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- Newsgroups: rec.music.dementia
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!concert!samba!usenet
- From: Chuck.Lavazzi@launchpad.unc.edu (Chuck Lavazzi)
- Subject: Re: Classical(was: Wendy Carlos (was Re: Weird Al albums))
- Message-ID: <1992Dec24.182939.14395@samba.oit.unc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@samba.oit.unc.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: lambada.oit.unc.edu
- Organization: University of North Carolina Extended Bulletin Board Service
- References: <1992Dec21.180324.22502@zip.eecs.umich.edu> <1992Dec21.214225.1814@netcom.com> <1992Dec23.083240.2560@inland.com>
- Date: Thu, 24 Dec 1992 18:29:39 GMT
- Lines: 60
-
- In article <1992Dec23.083240.2560@inland.com> hancock@inland.com (Tom Hancock) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec21.214225.1814@netcom.com>, bml@netcom.com (Brian Leibowitz) writes:
- >
- [...]
- >>
- >> Or one of my favorites is the version of Handle's "Surprise" symphony
- >> with lots of additional surprises added (including children climbing out
- >> of the piano.) This is arranged by Donald Swann (of Flanders and Swann)
- >>
- That's *Haydn's* "Surprise" symphony (No. 94, to be exact). Handel
- predates Papa Haydn considerably and didn't write symphonies as such.
- [...]
- >>
- >> The oldest classical dementia I have found is "Operatic Nightmare" by Arndt
- >> on an old 78 that is probably from the 20s.
- >>
- I stumbled across this on a recent CD by the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra,
- in case you're interested in a modern recording.
- [...]
- >
- > There are also some recordings by an opera singer (soprano)
- >who's name escapes me. (Damn! I'm pounding my head on the desk right
- >now. What was her name? The name "Anderson" pops into my head right
- >now, don't know if it's correct.) Where she explains the whole
- >Wagnerian "Ring of the Niebelung" (and sings all the parts!) in a
- >wonderful English accent. Very funny.
- You're thinking of Anna Russell, who finally retired from the stage
- several years ago. Her 20-minute traversal of the "Ring" is only one of
- many clasical parodies that she recorded in her long career. I'd also like
- toi recommend her discourse on "How to Write Your Own Gilbert and Sullivan
- Operetta", which is a devastatingly accurate send-up of the form. Her
- recordings *were* available on Columbia/CBS at one time. I don't know whether
- or not they've been re-released. Kultur Video also has/had a tape of her
- farewell concert available.
- There's plenty of "legitimate" classical dementia out there as well.
- Aside from Mozart's "Musical Joke", which was mentioned earlier. For example:
- - Ibert's "Divertissment", a suite of music from the play "The
- Italian Straw Hat". It includes a looopy parody of the Viennese waltz and
- a finale that includes a police whistle and some fairly silly trumpet licks.
- - Many of the songs of Charles Ives were written with tongue firmly
- in cheek, and the finale of his second symphony weaves in folk songs and
- music-hall tunes in a manner that Peter Shickele would later employ in some
- of the P.D.Q. Bach pieces.
- - Charles Valentin Alkan, a musical eccentric and piano virtuoso of
- superhuman ability (to judge from his music) wrote a funeral march for his
- dead parrot (insert Monty Python line here) that is basically a choral
- setting of the French equivalent of "Polly want a cracker?"
- - Gustav Mahler was not above bits of grotesque humor. The second
- movement of his Symphony No. 1 is a minor-key, funeral-march-style setting
- of "Frere Jacques".
- There are plenty of others, but this particular post has gone on too
- long as it is.
- Chuck
- No .sig, no frills, no foolin'
-
- --
- The opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the University of
- North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the Campus Office for Information
- Technology, or the Experimental Bulletin Board Service.
- internet: laUNChpad.unc.edu or 152.2.22.80
-