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Posts Tagged ‘Brahms’

Day 139. Bach, Neil Young, Mahler, The Police, Brahms and Purcell.

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Tonight I have a nice mix of discs getting ripped. The Emerson String Quartet’s recording of Bach’s ‘Art of the Fugue’, a couple of mid 90s Neil Young and Crazy Horse discs, the live double disc of The Police along with some Purcell, Brahms and Mahler. The Neil Young and Police (especially the first Police disc from Boston, 1979) are pretty rocking. Even more striking about the Neil Young discs is how rocking it can be in one song, then how melodic and sweet it can be in the next. The funny thing (for me) about Neil Young is how little I think to listen to him. While he may not be in my top ten artists list, he is certainly pretty high, and when I think about the first time I heard ‘Sleeps With Angels’ (late at night at Tower, turned up really loud) I still think about how the sound on the record seemed just perfect. I listened to the whole album a few months ago (during a drive to Seattle to perform in a concert) and I was still struck at how well put together the disc was and how good the songs were. The jangly, saloon sounding piano that starts off the disc that leads into darker ‘Prime of Life’ with its haunting flute that weaves through most of the song, to the mellow ‘Driveby’ and finally into ‘Sleep With Angels’ which, while still slow, is grungier the grunge was in ‘94. And as awkward as it is to hear middle age guys bellowing ‘PIECE .. OF .. CRAP!’ in the chorus of a song, that song rocks pretty hard. And that goes a long way since my favorite part about almost anything Neil Young does with Crazy Horse is the sound of the band. They sound damn good on this disc. ‘Broken Arrow’, while it hasn’t had as many plays for me as most other Neil Young discs does have ‘Music Arcade’ on it. Charles placed this song expertly on his ‘Wood and Smoke’ mix disc 11 years ago. I’ve probably heard ‘Wood and Smoke’ more then any other mix disc I have, so there is some irony that the Neil Young song on the mix comes from the disc I have probably listened to the least.

Though not this specific recording, Bach’s ‘Art of the Fugue’ is, personally, a very significant work of art for me. My first memory of a piece of classical music really demanding my attention was in high school band. We played a transcription of the ‘little’ fugue in g minor, and I was amazed at how the counterpoint (though I didn’t know that’s what it was yet). I became fixated on the piece, and on the idea of fugue in general. The next day at work, I bought the first two things I found with the word ‘fugue’ in the title (Beethoven’s ‘Grosse Fuge’ and the Julliard String Quartet recording of ‘Art of the Fugue’). Though my appreciation of Beethoven’s great fugue is just about higher then anything else ever written now, at the time I thought it was a dissonant piece of crap that seemed completely non-sensical to me. Perhaps this made the opening of the ‘Art of the Fugue’ that much more special though. The opening D minor arpeggio was so refreshing, and the intricacy of the writing drew me in immediately. This was also the week I discovered Dover scores, and ‘Art of the Fugue’ was the first one I bought. And so I began my love affair with fugues and counterpoint that continues still to this day. I still get lost in them, and love how a person can focus their attention on a single part, as well as the whole. I love how we can aurally zoom in on a part of the piece, and back out again and hear the same thing in different contexts. And most of all, I love how it is music that still makes my brain tingle after knowing it for the better part of two decades.

Day 118. Brahms.

Saturday, June 26th, 2010


One of my favorite quotes about Brahms’ fourth symphony comes from Ravel. I can’t remember it exactly, but a friend of Ravel’s asks if he is going to go to a performance, and Ravel says something like ‘why would I go listen to that silly waltz?’, his friend says Ravel must be confused, there is no waltz in the fourth symphony. Then Ravel says ‘sure there is’ and starts to sing to melody to the first movement in 3/4 DAAA-da, DAAA-da, DAAA-da etc. etc. Whenever I hear the fourth now, I almost always think of how Ravel must have sung this (probably quite a bit like a couple of his ‘Valses nobles et sentimantales’).

Tonight I ripped the Bernard Haitink box set of the symphonies along with a number of other orchestral works (including both serenades!). The box is part of a set of boxes covering most of the romantic and some classical symphonic repertoire that Phillips put out featuring Haitink and the Concertgebouw of Amsterdam. Most were done in the ‘70s, and they pulled together complete sets of Brahms, Schumann, Mahler, Beethoven and others. Many of these recordings now show up as budget discs, and as a result they are often overlooked, but they are wonderful performances. Haitink is such a great musician and conductor, and paired with one of the best orchestras in the world in a wonderful concert hall, it is hard to go wrong. The boxes are hard to find now (and I’m still searching for the Mahler and Bruckner sets), but many of these sets can be pieced together as single discs and double-disc sets. Not a bad way to build up a good overview of symphonic literature!

Day 104. Kempff (playing Schumann and Brahms).

