Showing posts with label Gunther Schuller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gunther Schuller. Show all posts

February 29, 2024

Billy Strayhorn articles/mentions

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mentions:      
Zebedy Colt ~ Zebedy Sings           
Duke Ellington ~ A Drum Is a Woman  
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 

November 10, 2023

Krzysztof Penderecki articles/mentions

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mentions:            
Happy Birthday Ennio Morricone      
     
     
     
     
     
date & photographer unknown
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 

December 18, 2022

Paul Klee ~ expressionism, cubism, surrealism, Dada & Senecio

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Paul Klee ~ Senecio - 1922
         
Today is the birthday of Swiss-born German artist, Paul Klee. I discovered him when I was 18 and moved from home and began my life as an adult. I shared a five room apartment on Nob Hill with two of my high school buddies (link below) just up the block from the notorious bordello owned by Sally Stanford; however, by that time Sally had gone straight and was the mayor of Sausalito, California.     
 
Back to the apartment! As each of us had our own bedroom each painted his a different color. John painted his vermilion (also known as Chinese Red), I think my other roommate, also named John, painted his kelly green while I painted mine black and had a couple of overhead spots, one on a wonderful print of Klee's Senecio and the other on a print by Kandinsky, Comets.    Pretty adult, right!          
 
 
 

Senecio has always been one of my favorite art images, although it was briefly replaced during that same period by a chalk copy of a Modigliani work.    
 
Paul Klee was born in Münchenbuchsee, Switzerland, on December 18, 1879. He was the second child of German music teacher Hans Wilhelm Klee (1849–1940) and Swiss singer Ida Marie Klee, born Frick (1855–1921).            
 
His work was influenced by movements in art that included expressionism, cubism, and surrealism. He and his colleague, Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, both taught at the Bauhaus school of art, design and architecture in Germany. On meeting Kandinsky, Klee recorded, "I came to feel a deep trust in him. He is somebody, and has an exceptionally beautiful and lucid mind."       
 
Klee's artistic breakthrough came in 1914 when he briefly visited Tunisia with August Macke and Louis Moilliet and was impressed by the quality of the light there. He wrote, "Color has taken possession of me; no longer do I have to chase after it, I know that it has hold of me forever... Color and I are one. I am a painter."          
 
Unlike his taste for adventurous modern experiment in painting, Klee was attracted to older traditions of music; he appreciated neither composers of the late 19th century, such as Wagner, Bruckner and Mahler, nor contemporary music. Bach and Mozart were for him the greatest composers.         
 
Klee's work has influenced composers such as Miklós Rózsa ~ Concerto for String Orchestra, Argentinian Roberto García Morillo in 1943, with Tres pinturas de Paul Klee. Others include the American composer David Diamond in 1958, with the four-part Opus Welt von Paul Klee (World of Paul Klee). Gunther Schuller composed Seven Studies on Themes of Paul Klee in the years 1959/60, consisting of Antique Harmonies, Abstract Trio, Little Blue Devil, Twittering Machine, Arab Village, An Eerie Moment, and Pastorale. There have been many, many others (link below).        
 
Architect Renzo Piano constructed the Zentrum Paul Klee in June 2005. Located in Bern, the museum exhibits about 150 (of 4000 Klee works overall) in a six-month rotation, as it is impossible to show all of his works at once. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has a comprehensive Klee collection.         
 
In 1935, 2 years after moving to Switzerland, Klee developed scleroderma, an autoimmune disease resulting in hardening of connective tissue. In his last months he created 50 drawings of angels. One of his last paintings, Death and Fire, features a skull in the center with the German word for death, "Tod", appearing in the face. 
 
 

 
Paul Klee died in Muralto, Locarno, Switzerland, on June 29, 1940, without having obtained Swiss citizenship, despite his birth in that country. His art work was considered too revolutionary, even degenerate, by the Swiss authorities, but eventually they accepted his request six days after his death.    

     
     
     
     

Viewfinder links:     
      
Wassily Kandinsky         
Paul Klee      
Miklós Rózsa       
Miklós Rózsa ~ Concerto for String Orchestra        
Gunther Schuller         
     
Net links:            
      
YouTube links:            
        
Paul Klee ~ A collection of 277 works           
Miklós Rózsa ~ Concerto for String Orchestra     
Gunther Schuller ~ Seven Studies on Themes of Paul Klee      
     
   
     
     
        














January 21, 2022

Gil Evans articles/mentions

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mentions:      
      
     
     
     
      
Gil Evans - 1960
photographer unknown
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

November 12, 2019

Aaron Copland articles/mentions

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Fanfare for the Common Man    
   
  
mentions:       

      
           
  
   
   
Aaron Copland        
date & photographer unknown        
   
  
   
   
  
   
   
  











March 9, 2018

February 27, 2018

February 7, 2018

January 30, 2018

Gunther Schuller articles/mentions

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Gunther Alexander Schuller (November 22, 1925 – June 21, 2015) was an American composer, conductor, horn player, author, historian and jazz musician.        
 
Viewfinder links:    

Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz     

 
   
photographer unknown
mentions:    
Miles Davis       
Eric Dolphy    
Roy Eldridge ~ "Little Jazz" & tritones   
George Gershwin     
Woody Herman       
Paul Klee ~ Dada & Senecio       
Teo Macero         
Charles Mingus          

    


















January 24, 2018

Teo Macero articles/mentions

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Thelonious Monk ~ Monk.        
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz          
       
      
          
     
       
         
       
      
Teo Macero           
photographer unknown      
       
         
       
      
          
     




















January 19, 2018

Charles Mingus articles/mentions

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Max Roach    
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz   
   
    
  
 
    
       
        
          
    
Charles Mingus: - 1959
photo by Don Hunstein
 
   
    
    
    
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January 15, 2018

Eric Dolphy articles/mentions

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Max Roach                           
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz    

         
       
     
        
        
       
        
Eric Dolphy         
photo by Francis Wolff/Mosaic Images, via CORBIS.          
       
        




























December 26, 2017

Miles Davis articles/mentions

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the "Forevers" Pt 3       
the "Forevers" Pt 4               
Miles Davis - June 12, 2012
photo of Davis by David Gahr

mentions:
Harry Belafonte ~ At the Greek      
Betty Davis ~ They Say I'm Different
Dizzy Gillespie ~ trumpeter, bandleader, composer  
William P. Gottlieb: Jazz photographer    
Gil Mellé ‎– The Andromeda Strain                       
Edith Piaf ~ the Little Sparrow
Leontyne Price ~ the ultimate Aida    
Max Roach          
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz  
        
       
   
       


       











 

Camille Saint-Saëns articles/mentions

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Klaus Nomi      
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz     
Arthur Fiedler ~ The "Pop" King     
        
     


     
   


         Camille Saint-Saëns
            photo by Nadar 
     
   






 
             
  

August 30, 2017

Maurice Ravel articles/mentions

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mentions:  
     
    
    

    
    
Maurice Ravel - 1913         
photographer unknown          
     














August 28, 2017

Woody Herman articles/mentions

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Fats Domino ~ Lifetime Achievement Award    
Stan Getz ~ Another World          
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz         
          
    
      
  
          
    
                 
Woody Herman      
Billboard 1943 Music Yearbook page 170       
    
           
                   
         
            








August 27, 2017

Béla Bartók articles/mentions

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Béla Bartók -1927      
photographer unknown          
 
 
 
mentions:  
Hector Berlioz ~ The King of Thule       
Roman Ryterband ~ Chamber Music          
Gunther Schuller & Third Stream jazz