To promote cultural ties between the United States of America and Greece through Music and the Arts.
Σάββατο 9 Σεπτεμβρίου 2023
Callas' 5 top roles. Norma, Lucia, Tosca, Medea and Traviata
This month I am going to listen again to Callas' 5 top roles. Norma, Lucia, Tosca, Medea and Traviata. Yesterday Norma, London 1952. Feel the adrenaline running in the first scene. Great Casta Diva, her best I think! Tremendous Cabaletta, she hits the final high C half a beat early, no applause. How bad she must have felt after all she gave. Edward Downes, who was the prompter back then, and whom I had the great honour to meet, told me she was devastated. He said to her, London audiences are like that. However, it is a wonderful Norma. I love it, so moving. I only wonder why in the first duet with Adalgisa, Callas doesn't sing her duetting part in A si fa cor abraccia mi.
Familienkonzert: Young Person's Guide to the Orchestra
Es ist eine unterhaltsame Einführung in die wunderbare Welt der Orchestermusik: Benjamin Brittens „Variationen und Fuge über ein Thema von Henry Purcell“ sind ein absoluter Klassiker der Musikvermittlung für das junge Publikum. Denn wenn ein großes Orchester spielt, ist das zwar ein eindrucksvolles Erlebnis, es ist aber auf Anhieb gar nicht so leicht, sich im Gewimmel der Klänge zurechtzufinden. Der bekannte englische Komponist hat darum ein Stück komponiert, in dem die Instrumentation praktisch auseinandergenommen und wieder zusammengesetzt wird. Unterstützt von einem Erzähler werden dabei die verschiedenen Instrumentengruppen und Klangfarben eines sinfonischen Orchesters vorgestellt.
The Rosetta Stone
The Rosetta Stone is a stele composed of granodiorite inscribed with three versions of a decree issued in Memphis, Egypt, in 196 BC during the Ptolemaic dynasty on behalf of King Ptolemy V Epiphanes. The top and middle texts are in Ancient Egyptian using hieroglyphic and Demotic scripts respectively, while the bottom is in Ancient Greek. The decree has only minor differences between the three versions, making the Rosetta Stone key to deciphering the Egyptian scripts.
Cleopatra Queen of Egypt
At the age of 17, Cleopatra became Queen of Egypt and ruled until she was 39 years old. She was a polyglot, as she spoke nine languages, including Ancient Egyptian and the languages of the Parthians, Hebrews, Medes, Troglodytes, Syrians, Ethiopians, and Arabs. This meant that she was able to read any book in the world.
Additionally, her knowledge of languages allowed her to have access to numerous papyri that are now lost. Her influence on the sciences and medicine was highly esteemed in the early centuries of Christianity, making her an unparalleled figure in human history.
Behind The Music "Nature Boy" Nat King Cole's first big hit
Behind The Music
"Nature Boy" was Nat King Cole's first big hit, since then it has been covered over 1223 times! The story behind the song is even more sensational.
Joe Moondad has the strange story of eden ahbez:
"In the late 40s, there was a rumor that there was a "hermit," disenchanted and disillusioned with the world, supposedly "out-of-sync" with society, living in California in a cave under one of the L’s in the Hollywood sign.
No one really cared about this strange man, until one night in 1947, when someone tried to enter backstage at the Lincoln Theater in Los Angeles. Nat King Cole was playing there, and the man said he had something for Cole. Of course, the employees didn't let the strange man see Cole, so he gave whatever he had with Cole's manager.
What he had was a song sheet, which Cole would later take a look at. Cole liked the song and wanted to record it, but he had to find the strange man. When asked, the people who saw the man said he was strange, indeed, with shoulder-length hair and beard, wearing sandals and a white robe.
Cole finally tracked him down in New York City. When Cole asked him where he was staying, the strange man declared he was staying at the best hotel in New York - outside, literally, in Central Park. He said his name was eden ahbez (spelled all in lower-case letters). The song he gave Cole was titled, "Nature Boy." It became Cole's first big hit, and was soon covered by other artists through the years, from Frank Sinatra and Sarah Vaughan to Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, most recently.
