, January 13, 2011

Who Is Virginia?: Arrowhead Trio January Concert - Gal .

Arrowhead Trio January Concert - Gal, Moszkowski, Schickele
I'm looking onwards to seeing the musical "Billy Elliot" this weekend.Karen's dusted off her ballet shoes and I've been limbering up, in case we go somewhere after. I think what will impress me about is the kid's ability to talk and dancing at the same time. I've seen how out of breath the contestants are on "So You Think You Can Dance?



Lately I've been thankful I'm more of a pianist than a singer. It can be tough keeping a part in flesh through the throes of winter and seasonal allergies. Often when I'm sick I still can play piano, at least until the sneezed-on keys get sticky.

"Get to the point," says Virginia, "you're building up to something."

She's beginning to go like a broken record. Check out yesterday's blog entry if you don't recognize what I mean.All right, I was only thinking how self-centered blog entries and Facebook status entries can be, especially when artists post their own accolades. Then I reconsidered, it's a hard world out there, if they don't promote themselves, their friends might not yet know.

Here goes.Any nearby readers, if you've got next Wednesday night free - we realized too late we're competing with Andrew Young speaking at Washington & Lee U - you might check out Kendal Hall, Kendal at Lexington, for The Arrowhead Trio's next concert, see below.

The Arrowhead Trio will offer selections of 20th century music at Kendal Hall, Kendal at Lexington, 160 Kendal Drive, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, January 19, 2011. The group will play Hans Gal`s "Trio," Maurice Moszkowski`s "Suite in G minor," and Peter Schickele`s "Serenade for Three." The members of the three are Winston Davis, violin, John McClenon, clarinet, and James Pannabecker, piano.

Hans Gal, born in 1890 near Vienna, was appointed Director of the Mainz Conservatory in 1929 but was fired in 1933 when Hitler came to power. His influence was prohibited from publication or performance in Germany. He finally became a reader for the Department of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland and a British citizen. His clarinet trio is polyphonically complex, with moments of lyrical beauty.

By 1908, Moszkowski reportedly was a recluse of sorts, refusing to learn composition because "they wanted to write like artistic madmen such as Scriabin, Schoenberg, Debussy, Satie_" and perhaps Hans Gal. The Rooms the Arrowhead Trio will perform was scored for two violins and a piano.The second violin part has been transcribed for Mr. McClenon`s clarinet.Perhaps the following account is true.Hans von Bulow filed this submission in an autograph book, "The 3 greatest composers are Bach, Beethoven and Brahms.All the lie are cretins."When Moszkowski saw it, he inscribed underneath, "The 3 greatest composers are Mendelssohn, Meyerbeer and Moszkowski. All the others are Christians!"

The third composer, Peter Schickele, born in 1935, may be best known for his connexion with P.D.Q Bach, the "lowest and by far the least" offspring of J.S. Bach who has been called a "pimple on the font of medicine" and "the worst musician ever to have trod organ pedals."Schickele`s "Serenade for Three" includes variations on a report from P.D.Q. Bach`s "Oedipus Tex" and a rousing barn dance. A recent coup was Shickele`s creation of the musical score for the movie adaptation of Maurice Sendak`s "Where the Wild Things Are."

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