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Friday, March 7, 2008

Music of Moving Pictures

The title of this years Late Winter Concert with the Galveston College Choir was "The Music of Moving Pictures."

The choir performed the 1st half.

* That's Entertainment
   Music by Arthur Schwartz
   Words by Howard Dietz

* From "Dido and Aeneas"
   When I am Laid in Earth
         and
   With Drooping Wings, Ye Cupids Come
   Music by Henry Purcell
   Words by Nahum Tate
     (Before there was film and TV there was another type of entertainment.
     That was Henry Purcell was a great English composer of opera
     and composed the opera Dido and Aeneas.)

* From the musical "The Gondoliers"
   Dance a Cachucha
   Music and words by William Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan
     (Not all operas are tragic. Comic operas were very popular before the turn of the century.
     The Gondoliers premiered in 1889 and ran for a very successful 554 performances.)

* From "Gypsy"
   Everything's Coming Up Roses
   Music by Jule Styen
   Words by Stephen Sondheim
     (Broadway was a street in the New York theater district.
     Originally considered the bad part of town, it was now accessible by the new subway system.
     Since the buildings were cheap, people bought them to make a theater in them.
     In the year 1927, over 264 musicals opened on Broadway.
     As many as 11 would open in a single night.)
     (This song had its genesis in the 1947 musical High Button Shoes.
     The melody was written by Jule Styne, who was that musical's composer,
      but the director decided the song didn't fit well into the show and removed it.
     When composing Gypsy, Jule Styne decided to re-use the music for what became
     Everything's Coming Up Roses, with new lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.)

* Peter Gunn
   Music by Henry Mancini
     (Henry Mancini was one of the pioneers who introduced jazz music into
     the late romantic orchestral film and TV scores prevalent at the time.
     Mancini's music for Peter Gunn started an exceptional career as one of the most popular
     and successful film composers. His other themes included "Pink Panther"
      and "Moon River" from Breakfast at Tiffany"s.
     Here is a little trivia, John Williams the composer of Star Wars played piano
     on the original recording of "Peter Gunn.")

* From the movie "The Titanic"
   Nearer, My God, to Thee
   Music by Lowell Mason
   Words by Sarah Adams
     ("Nearer, My God, to Thee" is a 19th century Christian hymn based loosely
     on Genesis Ch 28, the story of Jacob's dream. Nearer, my God, to Thee is
     traditionally associated with the Titanic, as passengers reported that the
     ship's band played the hymn as the Titanic sank.)

* From the movie "Amadeus"
   Music by Wolfgang Amadues Mozart
   Dies Irae
     (In the movie "Amadeus", there were a lot of things that were true about Mozart.
     He did have a billiard table in his bedroom and would compose on it.
     There was a commission for a "Requiem" (it was an anonymous commission from Count Walsegg,
     who wanted to pass himself off as the composer of the piece).
     A powerful part of the "Requiem" is the Dies Irae.)

   Confutatis
     (The Confutatis is were in the movie Mozart was dictating the music to Saliari
     and Saliari wrote it down. In real life it was friend of Mozart's and copyist Süssmayr
     that might have been writing Mozart's musical dictation.)

* From the "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang"
   Hushabye Mountain
   Music and words by Robert M. and Robert B. Sherman
     (Hushabye Mountain is a popular ballad which appears in the 1968 movie
     "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang." It is sung twice, first by a father as a lullaby to his children.
     It is then reprised later in the film when the children have lost all hope of salvation.)

* From the movie "Sandpiper"
   The Shadow of Your Smile
   Music by Paul Francis Webster
   Words by Johnny Mandel
     (The Shadow of Your Smile is also known as the Love Theme the 1965 movie "The Sandpiper.")


The Island Steel Drum Band continued with the 2nd half.

* The Hammer - Brad Shores
* The Girl from Ipanema - Eric D. Sharp
* Mission Impossible - Eric D. Sharp
* Steeling the Blues - Brad Shores
* On Broadway - Eric D. Sharp
* The Groove in the Mist - Eric D. Sharp

There were over 75 people at the concert. A little less that the winter concert but I always have more attend the Christmas concert. It was a great concert and both groups sounded incredible. Even the president of the college and my dean attended. And of course I had way too much fun.

Posted by Eric at March 7, 2008 10:36 PM