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Tonight’s rips were a 5 CD ‘Original Masters’ DG collection of Wilhelm Kempff recordings from the 1950s. I love Kempff’s playing, and this set is nicely done (from mostly mono recordings, they sound superb). Most of the set consists of Schumann and Brahms, but the last disc contains three Beethoven sonatas and a smattering of transcriptions (including some Bach, Couperin and Rameau). His playing in these earlier 50s recordings is a bit more forceful (especially his Schumann Symphonic Etudes… they are amazing). The set also brought me another recording of the late Brahms piano pieces, probably my favorite music that Brahms wrote. Like late Beethoven, there is quite a bit of room for a great interpreter. I have a later recording of these works by Kempff as well, and the differences can be pretty astounding. Just little touches here and there bring different voices to light, or make the piano resonate a little differently (which counts for quite a bit in many of these pieces where harmonies are broken apart and even smeared across the changes of bass and probably harmony). These pieces certainly share some of the tonal break down that Wagner had been experimenting with, and the tonal ambiguity at times looks ahead to Stravinsky in some ways.
The end of the 11th ‘Symphonic Etude’ by Schumann just played, and I had to back it up. The last couple of notes in the melody were some of the saddest I think I have ever heard. Not quite gasping, or resigned. It just seemed to quietly give up and almost fall apart. The dynamic Kempff plays at the end is a physical one. It sounds like he is pressing the keys so lightly that the note may not even sound. He slows down unevenly, and it is beautiful. The perfect lead into the more youthful, almost heroic beginning to the last etude.

Day 96. Tim Buckley, Steve Reich, Schubert, Brahms, Billy Bragg and Wilco.

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Been a busy night working on some recordings for school, but I also managed to rip quite a bit. In the stack was a Schubert symphony box-set (Mira’s pick) with Harnoncourt conducting, some Brahms chamber music, early Steve Reich works, the first Billy Bragg and Wilco album and Tim Buckley’s ‘Happy  Sad’.

So – very little here that is not noteworthy, but the Tim Buckley album is particularily special. It is one of the albums I remember from growing up (and definitely mellower music), but it is also an album I kept listening to as my musical tastes started to drift more and more from my parents’ musical tastes (and I probably kept listening to it as their drifted from mine!). In high school, it was a quiet favorite of mine, and tracks from it wound up on many mix tapes. During my freshman year, as Tamiko and I (still friends) were coming back from a band trip to San Luis Obisopo (with a long bus ride), she and her boyfriend Matt were breaking up, and my girlfriend and I weren’t in the best of places either. As we were passing north on 101 up towards San Jose (through the area I grew up in), we were getting a sunset, and I remember telling Tamiko a few things about what I missed about living there (mostly, the fog rolling in over the hills). After a bit of time, I gave her my headphones to listen to and on the tape at the time was ‘Buzzin’ Fly’ by Tim Buckley. She cuddled up with me on my lap and listened to it. It was probably one of the most intimate moments I had ever had with anyone up to this point in my life, and it was with my best friend.

I love this song, and Tamiko and I now associate it with this moment. We were both breaking / about to be breaking up with people, and within a few weeks we ourselves would start dating. It wasn’t a great time for either of us… teenage break-ups just suck. But at this moment, we were really good friends, and we were the two that we went to for comfort. And when it comes down to it, it is that comfort and security in each other that is one of the strongest part of our relationship. The music on ‘Happy Sad’ is happy, and sad, but also lush, warm, comforting and sometimes tense. It is probably one of my favorite albums (and is also one of the more ‘out there’ Tim Buckley discs… complete with vibraphones and double bass in a quasi-jazz like setting). Pretty complex emotionally in many ways. Perhaps this is the disc all adolescents should have while they go through that confusing period of life where everything feels like so many emotions can be happening at the same time.

Day 87. Brahms and Yo La Tengo.

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Tonight I finished ripping the Julius Katchen complete Brahms piano works and a stack of Yo La Tengo. The Katchen set is very well done, and I remember when it came out because Jim the manager at Tower Berkeley held the box up when it was unpacked, had a great smile spread over his face, and snapped ‘KATCHEN!’. He had been waiting for this set for a number of years (since his days playing piano in college), and he took the single copy of the set we got in and immediately purchased it. I asked him if it was good, he looked at me, held up the set and again snapped ‘KATCHEN!’. I picked it up a few weeks after that and really enjoyed it as well, especially the late sets of piano pieces.

I had already ripped a few Yo La Tengo discs early on in the project, so I went ahead and grabbed the rest that were on the shelves. Included in this stack was ‘I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One’, the album that I consider, hands down, to be the best album of the ’90s. The flow of the album goes between rockers, folk songs and out there shoegazer drones. There is a great Beach Boys cover, and the last 20 minutes (“Spec Bebop”, “We’re and American Band” and “My Little Corner Of The World”) is a great outro to a great album. And for personal reasons, it was also the album that introduced me to the band. I first heard it being played at the old Wall Berlin cafe in Berkeley (I think I heard ‘Autumn Sweater’ leading into ‘Little Honda’) one night while I was closing at Tower, and bought the disc that night. Honestly though, the first time I heard it all the way through, I thought it was a bit tough to get through. Then I listened again and probably by the fourth or fifth time I couldn’t believe how good of an album it is. From then on, it just continued to grow on me. I picked up a few more records before ‘And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside Out’ came out. Within those couple years, Yo La Tengo became probably my favorite rock band. I still pick up any of their releases as soon as they come out (and since the last few have been available as pre-orders on iTunes, Yo La Tengo also tends to be one of the only bands where I buy the album BEFORE I can get it).

This album still stands up incredibly well. And I see it as the start of a great run for the band. After this album, they have been releasing a new album about once every three years (with a few side projects thrown in here and there in between). And they have held up a pretty high level of consistency. As of right now, ‘I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One’ lies at the mid point of their career. So far. ‘Popular Songs’ came out last year, and I imagine the next album should be out sometime around 2012.

I can’t wait.

And if you are one of those unfortunate people that thinks that the 90s topped out with ‘OK Computer’ or ‘Nevermind’ or any of Björk’s great albums, then you should treat yourself and go pick up the real best album of the 90s.