Justin

Teaching Tuesdays Rimsky-Korsakov Scheherazade

January 31, 2012 in Teaching Tuesday

My all time favorite symphonic work has been Scheherazade. It’s one of those incredible works of music that engages the musician, engages the audience and really evokes the story of Scheherazade and her 1001 Arabian nights with Sultan Sharyar.  The imagery is awesome.  Not only do you get transported to a new location each time Scheherazade starts to tell a story (represented by the violin) the melodic form of the symphony is almost like a series of variations on the same melodies in each movement.  This makes listening much easier and interesting.

If you don’t know the story, Sultan Sharyar was known for being a promiscuous man who like to avoid any long term relationships, by executing his current wife, the morning after any love affairs.  He ran rampant until he met Scheherazade.  She knew that she would be executed, so like a modern day hollywood director, she told stories each night with an exciting “cliff-hanger” to leave the Sultan wanting more.  Each night she returned to his chamber and told more stories.  One thousand  and one nights of stories.

   Rimsky-Korsakov had some “exotic experiences” during his naval career, which apparently, fueled by his vivid imagination, helped him conjure up the 4 movements that make up the symphonic piece “Scheherazade”.  He was known to be a strictly amateur composer in the beginning of his career, but in 1871, after being noticed for his “ultra-modern” writing style,  got offered a position at the St. Petersburg Conservatoire.  He accepted the job, but claims that he had no real proper training in composition at all.  He bluffed his way through teaching by staying one step ahead of his students, working his way to the title of “finest composition teacher in Russia”.

His orchestration techniques were apparently learned from Berlioz’ Treatise on Orchestration. (MUST READ!)

Listen to the whole thing performed here:

Read below while you listen to each movement!

I found this excellent exerpt from www.musicweb-international.com about the 4 movements.

The Sea and Sinbad’s Ship (Largo e Maestoso – Allegro non troppo) Two memorable mottos represent the protagonists: “Sharyar”, majestic and fearsome on bass strings and heavy brass, and “Scheherazade”, sinuously seductive on solo violin over harp arpeggios. The movement alternates three climactic passages predominantly scored for strings and brass, casting “Sharyar” in the role of Sinbad, with three calm twilit episodes featuring both mottos. The scoring of the two interstitial episodes, otherwise practically identical, is breathtaking in its simple ingenuity: in the second episode the solo ‘cello swaps places with the horn, likewise clarinet with flute, while oboe and solo violin stay put.

The Tale of the Kalendar Prince (Lento – Andante) The Kalendars were wandering beggars, for some superstitious reason fêted as royalty. The movement is a ternary form (ABA) regarding deployment of themes, but otherwise a kaleidoscope of increasingly colourful variations, making atmospheric use of string tremolandos and “thrummings”, and characteristically “pricking” textures with sharper sounds. “Scheherazade” weaves her spell to introduce the A theme – half dancing, half declamatory – on the only woodwind not yet heard solo: the bassoon (resolving a sort of “dissonance””). The B theme is based on “Sharyar”, first heard plucked deep in the basses, then in fierce growls and brassy fanfares. A bold march gradually emerges, bracketed by two cadenzas on the declamatory part of A. The first is for clarinet, the second (on bassoon) initiates the final section, containing the most exquisite scoring of the entire work. “Sharyar” reappears, low down, generating a huge crescendo to a knockout close.

The Young Prince and Princess (Andantino quasi Allegretto) Invent a story of young love, if you wish – Rimsky provided scant clues: the sumptuous main theme (flowing strings) he identified with the Prince, a brief counter-subject (rippling clarinet) with the Princess, and at the central allegretto he suggested, “They carry the Princess on a palanquin”. Again, this is a “ternary/variations” form. The first section rings the changes on string textures tinted by added wind, with contrasting solo woodwind timbres. The allegretto, one of those wonderful oriental dances, is just an upbeat variation of the same material, where the snare-drum part is played on more than the snare-drum. A resounding trumpet-led rubato reinstates tempo primo for a rhapsodic closing section where solo instruments predominate, and “Scheherazade” embroiders the tale. The codetta is particularly captivating, woodwind swirl over string pizzicati and scintillating percussion: what images that conjures!