Of course, the media went crazy about the strange, mysterious man who handed Nat King Cole, one of the biggest hits during that time. Everyone went out to try to find out more about him.
What little they found was that he was once an orphan, who never stayed at one place very long, living in various foster homes. He explained he just never fit in and was always searching, for something.
["They say he wandered very far...
Very far, over land and sea..."
They found out he would hop freight trains and walked across country several times, subsisting solely on raw fruits and vegetables, then one day he completely vanished.
["A little shy and sad of eye...
But very wise was he..."]
He finally showed up again in the Hollywood hills. When a policeman stopped the strange, long-haired man with beard, sandals, and robe, ahbez simply replied, "I look crazy but I'm not. And the funny thing is that other people don't look crazy but they are."
["And then one day...
One magic day he passed my way..."]
He then showed up backstage at Nat King Cole's concert in Los Angeles, to present him with the song, "Nature Boy." No one seems to really know why he selected Cole, there were some rumors that he came out of hiding when he began to hear about the racism going on and trouble throughout the world, and he thought "King" was the best person at that time to pass his message along.
["While we spoke of many things...
Fools and Kings..."]
When he was asked about racism, he replied, "Some white people hate black people, and some white people love black people, some black people hate white people, and some black people love white people. So you see it's not an issue of black and white, it's an issue of Lovers and Haters."
It was that theme of love that he continued to talk about, what was missing in the world, and what would be needed in the future if we are to survive.
ahbez would eventually get his message out, especially after the counter-culture finally caught up with him and the hippie movement began, when other artists such as Donovan, Grace Slick, and the Beach Boys' Brian Wilson sought him out. He also wrote songs for Eartha Kitt and had another song recorded by Sam Cooke.
In 2009, Congressman Bill Aswad recited the last lyrics of the song before the Vermont House of Representatives at the passing of his state's same-sex marriage bill in '09.
Author Raymond Knapp described the track as a "mystically charged vagabond song" whose lyrics evoked an intense sense of loss and haplessness, with the final line delivering a universal truth, described by Knapp as "indestructible" and "salvaged somehow from the perilous journey of life."
["This he said to me...
The greatest thing you'll ever learn...
Is just to love and be loved in return."]
"George Alexander Aberle (April 15, 1908 – March 4, 1995), known as eden ahbez, was an American songwriter and recording artist of the 1940s to 1960s, whose lifestyle in California was influential in the hippie movement.
He was known to friends simply as ahbe.
Ahbez composed the song "Nature Boy", which became a No. 1 hit for eight weeks in 1948 for Nat "King" Cole.
Living a bucolic life from at least the 1940s, he traveled in sandals and wore shoulder-length hair and beard, and white robes. He camped out below the first L in the Hollywood Sign above Los Angeles and studied Oriental mysticism. He slept outdoors with his family and ate vegetables, fruits, and nuts. He claimed to live on three dollars per week.
In the mid 1950s, he wrote songs for Eartha Kitt, Frankie Laine, and others, as well as writing some rock-and-roll novelty songs. In 1957, his song "Lonely Island" was recorded by Sam Cooke, becoming the second and final Ahbez composition to hit the Top 40.
In 1959, he began recording instrumental music, which combined his signature somber tones with exotic arrangements and (according to the record sleeve) "primitive rhythms". He often performed bongo, flute, and poetry gigs at beat coffeehouses in the Los Angeles area. In 1960, he recorded his only solo LP, Eden's Island, for Del-Fi Records. This mixed beatnik poetry with exotica arrangements. Ahbez promoted the album through a coast-to-coast walking tour making personal appearances, but it sold poorly.
During the 1960s, ahbez released five singles. Grace Slick's band, the Great Society, recorded a version of "Nature Boy" in 1966 and ahbez was photographed in the studio with Brian Wilson during a session for the Smile album in early 1967. Later that year, British singer Donovan sought out ahbez in Palm Springs, and the two wanderers shared a reportedly "near-telepathic" conversation. In the 1970s, Big Star's Alex Chilton recorded a version of "Nature Boy" with the photographer William Eggleston on piano. The song was finally released as a bonus track on the 1992 Rykodisc re-release of the album Third/Sister Lovers.