Festival at Baghdad – The Sea – Shipwreck on a Rock surmounted by a Bronze Warrior - Conclusion (Allegro molto)  The orchestration reaches a peak of virtuosity, inevitably with less subtlety as the big guns are drawn to blast huge splashes of poster-colour.  Paralleling the work’s beginning, the introduction finds “Sharyar” now gruffly impatient (grabbing first whack on the bass drum), and “Scheherazade” correspondingly more animated. The Festival is, loosely, a “rondo/variations”: AB[AC]ABA, where [C], developing the Kalendar fanfare, hijacks the second [A]‘s climax. The first and third occurrences of [A], a skittering dance, whip up a blaze of crackling trumpets and booming tuttis – these last based on the the Kalendar Prince’s bassoon tune. [B] is the “palanquin” allegretto, liquidly re-scored. The final [A] builds manically, trumpets triple-tonguing like mad, only for the scene to cut cinematographically to Sinbad’s storm-tossed ship, which shudders (theme stuttering in basses) and breaks (tamtam!). In the stunned calm one recognises, through the thematic identity, that this symbolises Sharyar’s rising passion for his enchantress and cataclysmic acquiescence to the superiority of woman (or at least this particular woman). “Sharyar” and “Scheherazade” finally make sweet music together.

 

 

 

Justin

Friends Friday – David “Misung” Vaughn Stevenson

January 6, 2012 in Friends' Friday

David Stevenson, aka MISUNG, will come up various times in my blog because not only is he my best friend, he’s one of my favorite artists and songwriters that I hold in extremely high regard. Not only can the man illustrate up a storm (see above), he has also written more songs than there are to write.  I have never worked with anyone as creative and quick as he is.  He has managed to maintain that sense of creativity that most of us lose when we enter junior high school or maybe earlier.

He has to be the most prolific person I know to date.

When I was in high school,I went to his house for the first time with my bass guitar and a red hot chili peppers blood sugar sex magic book and said, come on lets play these songs.  He said, no, let’s make songs!  Like this:
Monkeys and Electricity
I was 14 and had never actually taken my eyes off a score or a recording when it came to instruments, so I was shocked !  He put the guitar in my hands after a few songs and said, ok you play guitar, I play bass.

Not only did I learn how to play guitar because of Dave, his mother made me learn how to write and speak a little Korean.  This is one of my favorite Misung (his korean name) songs:

16 Anyo

The words to this song are basically give me a cat, NO, give me some beef NO, hello, give me some mountain rabbit, NO, NO NO NO mom dad.

He broke all the rules that I thought made music what it is.

Of course, this haphazard style of music making that Dave excels at, doesn’t work for everyone as I am slowly starting to realize as I work more and more in the music industry.  He is a true artist in this regard and doesn’t need manuscript or notation for his ideas.  He just needs something that records.

Dave is the mastermind behind the OTTOMEN, which began at Kansas City Art Institute with fellow artist and songwriter Jim Cambpell of AngryJim.com

Jim recorded a bunch of OTTOMEN recordings and I recorded 4 albums.

Here are highlights from some of my favorite recordings I did with Dave.

From the album

Back to the Past:

Tennis Shoes Of Love

From the album

EVERYONE AGREES!

Old lady from Phoenix

This album is filled with lots of memories.  Duane Bridges played a keyboard solo on the opening track, Mario Viele plays a killer solo in the middle of this track, Alison Derrick sings background vocals with me at the end as well.  Lots of friends being creative together!  I played most of the instruments on the song. John Halloran on drums and Dave on guitar and lead vocals.  Plus my Grandfather is on the album jacket posing like the icon that he was!

I will leave this post here with a few of my favorite drawings by Dave that I could find online:

Notice the robot wife

Can’t beat the deer God!

Dave is the head artist at St.Louis Trader Joe’s and does this all day

This is classic Dave art that probably took him a minute to make