In 1974, ahbez was reported to be living in the Los Angeles suburb of Sunland, and he owned a record label named Sunland Records, for which he was recording under the name "Eden Abba." From the late 1980s until his death, ahbez worked closely with Joe Romersa, an engineer/drummer in Los Angeles. The master tapes, photos, and final works of eden ahbez are in Romersa's possession.
Ahbez died on March 4, 1995, of injuries sustained in a car accident, at the age of 86. Another album, Echoes from Nature Boy, was released posthumously."
Rock & Roll Man
Wow, what a show!!
However, it's not just a show about a radio DJ and his epic battle for the freedom of musical expression, there's a subtext in the show about a period in American history where civil rights and racism was being fought behind the scenes and in the headlines and in Congress that centered around the music industry and the airwaves.
The show highlights the first major stars of new genre of music. From Little Richard to Jerry Lee Lewis to LaVern Baker, Buddy Holly, Frankie Lymon, Screamin Jay Hawkins and Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley and more.
Each artist portrayed to perfection and singing their hearts out with such incredible voices and musical talent that throughout the whole show they had the audience jumping and jivin and waving their hands in the air, and singing and shouting like teenagers.
The show is genuinely exciting from start to finish !!
Now, lets talk about three of the shows main stars.
Ever hear of Constantine Maroulis?
You should have. He's the guy in the hat that I'm standing with outside the theatre. This guy has certainly earned the star on his dressing room door. He got a Tony Award Nomination for Best Actor in Rock of Ages and was in Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita, Rent, Jekyll and Hyde, and a lot more, and I guess I should have watched "American Idol" more because he got his star there, but what a talent. The second he walks on stage and into his key light, he just takes command of the whole show and captivates everyone in the audience with an absolutely thrilling performance.
However, almost as amazing is one of the actors who you've seen 100 times but still might not know his name.
Joe Pantoliano. He's the actor shown being interviewed on my old friend Eli Marcus's "The Motivation Show" at www.EliMarcusSuccess.com
Eli joined me a few years back in a series of seminars I called "Time To Evolve" about conscious evolution and energized the audience with his larger than life personality and boundless enthusiasm for living and is the perfect person to interview Joe Pantoliano, a prolific character actor who we know from The Matrix, Empire of the Sun, The Fugitive , the Sopranos, Risky Business, Memento (a favorite of mine) and a list of over 150 films, television and stage productions.
Joe plays Leo Mintz and Morris Levy in the musical and though I didn't recognize him at first, once I did, my eyes just stayed fixed on him, fascinated with his versatility and presence on the stage.
Then there's Rodrick Covington who plays Little Richard with such ease and visual likeness you thought Little Richard was making a guest appearance.
There are too many great performers and too many iconic Rock and Roll songs packed into this musical to go into here,
but all I can tell you is when the Rock Man Rolls around again, be sure not to miss it. It's a real gem
The Gordian Knot
The Gordian Knot
("O,τι δεν λύεται κόπτεται")
Alexander the Great, 356-323 BC - King of Macedon
In 333 BC, Alexander the Great, while marching through Anatolia, modern-day Turkey, arrived in the city of Gordium, where the founder, Gordius, a peasant farmer, who, years ago, had been declared king, when the oracle at Telmissus (the ancient capital of Lycia-Anatolia), had declared that the next man to enter the city on an ox cart, would be king.
In appreciation for this honour bequeathed to Gordius, his son, Midas, tied the cart to a pole, using an intricate knot, whoever, announced a local oracle, could unravel this complicated knot, would become ruler of all Asia.
Many were the men who battled with this elaborate knot but to no avail, until that is, Alexander the Great, after struggling with the dratted knot, lost patience, thought outside the box, decided it did not matter how the knot was untied and with one stroke of his sword sliced through the knot and after conquering Asia, became ruler, fulfilling the prophecy.
Discover more everyday English sayings and idioms with Greek origins by clicking on the link below:
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